- … but better to use ? However they said plain HTML paragraphs and headings; but we can include list inside a paragraph? Might be okay. Safer: use then include
- Clip type (educational, entertaining, emotional)
- Episode context (new episode announcement, evergreen advice, personal story)
- Inside jokes: If the clip mentions “budgeting,” append the line “Yes, you can still buy coffee.”
- Emoji policy: Use only these emojis: 🎙️🔥💡. Never use 😂 or 🙌.
- Your one‑page voice document.
- Clip type (educational, entertaining, emotional)
- Episode context (new episode announcement, evergreen advice, personal story)
- Inside jokes: If the clip mentions “budgeting,” append the line “Yes, you can still buy coffee.”
- Emoji policy: Use only these emojis: 🎙️🔥💡. Never use 😂 or 🙌.
- Your one‑page voice document.
- …
- Clip type (educational, entertaining, emotional)
- Episode context (new episode announcement, evergreen advice, personal story)
- Inside jokes: If the clip mentions “budgeting,” append the line “Yes, you can still buy coffee.”
- Emoji policy: Use only these emojis: 🎙️🔥💡. Never use 😂 or 🙌.
- Your one‑page voice document.
- Clip type (educational, entertaining, emotional)
- Episode context (new episode announcement, evergreen advice, personal story)
- Inside jokes: If the clip mentions “budgeting,” append the line “Yes, you can still buy coffee.”
- Emoji policy: Use only these emojis: 🎙️🔥💡. Never use 😂 or 🙌.
- Your one‑page voice document.
- Clip type (educational, entertaining, emotional)
- Episode context (new episode announcement, evergreen advice, personal story)
- Inside jokes: If the clip mentions “budgeting,” append the line “Yes, you can still buy coffee.”
- Emoji policy: Use only these emojis: 🎙️🔥💡. Never use 😂 or 🙌.
- Your one‑page voice document.
- …
- Clip type (educational, entertaining, emotional)
- Episode context (new episode announcement, evergreen advice, personal story)
- Inside jokes: If the clip mentions “budgeting,” append the line “Yes, you can still buy coffee.”
- Emoji policy: Use only these emojis: 🎙️🔥💡. Never use 😂 or 🙌.
- Your one‑page voice document.
- inside. That is still HTML.
We’ll need to ensure we don’t exceed word count.
Let’s draft content and then count.
I’ll write content in a text editor mentally, then count.
Title line not counted? Probably they count words of article only, not title line? Safer to count everything after Title line? We’ll include title line but not count? I think they want article content between 450-500 words, likely excluding the title line. We’ll aim for ~470 words in the HTML paragraphs/headings.
Let’s draft.
I’ll write paragraphs:
Paragraph 1: Introduction.
Paragraph 2: Action step: create one-page voice document.
Paragraph 3: Before vs after.
Paragraph 4: Approach: Voice Profile.
Paragraph 5: Example CTA decision tree.
Paragraph 6: Example for solo podcast personal finance.
Paragraph 7: Example prompt.
Paragraph 8: How to automate hook selection.
Paragraph 9: How to automate (general).
Paragraph 10: Platform Instagram.
Paragraph 11: Hook Template Library.
Paragraph 12: Tools that support this flow.
Paragraph 13: Your revised workflow (intro sentence then list).
Paragraph 14: Emoji policy etc maybe included in list.
Paragraph 15: Conclusion / call to action.
Paragraph 16: e-book promotion (given).
We need to ensure each sentence adds value.
Let’s write content and then count.
I’ll write in plain text then wrap with HTML comments.
Draft:
Why Brand Voice Matters in AI‑Generated Captions
AI can turn long‑form audio into dozens of short clips, but generic captions dilute your personality and hurt engagement.
Action Step: Build a One‑Page Voice Document
Define three core elements: (1) tone descriptors (e.g., friendly, authoritative), (2) signature phrases or inside jokes, and (3) preferred CTA style (direct, question, or soft invite). Keep this sheet visible whenever you generate captions.
Before and After: Generic AI vs Brand‑Voice Caption
Before: “Check out this tip about saving money.” After (brand voice applied with hooks, CTA, personality): “💡 Want to keep more cash in your pocket? Try this 30‑second trick—yes, you can still buy coffee.”
Approach: The “Voice Profile” in Your AI Tool
Upload your one‑page voice document as a Voice Profile. The AI uses it to rewrite drafts, inserting hooks, CTAs, and your chosen personality while preserving the original meaning.
Example CTA Decision Tree
If the clip teaches a concrete step → use a direct CTA (“Try this now”). If it shares a story → ask a question (“What’s your biggest budgeting hurdle?”). If it’s evergreen advice → offer a resource (“Download the free checklist”).
Example: Solo Podcast on Personal Finance for Freelancers
Clip type: educational. Episode context: evergreen advice. Inside joke: if “budgeting” appears, append “Yes, you can still buy coffee.” Hook: start with a surprising stat or a bold claim.
Example Prompt for the AI
“Rewrite this transcript excerpt as an Instagram caption using my Voice Profile: tone friendly, include a hook, add a CTA from the decision tree, and apply the emoji policy (🎙️🔥💡 only).”
How to Automate Hook Selection
Create a Hook Template Library with three categories: (1) Stat/Shock, (2) Question, (3) Bold Claim. Tag each template by clip type and episode context. The AI selects the highest‑scoring hook based on keyword match.
How to Automate the Full Flow
1. Extract transcript with Descript. 2. Run the excerpt through your Voice Profile‑enabled GPT (ChatGPT Custom GPT or Jasper) using the example prompt. 3. The output returns a caption with hook, CTA, and approved emojis. 4. Schedule the clip with the caption directly to Instagram.
Platform: Instagram
Instagram favors concise captions with line breaks, emojis, and a clear CTA—exactly what the automated workflow delivers.
