The Solo Content Studio

Editing your draft

Your specialist just handed you a first draft. This page walks through what to do with it.

Open it up

Head to the Drafts tab on your specialist's page and click the draft you want to work on. You'll land on a preview page with the full draft laid out: subject line options for a newsletter, platform tabs for a social post, the video script and looping variants for short-form video.

Screenshot: Draft detail view showing the preview with copy buttons and the draft body below.

What you can do here

The draft detail page is a read-only preview. You can't edit the text, rename the draft, or change its status from this page. What you can do here is copy the draft out, in whichever shape you need it:

  • The whole draft at once.
  • A single post or variant (a specific platform tab for a social post, one subject line option for a newsletter, the scripted version of a short-form video, etc.).

Paste wherever you're publishing: your email tool, LinkedIn, Threads, your video editor, whatever your workflow uses.

Editing happens on your publishing platform

Once you paste, that's where the editing happens. Tighten an opener, rewrite a line, cut a paragraph, add your own example, trim to length. Your draft in The Solo Content Studio stays as the starting point; your platform is where it gets finished.

Renaming and marking as published

Both of these happen on the Drafts tab, not on the draft detail page.

  • Rename. On the Drafts tab, click the draft's title to edit it. Useful for finding it later.
  • Status. Every draft has a status: Generated, Published, or Archived. On the Drafts tab, open the status menu on a draft's row and switch to Published when you post it, or Archive when you're done with it. It keeps your Drafts tab honest about what's gone live and what's still sitting there waiting for you.
Screenshot: Drafts tab list view showing a draft row with its editable title and the status menu open.

Why there's no regenerate button (yet)

We turned regenerate off on purpose for beta. Re-rolling the same request tends to shuffle words around without actually getting you closer to what you want. Two better moves:

  • One-off rewrite? Handle it on your publishing platform after pasting. You already know the fix.
  • Keep seeing the same miss? (Wrong tone, wrong format, wrong structure.) That's a training signal. Open your specialist's Training tab, update the section that's off, and your next draft will be sharper. Retraining is the real lever.

The last 20%

The draft is a solid first draft you put your human touch on. It gets you out of the blank page; your voice, your judgment, your specifics finish it on your publishing platform of choice.

Copying to a scheduler or queue? For now, you'll paste it in yourself. Scheduling is on the roadmap.

Questions? Send us a note.