In the next 15 minutes you will learn how to set AI up like the top 0.1% (I learned this from Russell Brunson)
Automated carousels. Reel scripts. In your actual voice. Not AI Poop Brownies… Not watered-down content. Not robotic filler. Not the same "here are 5 tips" format that every other coach is copying from every other coach. Your stories. Your energy. Your frameworks. Your voice. Just produced at a speed that used to require a full content team behind you. Here's what nobody tells you when you first try AI for content. The quality of what comes out has almost nothing to do with the tool. It has everything to do with what you put in beforeyou ask it to create anything. Most coaches open ChatGPT, type "write me a reel about staying consistent," read the output, cringe, and decide AI doesn't work for them. It's not the AI. It's the missing foundation. Think of it like a new hire. You wouldn't hand someone a laptop on day one and say "figure it out." You'd sit with them. Explain how you think. How you speak. What you'd never say. The stories you always come back to. That onboarding process — that's what almost everyone skips. And it's the entire difference between content that sounds like a press release and content that makes your audience stop mid-scroll and think how does this person always know exactly what I'm thinking. So before you ask AI to write a single word, you need to give it five things. Your tone of voice. How you actually speak. Punchy or considered. Dry wit or warm. The words you'd never use. Feed it real examples — old captions that felt like you, voice notes transcribed, anything that already sounds like you on a good day. Your core beliefs. What do you fundamentally believe about your niche that most people would push back on? What would you die on a hill for? This is what makes content magnetic instead of forgettable. Your client's inner world. Not the polished version of their problem. The 2am version. The thing they'd type into Google at their lowest point. AI needs to know who it's speaking to as clearly as it knows who it's speaking as.