The Hook Template Library
Store hooks in a spreadsheet: Column A – hook text, Column B – clip type (educational/entertaining/emotional), Column C – episode context (new announcement/evergreen/personal story), Column D – usage notes. The AI references this table to pull the best match.
Tools That Support This Flow
• ChatGPT (Custom GPT) – Build a “Caption Editor GPT” that takes your draft and applies your voice rules.
• Descript – Has a “Rewrite in my voice” feature for transcripts (can be adapted for captions).
• Jasper – Brand Voice profiles and conditional prompts.
Your Revised Workflow
By embedding your voice profile into the AI pipeline, you eliminate manual rewriting while keeping every clip unmistakably yours.
Now the e-book promotion paragraph exactly as given. We need to count words of the article (excluding title line?). Let’s count words in all the paragraphs and headings content. I’ll copy the text without HTML tags and comments to count. Let’s extract the visible text: “Why Brand Voice Matters in AI‑Generated Captions” “AI can turn long‑form audio into dozens of short clips, but generic captions dilute your personality and hurt engagement.” “Action Step: Build a One‑Page Voice Document” “Define three core elements: (1) tone descriptors (e.g., friendly, authoritative), (2) signature phrases or inside jokes, and (3) preferred CTA style (direct, question, or soft invite). Keep this sheet visible whenever you generate captions.” “Before and After: Generic AI vs Brand‑Voice Caption” “Before: “Check out this tip about saving money.” After (brand voice applied with hooks, CTA, personality): “💡 Want to keep more cash in your pocket? Try this 30‑second trick—yes, you can still buy coffee.”” “Approach: The “Voice Profile” in Your AI Tool” “Upload your one‑page voice document as a Voice Profile. The AI uses it to rewrite drafts, inserting hooks, CTAs, and your chosen personality while preserving the original meaning.” “Example CTA Decision Tree” “If the clip teaches a concrete step → use a direct CTA (“Try this now”). If it shares a story → ask a question (“What’s your biggest budgeting hurdle?”). If it’s evergreen advice → offer a resource (“Download the free checklist”).” “Example: Solo Podcast on Personal Finance for Freelancers” “Clip type: educational. Episode context: evergreen advice. Inside joke: if “budgeting” appears, append the line “Yes, you can still buy coffee.” Hook: start with a surprising stat or a bold claim.” “Example Prompt for the AI” ““Rewrite this transcript excerpt as an Instagram caption using my Voice Profile: tone friendly, include a hook, add a CTA from the decision tree, and apply the emoji policy (🎙️🔥💡 only).”” “How to Automate Hook Selection” “Create a Hook Template Library with three categories: (1) Stat/Shock, (2) Question, (3) Bold Claim. Tag each template by clip type and episode context. The AI selects the highest‑scoring hook based on keyword match.” “How to Automate the Full Flow” “1. Extract transcript with Descript. 2. Run the excerpt through your Voice Profile‑enabled GPT (ChatGPT Custom GPT or Jasper) using the example prompt. 3. The output returns a caption with hook, CTA, and approved emojis. 4. Schedule the clip with the caption directly to Instagram.” “Platform: Instagram” “Instagram favors concise captions with line breaks, emojis, and a clear CTA—exactly what the automated workflow delivers.” “The Hook Template Library” “Store hooks in a spreadsheet: Column A – hook text, Column B – clip typeFor a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Independent Social Media Content Repurposers (Podcasters & YouTubers): How to Automate Short-Form Clip Selection and Caption Drafting from Long-Form Audio.
- … but better to use ? However they said plain HTML paragraphs and headings; but we can include list inside a paragraph? Might be okay. Safer: use then include
- inside. That is still HTML.
We’ll need to ensure we don’t exceed word count.
Let’s draft content and then count.
I’ll write content in a text editor mentally, then count.
Title line not counted? Probably they count words of article only, not title line? Safer to count everything after Title line? We’ll include title line but not count? I think they want article content between 450-500 words, likely excluding the title line. We’ll aim for ~470 words in the HTML paragraphs/headings.
Let’s draft.
I’ll write paragraphs:
Paragraph 1: Introduction.
Paragraph 2: Action step: create one-page voice document.
Paragraph 3: Before vs after.
Paragraph 4: Approach: Voice Profile.
Paragraph 5: Example CTA decision tree.
Paragraph 6: Example for solo podcast personal finance.
Paragraph 7: Example prompt.
Paragraph 8: How to automate hook selection.
Paragraph 9: How to automate (general).
Paragraph 10: Platform Instagram.
Paragraph 11: Hook Template Library.
Paragraph 12: Tools that support this flow.
Paragraph 13: Your revised workflow (intro sentence then list).
Paragraph 14: Emoji policy etc maybe included in list.
Paragraph 15: Conclusion / call to action.
Paragraph 16: e-book promotion (given).
We need to ensure each sentence adds value.
Let’s write content and then count.
I’ll write in plain text then wrap with HTML comments.
Draft:
Why Brand Voice Matters in AI‑Generated Captions
AI can turn long‑form audio into dozens of short clips, but generic captions dilute your personality and hurt engagement.
Action Step: Build a One‑Page Voice Document
Define three core elements: (1) tone descriptors (e.g., friendly, authoritative), (2) signature phrases or inside jokes, and (3) preferred CTA style (direct, question, or soft invite). Keep this sheet visible whenever you generate captions.
Before and After: Generic AI vs Brand‑Voice Caption
Before: “Check out this tip about saving money.” After (brand voice applied with hooks, CTA, personality): “💡 Want to keep more cash in your pocket? Try this 30‑second trick—yes, you can still buy coffee.”
Approach: The “Voice Profile” in Your AI Tool
Upload your one‑page voice document as a Voice Profile. The AI uses it to rewrite drafts, inserting hooks, CTAs, and your chosen personality while preserving the original meaning.
