
SocialEcho 2.0
AI social media copilot for teams and agents
931 followers
AI social media copilot for teams and agents
931 followers
SocialEcho is an AI social media copilot for teams running sophisticated campaigns across multiple brands.
Discover what’s trending, generate original on-brand content, adapt every post to each platform’s style, publish from one workspace, manage audience interactions and track what actually drives engagement.
Built on official APIs, SocialEcho also gives AI agents like OpenClaw, Hermes a secure, reliable way to manage connected social accounts without brittle scraping or risky workarounds.
This is the 2nd launch from SocialEcho 2.0. View more
SocialEcho 2.0
Launched this week
SocialEcho is an AI social media copilot for teams managing social campaigns across multiple brands, accounts, and channels.
See what’s trending, create content that resonates, optimize posts for every platform, publish from one workspace, manage every conversation, and track what drives engagement.
Built on official social APIs, SocialEcho gives AI agents like OpenClaw, Hermes, and custom automations a secure way to manage connected social accounts without brittle scraping or risky workarounds.








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Congrats on the launch. Quick question on the AI content generation side does SocialEcho require a significant onboarding period to learn brand voice, or does it work reasonably well from day one with a brief prompt or style guide input? Curious what the ramp-up experience looks like for a brand-new account.
SocialEcho 2.0
@carter_son Thanks! The ramp-up is pretty lightweight. SocialEcho can work from day one with a brief brand profile, tone guideline, or style prompt. You don’t need a long onboarding period just to get usable content.
Of course, the more context you give it, like brand positioning, sample posts, words to use or avoid, the better the output gets. For a brand-new account, teams can start simple, review and tweak the first few outputs, then keep refining the brand profile over time.
On the engagement analytics side does SocialEcho connect post performance back to downstream outcomes like link clicks, landing page conversions, or product sign-ups? Or does the tracking stay within the native social layer? The gap between social engagement and business results is where most tools lose the thread.
SocialEcho 2.0
@chen_hao3 That’s a very real gap. Today, SocialEcho mainly focuses on the native social layer, such as post performance, engagement, comments, DMs, monitoring, and account-level analytics.
For downstream outcomes like link clicks, landing page conversions, or sign-ups, teams can connect SocialEcho data with their existing analytics, CRM, or attribution systems through our open API. So we don’t try to replace the full business analytics stack, but we do want SocialEcho to plug into it and help teams connect social signals with business results over time.
For large organisations where content has to pass through legal and compliance review before publishing especially in regulated industries like finance or healthcare does SocialEcho support custom approval workflows, hold states, and audit trails? That infrastructure is often the deciding factor in enterprise adoption.
SocialEcho 2.0
@new_user___10520260379921a76fc2d64 You’re absolutely right that this is a key requirement for regulated industries. Today, SocialEcho does not yet support fully custom approval workflows, legal hold states, or detailed audit trails for compliance review.
Right now, we’re focused on helping teams manage publishing, engagement, monitoring, and analytics more efficiently across social platforms. For enterprise and regulated use cases, approval infrastructure is definitely an area we’re evaluating carefully, because we know it can be a deciding factor for adoption.
Congrats! the focus on multi platform publishing from one post is super useful. how do you handle platform specific limitations like character count or media formats?
SocialEcho 2.0
@joshua_cooper2 Thanks! We handle this through official platform APIs, so each post follows the specific rules of the channel it’s going to, including character limits, media types, and format requirements. SocialEcho helps turn one core post into platform-ready versions instead of blindly pushing the same thing everywhere.
Curious about the trend discovery experience in practice. When SocialEcho surfaces a trending topic, does it also suggest specific content angles or hooks that align with each brand's voice or does it just flag the trend and leave the creative interpretation to the team? The former would dramatically accelerate ideation speed.
SocialEcho 2.0
@diego_joaquin1 Love this question. Today, SocialEcho mainly helps teams discover and monitor trending topics, rather than automatically generating full creative angles or hooks for each brand.
For deeper strategy and insight work, teams can connect SocialEcho data through our open API to agents like OpenClaw, then use that layer to analyze trends, find opportunities, and turn them into brand-specific content ideas.
We’re also planning to build more inspiration and ideation features directly into SocialEcho, because we agree this can save teams a lot of time at the creative starting point.
How does SocialEcho approach the balance between AI-generated content and human editorial control? Specifically can teams set guardrails so the AI only ever drafts and never publishes autonomously, with a required human review step? Knowing where the human stays in the loop is important for brand-sensitive accounts.
SocialEcho 2.0
@ding_hao Yes, teams can keep humans fully in the loop. SocialEcho doesn’t have to publish autonomously. You can use AI for drafting, rewriting, or reply suggestions, while setting permissions so only approved team members can review and publish.
For brand-sensitive accounts, that means AI can help with the heavy lifting, but the final decision stays with the team before anything goes live.
How granular are the analytics insights can users track performance per content variation? or is it more aggregated at post level?
SocialEcho 2.0
@luz_bidelspach Right now, analytics are mainly tracked at the post, account, and platform level. So teams can see how each published version performs on its own, but we don’t yet group multiple adapted variations under one shared campaign view.
For now, this keeps reporting clear by channel. But variation-level comparison is a very useful workflow for multi-platform teams, and it’s something we see a lot of value in as we keep improving SocialEcho.