One idea. Three platforms. Each one written like it belongs there.

You talk a voice note into your phone. Liftli turns it into a LinkedIn post with LinkedIn pacing, an X thread in X's rhythm, and a Substack section a subscriber would actually read — each in your extracted voice, each waiting for your one-tap yes.

Updated July 2026 · for writers on LinkedIn, X and Substack — not a video tool

TL;DR

Liftli is for writers building on text platforms. It gathers ideas from your week — voice notes, calls, GitHub activity, chats, the news — and writes each platform its own native piece in your extracted voice: post, thread, newsletter. Not one blob cross-posted three times. Nothing publishes without your approval. Runs inside Claude today (ChatGPT and Cursor next), from $0. If you grow on video, we're not your tool.

Cross-posting is how audiences learn to skip you

Every creator managing more than one platform knows the trap. You write the LinkedIn post, then you're tired, so X gets the same text pasted in and the newsletter gets a link. Readers on each platform can tell — the piece wasn't written for them.

The platforms genuinely read differently:

Doing all three well, every week, by hand, is how writers burn out. Doing it with generic AI output has its own cost: detectably-AI posts underperform human writing in most professional niches, per Originality.AI's 2025 study.

One idea, three natives

Liftli's answer isn't a "repurpose" button. It's three separate writes from one source:

This is how the founder runs his own accounts: the same seed becomes a LinkedIn post, a lowercase X thread, and a newsletter section, and none of them read like copies of each other. One Liftli-drafted LinkedIn comment even became a cited source in AI search results (Oded Tsamir, first-person).

Consistency without burnout — you stay editor-in-chief

The reason creators go quiet isn't a lack of ideas. It's that turning ideas into finished, platform-shaped writing three times over is a second job.

Liftli's autopilot pipeline carries that second job: it gathers from your week, plans against your strategy, drafts, critiques itself, and revises. What's left for you is the part only you can do — the yes. Every piece stops at a one-tap approval gate; nothing publishes without the approver. You're not a content machine's operator. You're its editor-in-chief.

Two more things writers usually ask about:

Start free with a one-time lifetime allowance — 3 posts, 10 comments, 3 idea extractions, voice extraction, no card. Paid plans run from $29/month; Business at $79/month covers all three platforms with autopilot and warm-lead intelligence. Full details on the pricing page.

When Liftli is not the fit

If your growth engine is video — YouTube, TikTok, Instagram — Liftli won't help you. We don't do video, don't script reels, don't touch visual platforms. Liftli is for writers, full stop: LinkedIn, X, Substack.

And if you write one platform, rarely, purely for the joy of it, you may not need a pipeline at all. Liftli earns its keep when you're trying to show up consistently on text platforms without it eating your week. If you write for clients rather than yourself, see Liftli for ghostwriters; if you're weighing it against a scheduler, see Typefully vs. Liftli.

Frequently asked questions

Does Liftli recycle the same content across platforms?

No. Cross-posting one blob to three platforms is the thing Liftli exists to avoid. Each platform gets its own draft from the same idea: a LinkedIn post with LinkedIn pacing, an X thread in X's rhythm, a Substack section with the depth a newsletter reader expects. Same idea, three native pieces — each one goes through its own plan, draft, critique and revise loop before it reaches your approval.

Can Liftli write X threads?

Yes. Threads are written in X's cadence, not LinkedIn prose chopped into 280-character chunks. If your X voice runs lowercase and clipped while your LinkedIn voice is fuller, Liftli keeps both — voice is extracted from your own writing per platform context, and it drafts to match.

Does Liftli write Substack newsletters too?

Yes — full issues, with title and subtitle, plus Substack Notes. Substack is a first-class platform in Liftli alongside LinkedIn and X, with its own strategy layer, not an afterthought export.

Will my voice stay mine as I grow?

That is the design constraint everything else bends around. Liftli extracts your voice from your own writing and keeps a persistent strategy and memory for you specifically — it does not average you toward a house style or a template library. And you stay editor-in-chief: nothing publishes without your one-tap approval, so every piece that carries your name went past your eyes first.

Talk once. Publish native, three times.

Send Liftli one voice note from your week and approve the post, the thread and the newsletter section it hands back — each in your voice.

Start free — no card