Example CTA Decision Tree
If the clip teaches a concrete step → use a direct CTA (“Try this now”). If it shares a story → ask a question (“What’s your biggest budgeting hurdle?”). If it’s evergreen advice → offer a resource (“Download the free checklist”).
Example: Solo Podcast on Personal Finance for Freelancers
Clip type: educational. Episode context: evergreen advice. Inside joke: if “budgeting” appears, append “Yes, you can still buy coffee.” Hook: start with a surprising stat or a bold claim.
Example Prompt for the AI
“Rewrite this transcript excerpt as an Instagram caption using my Voice Profile: tone friendly, include a hook, add a CTA from the decision tree, and apply the emoji policy (🎙️🔥💡 only).”
How to Automate Hook Selection
Create a Hook Template Library with three categories: (1) Stat/Shock, (2) Question, (3) Bold Claim. Tag each template by clip type and episode context. The AI selects the highest‑scoring hook based on keyword match.
How to Automate the Full Flow
1. Extract transcript with Descript. 2. Run the excerpt through your Voice Profile‑enabled GPT (ChatGPT Custom GPT or Jasper) using the example prompt. 3. The output returns a caption with hook, CTA, and approved emojis. 4. Schedule the clip with the caption directly to Instagram.
Platform: Instagram
Instagram favors concise captions with line breaks, emojis, and a clear CTA—exactly what the automated workflow delivers.
The Hook Template Library
Store hooks in a spreadsheet: Column A – hook text, Column B – clip type (educational/entertaining/emotional), Column C – episode context (new announcement/evergreen/personal story), Column D – usage notes. The AI references this table to pull the best match.
Tools That Support This Flow
• ChatGPT (Custom GPT) – Build a “Caption Editor GPT” that takes your draft and applies your voice rules.
• Descript – Has a “Rewrite in my voice” feature for transcripts (can be adapted for captions).
• Jasper – Brand Voice profiles and conditional prompts.
Your Revised Workflow
By embedding your voice profile into the AI pipeline, you eliminate manual rewriting while keeping every clip unmistakably yours.
Now the e-book promotion paragraph exactly as given. We need to count words of the article (excluding title line?). Let’s count words in all the paragraphs and headings content. I’ll copy the text without HTML tags and comments to count. Let’s extract the visible text: “Why Brand Voice Matters in AI‑Generated Captions” “AI can turn long‑form audio into dozens of short clips, but generic captions dilute your personality and hurt engagement.” “Action Step: Build a One‑Page Voice Document” “Define three core elements: (1) tone descriptors (e.g., friendly, authoritative), (2) signature phrases or inside jokes, and (3) preferred CTA style (direct, question, or soft invite). Keep this sheet visible whenever you generate captions.” “Before and After: Generic AI vs Brand‑Voice Caption” “Before: “Check out this tip about saving money.” After (brand voice applied with hooks, CTA, personality): “💡 Want to keep more cash in your pocket? Try this 30‑second trick—yes, you can still buy coffee.”” “Approach: The “Voice Profile” in Your AI Tool” “Upload your one‑page voice document as a Voice Profile. The AI uses it to rewrite drafts, inserting hooks, CTAs, and your chosen personality while preserving the original meaning.” “Example CTA Decision Tree” “If the clip teaches a concrete step → use a direct CTA (“Try this now”). If it shares a story → ask a question (“What’s your biggest budgeting hurdle?”). If it’s evergreen advice → offer a resource (“Download the free checklist”).” “Example: Solo Podcast on Personal Finance for Freelancers” “Clip type: educational. Episode context: evergreen advice. Inside joke: if “budgeting” appears, append the line “Yes, you can still buy coffee.” Hook: start with a surprising stat or a bold claim.” “Example Prompt for the AI” ““Rewrite this transcript excerpt as an Instagram caption using my Voice Profile: tone friendly, include a hook, add a CTA from the decision tree, and apply the emoji policy (🎙️🔥💡 only).”” “How to Automate Hook Selection” “Create a Hook Template Library with three categories: (1) Stat/Shock, (2) Question, (3) Bold Claim. Tag each template by clip type and episode context. The AI selects the highest‑scoring hook based on keyword match.” “How to Automate the Full Flow” “1. Extract transcript with Descript. 2. Run the excerpt through your Voice Profile‑enabled GPT (ChatGPT Custom GPT or Jasper) using the example prompt. 3. The output returns a caption with hook, CTA, and approved emojis. 4. Schedule the clip with the caption directly to Instagram.” “Platform: Instagram” “Instagram favors concise captions with line breaks, emojis, and a clear CTA—exactly what the automated workflow delivers.” “The Hook Template Library” “Store hooks in a spreadsheet: Column A – hook text, Column B – clip typeFor a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Independent Social Media Content Repurposers (Podcasters & YouTubers): How to Automate Short-Form Clip Selection and Caption Drafting from Long-Form Audio.
etc. We need to include bullet list for revised workflow. Use HTML- … but better to use ? However they said plain HTML paragraphs and headings; but we can include list inside a paragraph? Might be okay. Safer: use then include
- inside. That is still HTML.
We’ll need to ensure we don’t exceed word count.
Let’s draft content and then count.
I’ll write content in a text editor mentally, then count.
Title line not counted? Probably they count words of article only, not title line? Safer to count everything after Title line? We’ll include title line but not count? I think they want article content between 450-500 words, likely excluding the title line. We’ll aim for ~470 words in the HTML paragraphs/headings.
Let’s draft.
I’ll write paragraphs:
Paragraph 1: Introduction.
Paragraph 2: Action step: create one-page voice document.
Paragraph 3: Before vs after.
Paragraph 4: Approach: Voice Profile.
Paragraph 5: Example CTA decision tree.
Paragraph 6: Example for solo podcast personal finance.
Paragraph 7: Example prompt.
Paragraph 8: How to automate hook selection.
Paragraph 9: How to automate (general).
Paragraph 10: Platform Instagram.
