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Marketing asks: “We need a landing page for the new product launch, a blog post announcing it, and social media graphics. Can you have it by Friday?” It’s Wednesday. Two days. The old plan is to panic. There’s a better one.

Landing page

“Build a landing page for our AI analytics product ‘DataLens’. Hero with headline ‘See your data differently’, features section (real-time analytics, natural language queries, auto-insights), social proof (3 customer logos), pricing (3 tiers), CTA. Modern, clean, brand colour #6366F1 primary.”
Fluso writes the page. Real HTML and CSS, responsive, deployable. You read it, tweak the headline, swap one of the feature blurbs. Done.

Blog post

“Write a 1,200-word blog post announcing the DataLens launch. Cover the problem, how DataLens solves it, key features, and a customer quote. Professional but approachable. Include a CTA to sign up for early access.”
Post comes back. You read it, drop in the actual customer quote you have on hand, light edits to a paragraph that’s slightly too marketing-coded. Done.

Social graphics

“Generate five social media graphics for the DataLens launch. 1080×1080, brand colours, featuring key stats: ‘Real-time analytics’, ‘10x faster insights’, ‘No SQL required’.”
Five variants generated. You pick three. Done. About forty-five minutes for the full package. The old version takes two to three days.

Variations

A sequenced campaign instead of a single drop:
“Plan a five-day launch campaign for DataLens. Daily LinkedIn post, X/Twitter thread, and email sequence. Tease day one, announce day three, customer story day five.”
A sales asset to match:
“Create a 10-slide sales demo deck for DataLens. Problem, solution, demo flow, customer proof, pricing, next steps. Modern design, brand colours.”
A launch email to existing customers:
“Draft a launch email for our existing customer base announcing DataLens. Friendly tone, focus on what’s new and how to get access. Include a link to the landing page.”
The full set — landing page, blog, sales deck, customer email, social — adds maybe another thirty minutes on top of the original forty-five.

What makes the output good

A specific audience changes the entire feel of the writing. “For technical buyers — Heads of Data Engineering at companies with 100-1,000 employees” produces sharper output than no audience description. Iterating works. “Make the headline more concrete.” “Add a Tom Tunguz-style data point in the intro.” “Cut the second-to-last paragraph; it’s filler.” All valid. You don’t have to settle for the first version. Brand assets reuse if you set them once. “Use our brand colours: #6366F1, #1E1B4B, white” applied across landing page, deck, and graphics keeps everything consistent.
Read external content carefully before publishing. If a sentence sounds like marketing slop, rewrite it. Your voice is what makes the difference between a launch that lands and a launch that’s competently forgettable.

Skills

Documents, decks, spreadsheets, images, diagrams, web pages, and the rest.

Gmail

For the customer-base announcement.