
AI for Editing: The Writing Job It Genuinely Nails
AI is mediocre at writing your draft and genuinely great at editing it. Here are the specific editing jobs AI tools for editing writing actually do well.
Hub · Making
Writing, making, publishing. The unglamorous parts and the strategic ones.
This shelf is for people who make things. Writers, designers, builders, anyone whose week includes producing something that will end up in front of other people. It's about the craft and the business of making, with the same skeptical lens the rest of the site uses on productivity and tools.
Some posts are tactical: how to keep a content cadence without burning out, when to ship before you're ready, what to do when an idea won't land. Some are about platforms: the changing economics of newsletters, blogs, video, and what the AI shift does to the people doing the writing. Some are about creative habits, which are mostly the same as work habits but with a thinner margin for self-deception.
If you came here looking for a "five steps to viral" piece, the door is the other way. If you came here looking for honest writing about making and shipping, this is the right shelf.
47 posts in this hub ·Content & Creativity
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If this is your first time on this hub, these are reasonable entry points.

AI is mediocre at writing your draft and genuinely great at editing it. Here are the specific editing jobs AI tools for editing writing actually do well.

Austin Kleon told us to steal like an artist. Most of us are still stealing badly. Here's how to repurpose, remix, and stop being precious about your own ideas.

Your content calendar doesn't have to be fantasy. Here's how to build one that's sustainable, flexible, and actually matches reality.

You don't need a studio or a decade of experience. Here's what actually matters when you go live on Zoom or YouTube.

Your personal brand feels fake because you're treating yourself like a product. Here's how to stop performing and start building real credibility.

Subscriber count is a vanity metric. What matters is keeping people actually opening your emails.
More in this hub

Forget the generic DM templates. Here's how to build real professional connections online that don't feel forced or desperate.

You don't need to be naturally gifted to write well. You need 30 days of deliberate practice, actual feedback, and permission to write badly first.

Viral moments are noise. Here's why they don't build sustainable audiences or businesses.

Can't design? That's fine. These tools make it impossible to look bad, even if you've never opened Photoshop in your life.

Proposals aren't about proving you're smart. They're about making the client feel safe choosing you.

You don't need a massive audience to start. You need a clear reason why people should open your emails and one honest offer to start collecting addresses.

You're creating more content, but your audience isn't growing. The problem isn't your output. It's your distribution. Here's what nobody tells you.

Stop writing the same thing five times. Here's how to repurpose one piece of content across platforms, without sounding like a robot reading a script.

Creativity isn't a gift for the chosen few. It's a practice anyone can build. Here's what changed my understanding of how it actually works.

It's not inspiration, structure, or discipline. It's the ugly middle where you write garbage, hate it, and keep going anyway.

Your portfolio isn't a gallery. It's your sales pitch. Here's how to show real work, not just credentials, and get hired.

You don't need to be a writer to benefit from writing well. Clear writing is clear thinking. And it pays dividends in every job you'll ever have.