Paragraph 11: Hook Template Library.
Paragraph 12: Tools that support this flow.
Paragraph 13: Your revised workflow (intro sentence then list).
Paragraph 14: Emoji policy etc maybe included in list.
Paragraph 15: Conclusion / call to action.
Paragraph 16: e-book promotion (given).
We need to ensure each sentence adds value.
Let’s write content and then count.
I’ll write in plain text then wrap with HTML comments.
Draft:
Why Brand Voice Matters in AI‑Generated Captions
AI can turn long‑form audio into dozens of short clips, but generic captions dilute your personality and hurt engagement.
Action Step: Build a One‑Page Voice Document
Define three core elements: (1) tone descriptors (e.g., friendly, authoritative), (2) signature phrases or inside jokes, and (3) preferred CTA style (direct, question, or soft invite). Keep this sheet visible whenever you generate captions.
Before and After: Generic AI vs Brand‑Voice Caption
Before: “Check out this tip about saving money.” After (brand voice applied with hooks, CTA, personality): “💡 Want to keep more cash in your pocket? Try this 30‑second trick—yes, you can still buy coffee.”
Approach: The “Voice Profile” in Your AI Tool
Upload your one‑page voice document as a Voice Profile. The AI uses it to rewrite drafts, inserting hooks, CTAs, and your chosen personality while preserving the original meaning.
Example CTA Decision Tree
If the clip teaches a concrete step → use a direct CTA (“Try this now”). If it shares a story → ask a question (“What’s your biggest budgeting hurdle?”). If it’s evergreen advice → offer a resource (“Download the free checklist”).
Example: Solo Podcast on Personal Finance for Freelancers
Clip type: educational. Episode context: evergreen advice. Inside joke: if “budgeting” appears, append “Yes, you can still buy coffee.” Hook: start with a surprising stat or a bold claim.
Example Prompt for the AI
“Rewrite this transcript excerpt as an Instagram caption using my Voice Profile: tone friendly, include a hook, add a CTA from the decision tree, and apply the emoji policy (🎙️🔥💡 only).”
How to Automate Hook Selection
Create a Hook Template Library with three categories: (1) Stat/Shock, (2) Question, (3) Bold Claim. Tag each template by clip type and episode context. The AI selects the highest‑scoring hook based on keyword match.
How to Automate the Full Flow
1. Extract transcript with Descript. 2. Run the excerpt through your Voice Profile‑enabled GPT (ChatGPT Custom GPT or Jasper) using the example prompt. 3. The output returns a caption with hook, CTA, and approved emojis. 4. Schedule the clip with the caption directly to Instagram.
Platform: Instagram
Instagram favors concise captions with line breaks, emojis, and a clear CTA—exactly what the automated workflow delivers.
The Hook Template Library
Store hooks in a spreadsheet: Column A – hook text, Column B – clip type (educational/entertaining/emotional), Column C – episode context (new announcement/evergreen/personal story), Column D – usage notes. The AI references this table to pull the best match.
Tools That Support This Flow
• ChatGPT (Custom GPT) – Build a “Caption Editor GPT” that takes your draft and applies your voice rules.
• Descript – Has a “Rewrite in my voice” feature for transcripts (can be adapted for captions).
• Jasper – Brand Voice profiles and conditional prompts.
Your Revised Workflow
By embedding your voice profile into the AI pipeline, you eliminate manual rewriting while keeping every clip unmistakably yours.
Now the e-book promotion paragraph exactly as given. We need to count words of the article (excluding title line?). Let’s count words in all the paragraphs and headings content. I’ll copy the text without HTML tags and comments to count. Let’s extract the visible text: “Why Brand Voice Matters in AI‑Generated Captions” “AI can turn long‑form audio into dozens of short clips, but generic captions dilute your personality and hurt engagement.” “Action Step: Build a One‑Page Voice Document” “Define three core elements: (1) tone descriptors (e.g., friendly, authoritative), (2) signature phrases or inside jokes, and (3) preferred CTA style (direct, question, or soft invite). Keep this sheet visible whenever you generate captions.” “Before and After: Generic AI vs Brand‑Voice Caption” “Before: “Check out this tip about saving money.” After (brand voice applied with hooks, CTA, personality): “💡 Want to keep more cash in your pocket? Try this 30‑second trick—yes, you can still buy coffee.”” “Approach: The “Voice Profile” in Your AI Tool” “Upload your one‑page voice document as a Voice Profile. The AI uses it to rewrite drafts, inserting hooks, CTAs, and your chosen personality while preserving the original meaning.” “Example CTA Decision Tree” “If the clip teaches a concrete step → use a direct CTA (“Try this now”). If it shares a story → ask a question (“What’s your biggest budgeting hurdle?”). If it’s evergreen advice → offer a resource (“Download the free checklist”).” “Example: Solo Podcast on Personal Finance for Freelancers” “Clip type: educational. Episode context: evergreen advice. Inside joke: if “budgeting” appears, append the line “Yes, you can still buy coffee.” Hook: start with a surprising stat or a bold claim.” “Example Prompt for the AI” ““Rewrite this transcript excerpt as an Instagram caption using my Voice Profile: tone friendly, include a hook, add a CTA from the decision tree, and apply the emoji policy (🎙️🔥💡 only).”” “How to Automate Hook Selection” “Create a Hook Template Library with three categories: (1) Stat/Shock, (2) Question, (3) Bold Claim. Tag each template by clip type and episode context. The AI selects the highest‑scoring hook based on keyword match.” “How to Automate the Full Flow” “1. Extract transcript with Descript. 2. Run the excerpt through your Voice Profile‑enabled GPT (ChatGPT Custom GPT or Jasper) using the example prompt. 3. The output returns a caption with hook, CTA, and approved emojis. 4. Schedule the clip with the caption directly to Instagram.” “Platform: Instagram” “Instagram favors concise captions with line breaks, emojis, and a clear CTA—exactly what the automated workflow delivers.” “The Hook Template Library” “Store hooks in a spreadsheet: Column A – hook text, Column B – clip typeFor a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Independent Social Media Content Repurposers (Podcasters & YouTubers): How to Automate Short-Form Clip Selection and Caption Drafting from Long-Form Audio.
