Weekly use case
LinkedIn post drafting
Turns your Notion notes into a LinkedIn post for your review.
What it does for you
Each week the automation reads the notes you have been keeping in Notion, picks a thread worth sharing, and drafts a LinkedIn post in your voice. It comes back as a draft for you to approve, tweak, or spike, never as something posted on its own.
The hard part, getting from a rough note to something postable, is done, so showing up is a five-minute edit instead of an hour you never find.
Why it's safe to hand off
Scoped access
Notion, read your notes
LinkedIn, draft posts only
How it fails silently
Post drafting fails silently when it pulls the wrong detail out of your notes. Your Notion is full of half-formed thoughts, customer names, an unreleased feature, a metric you wrote down before it was final. A fluent draft can fold any of that into a confident, shareable sentence, and because the writing reads well, the problem is invisible until it is the thing you just published. A leaked roadmap item or a stated number that turns out to be wrong does not look like an error in the draft. It looks like a good post.
What the overseer catches
Once the draft is written, the overseer reads it back against the notes it came from, watching for the unreleased detail, the customer name, the number stated as fact that the notes do not actually support. When it finds one, it flags the draft and points at the line, so the problem reaches you rather than your feed.
What still reaches you
Every post is a draft, so by design you are the one who hits publish. The automation does the writing, not the posting.
What it adds on top is a flag when a draft touches something it should not, an unreleased detail, an unverifiable claim, so your weekly review is not just a tone check but a real safeguard against the post you would have regretted.