adaptive ai twitter content guide (1)

everything you need to create content for adaptive.ai this cycle. formats, tone, examples, use cases, a 4-week roadmap. read it once and you'll know exactly what to post.
before you read this, make sure to contact support team to get your adaptive.ai credits, so you can make test the product/make content with it.
here’s the link to content briefs/ideas for all platforms, so you guys have ideas to post → content briefs
content assets →

most people think AI tools are just smarter search engines. something you ask a question and it spits back an answer.
adaptive is something different. it's an agent that actually operates your apps and workflows for you. you describe what you need in plain english and it builds the workflow, connects your tools, and runs it end to end.
think of it like having an operator who knows every app you use and just executes while you focus on other things. it connects to gmail, slack, google sheets, notion, github, discord, linkedIn, figma, shopify, square, plaid and more and these are real connections, not cosmetic integrations.

adaptive ai use cases → https://adaptive.ai/usecases (will help you to get ideas for making content on specific use cases.

there are three types of posts you'll be creating. each one serves a different purpose but all of them should feel like they're coming from you, not from a brand trying to sell something.


long-form post using twitter's article feature. good for deep dives use case walkthroughs, product explainers, opinion pieces on where AI and automation are going. best for thought leadership angles.
article style → https://x.com/jacobgrowth/status/2034725698456207620?s=20

ai slops content would be rejected, so instead try to use ai, but write some words of your own to make humanly as possible.
the most important thing to understand before you post anything: this should sound like you, not like a brand.
adaptive's audience is people who are already curious about AI and automation. they've seen a hundred polished ad posts. what actually stops them mid-scroll is someone real talking about something that genuinely worked for them.