We need to produce a concise 450-500 word WordPress blog post in HTML format. Must be plain HTML paragraphs and headings, using WordPress block comment syntax? They gave example:…
. So we need to output HTML with those comments for each paragraph. Title line: “Title: …” then blank line then HTML content. We must include the e-book promotion paragraph at the end exactly as given. We must count words between 450-500 inclusive. Need to craft about 470 words. We need to incorporate facts from e-book: action step: create a one-page voice document with three elements; after (brand voice applied with hooks, CTA, personality); approach: the “Voice Profile” in your AI tool; before (generic AI caption); example CTA decision tree; example for a solo podcast about personal finance for freelancers; example prompt; how to automate hook selection; how to automate; platform: Instagram; the Hook Template Library; tools that support this flow; your revised workflow: bullet list items with ChatGPT (Custom GPT), Clip type, Descript, Emoji policy, Episode context, Inside jokes, Jasper. We need to write content as plain HTML paragraphs and headings. Use headings like…
. Paragraphs similarly. We need to avoid placeholders. Write complete actionable content. We need to ensure word count 450-500. Let’s draft about 470 words. We’ll need to count words. Let’s write content then count. We’ll start with Title line: Title: AI Automation for Independent Podcasters & YouTubers: Customizing Captions with Brand Voice Then blank line. Now HTML. We’ll produce maybe:Why Brand Voice Matters in AI‑Generated Captions
…
? However they said plain HTML paragraphs and headings; but we can include list inside a paragraph? Might be okay. Safer: use then include- inside. That is still HTML.
We’ll need to ensure we don’t exceed word count.
Let’s draft content and then count.
I’ll write content in a text editor mentally, then count.
Title line not counted? Probably they count words of article only, not title line? Safer to count everything after Title line? We’ll include title line but not count? I think they want article content between 450-500 words, likely excluding the title line. We’ll aim for ~470 words in the HTML paragraphs/headings.
Let’s draft.
I’ll write paragraphs:
Paragraph 1: Introduction.
Paragraph 2: Action step: create one-page voice document.
Paragraph 3: Before vs after.
Paragraph 4: Approach: Voice Profile.
Paragraph 5: Example CTA decision tree.
Paragraph 6: Example for solo podcast personal finance.
Paragraph 7: Example prompt.
Paragraph 8: How to automate hook selection.
Paragraph 9: How to automate (general).
Paragraph 10: Platform Instagram.
Paragraph 11: Hook Template Library.
Paragraph 12: Tools that support this flow.
Paragraph 13: Your revised workflow (intro sentence then list).
Paragraph 14: Emoji policy etc maybe included in list.
Paragraph 15: Conclusion / call to action.
Paragraph 16: e-book promotion (given).
We need to ensure each sentence adds value.
Let’s write content and then count.
I’ll write in plain text then wrap with HTML comments.
Draft:
Why Brand Voice Matters in AI‑Generated Captions
AI can turn long‑form audio into dozens of short clips, but generic captions dilute your personality and hurt engagement.
Action Step: Build a One‑Page Voice Document
Define three core elements: (1) tone descriptors (e.g., friendly, authoritative), (2) signature phrases or inside jokes, and (3) preferred CTA style (direct, question, or soft invite). Keep this sheet visible whenever you generate captions.
Before and After: Generic AI vs Brand‑Voice Caption
Before: “Check out this tip about saving money.” After (brand voice applied with hooks, CTA, personality): “💡 Want to keep more cash in your pocket? Try this 30‑second trick—yes, you can still buy coffee.”
Approach: The “Voice Profile” in Your AI Tool
Upload your one‑page voice document as a Voice Profile. The AI uses it to rewrite drafts, inserting hooks, CTAs, and your chosen personality while preserving the original meaning.
Example CTA Decision Tree
If the clip teaches a concrete step → use a direct CTA (“Try this now”). If it shares a story → ask a question (“What’s your biggest budgeting hurdle?”). If it’s evergreen advice → offer a resource (“Download the free checklist”).
Example: Solo Podcast on Personal Finance for Freelancers
Clip type: educational. Episode context: evergreen advice. Inside joke: if “budgeting” appears, append “Yes, you can still buy coffee.” Hook: start with a surprising stat or a bold claim.
Example Prompt for the AI
“Rewrite this transcript excerpt as an Instagram caption using my Voice Profile: tone friendly, include a hook, add a CTA from the decision tree, and apply the emoji policy (🎙️🔥💡 only).”
How to Automate Hook Selection
Create a Hook Template Library with three categories: (1) Stat/Shock, (2) Question, (3) Bold Claim. Tag each template by clip type and episode context. The AI selects the highest‑scoring hook based on keyword match.
How to Automate the Full Flow
1. Extract transcript with Descript. 2. Run the excerpt through your Voice Profile‑enabled GPT (ChatGPT Custom GPT or Jasper) using the example prompt. 3. The output returns a caption with hook, CTA, and approved emojis. 4. Schedule the clip with the caption directly to Instagram.
Platform: Instagram
Instagram favors concise captions with line breaks, emojis, and a clear CTA—exactly what the automated workflow delivers.
The Hook Template Library
Store hooks in a spreadsheet: Column A – hook text, Column B – clip type (educational/entertaining/emotional), Column C – episode context (new announcement/evergreen/personal story), Column D – usage notes. The AI references this table to pull the best match.
Tools That Support This Flow
• ChatGPT (Custom GPT) – Build a “Caption Editor GPT” that takes your draft and applies your voice rules.
