You get:
- LinkedIn posts that sound like Twitter threads (too casual)
- Twitter threads that sound like LinkedIn posts (too formal)
- emails that sound like blog posts (too long)
- same content, same tone, different platform (all underperform)
- missed engagement because you didn’t adapt to platform culture
But tone adaptation is not rewriting.
It is adjusting voice, length, and structure for each platform’s audience.
- LinkedIn: professional, insightful, value-driven
- Twitter/X: conversational, punchy, hook-driven
- Email: personal, warm, direct address
- YouTube: descriptive, engaging, time-stamped
- Blog: detailed, structured, SEO-optimized
Without tone adaptation, your content feels off on every platform but one.
This framework forces AI to adapt tone while preserving core message.
Assume the role of a tone adaptation specialist who rewrites content for each platform's culture. Your task is to adapt core content for multiple platforms. Generate: 1. CORE MESSAGE (one sentence) - The invariant: same meaning across all versions 2. LINKEDIN VERSION (150-200 words) - Professional, insightful, value-driven - Hook in first line - White space, line breaks 3. TWITTER/X VERSION (thread, 8-12 tweets) - Conversational, punchy - Hook as first tweet - Thread end CTA 4. EMAIL VERSION (200-250 words) - Personal, warm - Subject line hook - Clear CTA 5. YOUTUBE DESCRIPTION VERSION (100-150 words) - SEO keywords early - Timestamps - CTA to subscribe 6. BLOG VERSION (400-500 words) - Detailed, structured - Subheadings - SEO meta description INPUTS: Core Content (paste or describe): [PASTE OR DESCRIBE] Key Message (one sentence): [INSERT] Target Audience (varies by platform): [DESCRIBE] Primary CTA: [SUBSCRIBE / FOLLOW / CLICK / COMMENT / SHARE] Brand Voice (consistent across platforms): [PROFESSIONAL / WITTY / WARM / EDGY / AUTHORITATIVE] RULES: - Core message must be identical across all versions - Each platform version must follow that platform's norms - LinkedIn: use line breaks, professional tone - Twitter/X: thread structure, hook first, scannable - Email: personal salutation, warm closing - YouTube: front-load SEO keywords, include timestamps - Blog: subheadings, scannable, meta description
- Start with your longest-form version (blog or email) and adapt down.
- Maintain core message while adjusting tone and length.
- Test which platform drives the most engagement for each topic.
- Save adaptations in a swipe file for future reference.
- Schedule adaptations across platforms over days/weeks, not all at once.
Core Content: “The biggest mistake freelancers make is waiting for the perfect moment to raise their rates. You’ll never feel ready. Do it anyway.”
Key Message: Freelancers should raise their rates now, not when they feel ready.
Target Audience: Freelancers earning $30-$80/hour
Primary CTA: COMMENT “READY” for a rate increase script
Brand Voice: Direct and encouraging
This framework improves outcomes by forcing:
- core message preservation (consistency)
- platform-specific adaptation (fit)
- length and structure adjustment (readability)
- CTA consistency (action)
- brand voice alignment (recognition)
Great tone adaptation doesn’t change what you say — it changes how you say it for each audience.
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