A ghostwritten LinkedIn article from interview notes takes raw conversation transcripts and turns them into a polished, voice-matched piece. On aidowith.me, you follow a 10-step route in about 90 minutes. You paste the interview notes or transcript (even rough bullet points work). The AI identifies 2 to 3 key themes, extracts quotable phrases, and builds an outline. Then it drafts an 800-to-1200-word article matching the speaker's tone: formal, casual, or somewhere between. You refine the draft, adjust any phrasing that doesn't sound right, and add a hook opening. The final piece includes a headline, intro paragraph, 3 body sections, and a closing CTA. Comms teams using this route publish 4x more executive content per month because the bottleneck (the writing) drops from 5 hours to 90 minutes. The route also generates 3 pull-quote options for use in social media posts that accompany the article. These short quotes drive additional traffic back to the full article.
Last updated: April 2026
The Problem and the Fix
Without a route
- Your CEO did a great interview but won't spend 4 hours turning notes into a LinkedIn post
- You ghostwrite for execs and spend half the time matching their voice instead of writing content
- Interview notes sit in a doc for weeks because nobody has time to turn them into an article
With aidowith.me
- Turn rough interview notes into a polished 800-to-1200-word article in 90 minutes
- The AI matches the speaker's tone by analyzing their phrasing patterns in the notes
- Publish 4x more executive thought leadership per month by removing the writing bottleneck
Who Builds This With AI
Marketers
Content, campaigns, and briefs done in hours instead of days.
Managers & Leads
Reports, presentations, and team comms handled faster.
Ops & Analysts
Summaries, process docs, and structured output from messy inputs.
How It Works
Paste interview notes
Drop in the transcript, bullet points, or rough notes from the conversation. Messy formatting is fine.
Generate the draft
The AI extracts themes, builds an outline, and writes an 800-to-1200-word article matching the speaker's tone.
Polish and publish
Refine the voice, tweak the hook, and copy the final article into LinkedIn's publishing editor.
Turn Interview Notes Into a LinkedIn Article
Follow the route and ship a voice-matched article from raw notes in about 90 minutes.
Start This Route →What You Walk Away With
Paste interview notes
Generate the draft
Polish and publish
Publish 4x more executive thought leadership per month by removing the writing bottleneck
"I ghostwrite for 3 partners at a consulting firm. This route cut my drafting time from 5 hours to 90 minutes per article. Voice accuracy is solid."- Freelance Content Writer
Questions
The AI scans your notes for recurring themes, strong phrases, and the speaker's natural cadence. It builds an outline around 2 to 3 key points, drafts body sections with quotes pulled from the notes, and matches sentence length and vocabulary to the speaker's style. You review and adjust before publishing.
Rough notes work fine. Even a bullet-point list with sentence fragments gives the AI enough to identify themes and tone. The route flags sections where it needs more detail, so you can fill gaps during the review step. You don't need a polished transcript to start. The route on aidowith.me walks you through each step with specific examples so you can apply this immediately to your real work.
Yes. The default range is 800 to 1200 words, which performs well on LinkedIn. You can set a shorter target (400 to 600 words) for a quick take or go longer (1500+) for a deep-dive piece. The AI adjusts structure and section count to match your target length. The route on aidowith.me walks you through each step with specific examples so you can apply this immediately to your real work.