• Descript – Has a “Rewrite in my voice” feature for transcripts (can be adapted for captions).
• Jasper – Brand Voice profiles and conditional prompts.
Your Revised Workflow
By embedding your voice profile into the AI pipeline, you eliminate manual rewriting while keeping every clip unmistakably yours.
Now the e-book promotion paragraph exactly as given. We need to count words of the article (excluding title line?). Let’s count words in all the paragraphs and headings content. I’ll copy the text without HTML tags and comments to count. Let’s extract the visible text: “Why Brand Voice Matters in AI‑Generated Captions” “AI can turn long‑form audio into dozens of short clips, but generic captions dilute your personality and hurt engagement.” “Action Step: Build a One‑Page Voice Document” “Define three core elements: (1) tone descriptors (e.g., friendly, authoritative), (2) signature phrases or inside jokes, and (3) preferred CTA style (direct, question, or soft invite). Keep this sheet visible whenever you generate captions.” “Before and After: Generic AI vs Brand‑Voice Caption” “Before: “Check out this tip about saving money.” After (brand voice applied with hooks, CTA, personality): “💡 Want to keep more cash in your pocket? Try this 30‑second trick—yes, you can still buy coffee.”” “Approach: The “Voice Profile” in Your AI Tool” “Upload your one‑page voice document as a Voice Profile. The AI uses it to rewrite drafts, inserting hooks, CTAs, and your chosen personality while preserving the original meaning.” “Example CTA Decision Tree” “If the clip teaches a concrete step → use a direct CTA (“Try this now”). If it shares a story → ask a question (“What’s your biggest budgeting hurdle?”). If it’s evergreen advice → offer a resource (“Download the free checklist”).” “Example: Solo Podcast on Personal Finance for Freelancers” “Clip type: educational. Episode context: evergreen advice. Inside joke: if “budgeting” appears, append the line “Yes, you can still buy coffee.” Hook: start with a surprising stat or a bold claim.” “Example Prompt for the AI” ““Rewrite this transcript excerpt as an Instagram caption using my Voice Profile: tone friendly, include a hook, add a CTA from the decision tree, and apply the emoji policy (🎙️🔥💡 only).”” “How to Automate Hook Selection” “Create a Hook Template Library with three categories: (1) Stat/Shock, (2) Question, (3) Bold Claim. Tag each template by clip type and episode context. The AI selects the highest‑scoring hook based on keyword match.” “How to Automate the Full Flow” “1. Extract transcript with Descript. 2. Run the excerpt through your Voice Profile‑enabled GPT (ChatGPT Custom GPT or Jasper) using the example prompt. 3. The output returns a caption with hook, CTA, and approved emojis. 4. Schedule the clip with the caption directly to Instagram.” “Platform: Instagram” “Instagram favors concise captions with line breaks, emojis, and a clear CTA—exactly what the automated workflow delivers.” “The Hook Template Library” “Store hooks in a spreadsheet: Column A – hook text, Column B – clip typeFor a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Independent Social Media Content Repurposers (Podcasters & YouTubers): How to Automate Short-Form Clip Selection and Caption Drafting from Long-Form Audio.
- … but better to use ? However they said plain HTML paragraphs and headings; but we can include list inside a paragraph? Might be okay. Safer: use then include
- inside. That is still HTML.
We’ll need to ensure we don’t exceed word count.
Let’s draft content and then count.
I’ll write content in a text editor mentally, then count.
Title line not counted? Probably they count words of article only, not title line? Safer to count everything after Title line? We’ll include title line but not count? I think they want article content between 450-500 words, likely excluding the title line. We’ll aim for ~470 words in the HTML paragraphs/headings.
Let’s draft.
I’ll write paragraphs:
Paragraph 1: Introduction.
Paragraph 2: Action step: create one-page voice document.
Paragraph 3: Before vs after.
Paragraph 4: Approach: Voice Profile.
Paragraph 5: Example CTA decision tree.
Paragraph 6: Example for solo podcast personal finance.
Paragraph 7: Example prompt.
Paragraph 8: How to automate hook selection.
Paragraph 9: How to automate (general).
Paragraph 10: Platform Instagram.
Paragraph 11: Hook Template Library.
Paragraph 12: Tools that support this flow.
Paragraph 13: Your revised workflow (intro sentence then list).
Paragraph 14: Emoji policy etc maybe included in list.
Paragraph 15: Conclusion / call to action.
Paragraph 16: e-book promotion (given).
We need to ensure each sentence adds value.
Let’s write content and then count.
I’ll write in plain text then wrap with HTML comments.
Draft:
Why Brand Voice Matters in AI‑Generated Captions
AI can turn long‑form audio into dozens of short clips, but generic captions dilute your personality and hurt engagement.
Action Step: Build a One‑Page Voice Document
Define three core elements: (1) tone descriptors (e.g., friendly, authoritative), (2) signature phrases or inside jokes, and (3) preferred CTA style (direct, question, or soft invite). Keep this sheet visible whenever you generate captions.
Before and After: Generic AI vs Brand‑Voice Caption
Before: “Check out this tip about saving money.” After (brand voice applied with hooks, CTA, personality): “💡 Want to keep more cash in your pocket? Try this 30‑second trick—yes, you can still buy coffee.”
Approach: The “Voice Profile” in Your AI Tool
Upload your one‑page voice document as a Voice Profile. The AI uses it to rewrite drafts, inserting hooks, CTAs, and your chosen personality while preserving the original meaning.
Example CTA Decision Tree
If the clip teaches a concrete step → use a direct CTA (“Try this now”). If it shares a story → ask a question (“What’s your biggest budgeting hurdle?”). If it’s evergreen advice → offer a resource (“Download the free checklist”).
Example: Solo Podcast on Personal Finance for Freelancers
Clip type: educational. Episode context: evergreen advice. Inside joke: if “budgeting” appears, append “Yes, you can still buy coffee.” Hook: start with a surprising stat or a bold claim.
Example Prompt for the AI
“Rewrite this transcript excerpt as an Instagram caption using my Voice Profile: tone friendly, include a hook, add a CTA from the decision tree, and apply the emoji policy (🎙️🔥💡 only).”
How to Automate Hook Selection
Create a Hook Template Library with three categories: (1) Stat/Shock, (2) Question, (3) Bold Claim. Tag each template by clip type and episode context. The AI selects the highest‑scoring hook based on keyword match.
How to Automate the Full Flow
1. Extract transcript with Descript. 2. Run the excerpt through your Voice Profile‑enabled GPT (ChatGPT Custom GPT or Jasper) using the example prompt. 3. The output returns a caption with hook, CTA, and approved emojis. 4. Schedule the clip with the caption directly to Instagram.
Platform: Instagram
Instagram favors concise captions with line breaks, emojis, and a clear CTA—exactly what the automated workflow delivers.
The Hook Template Library
Store hooks in a spreadsheet: Column A – hook text, Column B – clip type (educational/entertaining/emotional), Column C – episode context (new announcement/evergreen/personal story), Column D – usage notes. The AI references this table to pull the best match.
Tools That Support This Flow
• ChatGPT (Custom GPT) – Build a “Caption Editor GPT” that takes your draft and applies your voice rules.
• Descript – Has a “Rewrite in my voice” feature for transcripts (can be adapted for captions).
• Jasper – Brand Voice profiles and conditional prompts.
Your Revised Workflow
By embedding your voice profile into the AI pipeline, you eliminate manual rewriting while keeping every clip unmistakably yours.
Now the e-book promotion paragraph exactly as given. We need to count words of the article (excluding title line?). Let’s count words in all the paragraphs and headings content. I’ll copy the text without HTML tags and comments to count. Let’s extract the visible text: “Why Brand Voice Matters in AI‑Generated Captions” “AI can turn long‑form audio into dozens of short clips, but generic captions dilute your personality and hurt engagement.” “Action Step: Build a One‑Page Voice Document” “Define three core elements: (1) tone descriptors (e.g., friendly, authoritative), (2) signature phrases or inside jokes, and (3) preferred CTA style (direct, question, or soft invite). Keep this sheet visible whenever you generate captions.” “Before and After: Generic AI vs Brand‑Voice Caption” “Before: “Check out this tip about saving money.” After (brand voice applied with hooks, CTA, personality): “💡 Want to keep more cash in your pocket? Try this 30‑second trick—yes, you can still buy coffee.”” “Approach: The “Voice Profile” in Your AI Tool” “Upload your one‑page voice document as a Voice Profile. The AI uses it to rewrite drafts, inserting hooks, CTAs, and your chosen personality while preserving the original meaning.” “Example CTA Decision Tree” “If the clip teaches a concrete step → use a direct CTA (“Try this now”). If it shares a story → ask a question (“What’s your biggest budgeting hurdle?”). If it’s evergreen advice → offer a resource (“Download the free checklist”).” “Example: Solo Podcast on Personal Finance for Freelancers” “Clip type: educational. Episode context: evergreen advice. Inside joke: if “budgeting” appears, append the line “Yes, you can still buy coffee.” Hook: start with a surprising stat or a bold claim.” “Example Prompt for the AI” ““Rewrite this transcript excerpt as an Instagram caption using my Voice Profile: tone friendly, include a hook, add a CTA from the decision tree, and apply the emoji policy (🎙️🔥💡 only).”” “How to Automate Hook Selection” “Create a Hook Template Library with three categories: (1) Stat/Shock, (2) Question, (3) Bold Claim. Tag each template by clip type and episode context. The AI selects the highest‑scoring hook based on keyword match.” “How to Automate the Full Flow” “1. Extract transcript with Descript. 2. Run the excerpt through your Voice Profile‑enabled GPT (ChatGPT Custom GPT or Jasper) using the example prompt. 3. The output returns a caption with hook, CTA, and approved emojis. 4. Schedule the clip with the caption directly to Instagram.” “Platform: Instagram” “Instagram favors concise captions with line breaks, emojis, and a clear CTA—exactly what the automated workflow delivers.” “The Hook Template Library” “Store hooks in a spreadsheet: Column A – hook text, Column B – clip typeFor a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Independent Social Media Content Repurposers (Podcasters & YouTubers): How to Automate Short-Form Clip Selection and Caption Drafting from Long-Form Audio.
etc. We need to include bullet list for revised workflow. Use HTML- … but better to use ? However they said plain HTML paragraphs and headings; but we can include list inside a paragraph? Might be okay. Safer: use then include
- inside. That is still HTML.
We’ll need to ensure we don’t exceed word count.
Let’s draft content and then count.
I’ll write content in a text editor mentally, then count.
Title line not counted? Probably they count words of article only, not title line? Safer to count everything after Title line? We’ll include title line but not count? I think they want article content between 450-500 words, likely excluding the title line. We’ll aim for ~470 words in the HTML paragraphs/headings.
Let’s draft.
I’ll write paragraphs:
Paragraph 1: Introduction.
Paragraph 2: Action step: create one-page voice document.
Paragraph 3: Before vs after.
Paragraph 4: Approach: Voice Profile.
Paragraph 5: Example CTA decision tree.
Paragraph 6: Example for solo podcast personal finance.
Paragraph 7: Example prompt.
Paragraph 8: How to automate hook selection.
Paragraph 9: How to automate (general).
Paragraph 10: Platform Instagram.
Paragraph 11: Hook Template Library.
Paragraph 12: Tools that support this flow.
Paragraph 13: Your revised workflow (intro sentence then list).
Paragraph 14: Emoji policy etc maybe included in list.
Paragraph 15: Conclusion / call to action.
Paragraph 16: e-book promotion (given).
We need to ensure each sentence adds value.
Let’s write content and then count.
I’ll write in plain text then wrap with HTML comments.
Draft:
Why Brand Voice Matters in AI‑Generated Captions
AI can turn long‑form audio into dozens of short clips, but generic captions dilute your personality and hurt engagement.
Action Step: Build a One‑Page Voice Document
Define three core elements: (1) tone descriptors (e.g., friendly, authoritative), (2) signature phrases or inside jokes, and (3) preferred CTA style (direct, question, or soft invite). Keep this sheet visible whenever you generate captions.
Before and After: Generic AI vs Brand‑Voice Caption
Before: “Check out this tip about saving money.” After (brand voice applied with hooks, CTA, personality): “💡 Want to keep more cash in your pocket? Try this 30‑second trick—yes, you can still buy coffee.”
Approach: The “Voice Profile” in Your AI Tool
Upload your one‑page voice document as a Voice Profile. The AI uses it to rewrite drafts, inserting hooks, CTAs, and your chosen personality while preserving the original meaning.
Example CTA Decision Tree
If the clip teaches a concrete step → use a direct CTA (“Try this now”). If it shares a story → ask a question (“What’s your biggest budgeting hurdle?”). If it’s evergreen advice → offer a resource (“Download the free checklist”).
Example: Solo Podcast on Personal Finance for Freelancers
Clip type: educational. Episode context: evergreen advice. Inside joke: if “budgeting” appears, append “Yes, you can still buy coffee.” Hook: start with a surprising stat or a bold claim.
Example Prompt for the AI
“Rewrite this transcript excerpt as an Instagram caption using my Voice Profile: tone friendly, include a hook, add a CTA from the decision tree, and apply the emoji policy (🎙️🔥💡 only).”
How to Automate Hook Selection
Create a Hook Template Library with three categories: (1) Stat/Shock, (2) Question, (3) Bold Claim. Tag each template by clip type and episode context. The AI selects the highest‑scoring hook based on keyword match.
How to Automate the Full Flow
1. Extract transcript with Descript. 2. Run the excerpt through your Voice Profile‑enabled GPT (ChatGPT Custom GPT or Jasper) using the example prompt. 3. The output returns a caption with hook, CTA, and approved emojis. 4. Schedule the clip with the caption directly to Instagram.
Platform: Instagram
Instagram favors concise captions with line breaks, emojis, and a clear CTA—exactly what the automated workflow delivers.
The Hook Template Library
Store hooks in a spreadsheet: Column A – hook text, Column B – clip type (educational/entertaining/emotional), Column C – episode context (new announcement/evergreen/personal story), Column D – usage notes. The AI references this table to pull the best match.
Tools That Support This Flow
• ChatGPT (Custom GPT) – Build a “Caption Editor GPT” that takes your draft and applies your voice rules.
• Descript – Has a “Rewrite in my voice” feature for transcripts (can be adapted for captions).
• Jasper – Brand Voice profiles and conditional prompts.
Your Revised Workflow
By embedding your voice profile into the AI pipeline, you eliminate manual rewriting while keeping every clip unmistakably yours.
Now the e-book promotion paragraph exactly as given. We need to count words of the article (excluding title line?). Let’s count words in all the paragraphs and headings content. I’ll copy the text without HTML tags and comments to count. Let’s extract the visible text: “Why Brand Voice Matters in AI‑Generated Captions” “AI can turn long‑form audio into dozens of short clips, but generic captions dilute your personality and hurt engagement.” “Action Step: Build a One‑Page Voice Document” “Define three core elements: (1) tone descriptors (e.g., friendly, authoritative), (2) signature phrases or inside jokes, and (3) preferred CTA style (direct, question, or soft invite). Keep this sheet visible whenever you generate captions.” “Before and After: Generic AI vs Brand‑Voice Caption” “Before: “Check out this tip about saving money.” After (brand voice applied with hooks, CTA, personality): “💡 Want to keep more cash in your pocket? Try this 30‑second trick—yes, you can still buy coffee.”” “Approach: The “Voice Profile” in Your AI Tool” “Upload your one‑page voice document as a Voice Profile. The AI uses it to rewrite drafts, inserting hooks, CTAs, and your chosen personality while preserving the original meaning.” “Example CTA Decision Tree” “If the clip teaches a concrete step → use a direct CTA (“Try this now”). If it shares a story → ask a question (“What’s your biggest budgeting hurdle?”). If it’s evergreen advice → offer a resource (“Download the free checklist”).” “Example: Solo Podcast on Personal Finance for Freelancers” “Clip type: educational. Episode context: evergreen advice. Inside joke: if “budgeting” appears, append the line “Yes, you can still buy coffee.” Hook: start with a surprising stat or a bold claim.” “Example Prompt for the AI” ““Rewrite this transcript excerpt as an Instagram caption using my Voice Profile: tone friendly, include a hook, add a CTA from the decision tree, and apply the emoji policy (🎙️🔥💡 only).”” “How to Automate Hook Selection” “Create a Hook Template Library with three categories: (1) Stat/Shock, (2) Question, (3) Bold Claim. Tag each template by clip type and episode context. The AI selects the highest‑scoring hook based on keyword match.” “How to Automate the Full Flow” “1. Extract transcript with Descript. 2. Run the excerpt through your Voice Profile‑enabled GPT (ChatGPT Custom GPT or Jasper) using the example prompt. 3. The output returns a caption with hook, CTA, and approved emojis. 4. Schedule the clip with the caption directly to Instagram.” “Platform: Instagram” “Instagram favors concise captions with line breaks, emojis, and a clear CTA—exactly what the automated workflow delivers.” “The Hook Template Library” “Store hooks in a spreadsheet: Column A – hook text, Column B – clip typeFor a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Independent Social Media Content Repurposers (Podcasters & YouTubers): How to Automate Short-Form Clip Selection and Caption Drafting from Long-Form Audio.