Tim Keen — your agent content team | maestro
your agent content team | maestro
Tim Keen ranks #287 of 14,983 LinkedIn creators, and is a standout voice in United States. They have 63.2K followers and published 26 posts in the last 30 days at a 0.3% average engagement rate.
- 63.2K followers
- 26 posts / 30d
- 0.3% avg engagement
- — follower growth / 30d
The roast
Tim Keen claims he’s running a content agency called Maestro, yet with 63,000 followers and an engagement rate of 0.35 percent, he’s the only conductor in history whose entire orchestra walked out before the downbeat. You didn't invent a content team; you just automated the process of paying an AI to ignore you.
About Tim
On July 1st we're launching Maestro — an agent content team for B2B founders who are tired of playing software Twister every time they want to publish a LinkedIn post.Most B2B founders, coaches, and consultants are jerry-rigging 6 systems together to run their content. - A page builder that physically hurts to look at. - An AI tool with no context that you have to threaten into being useful.- A list-building stack held together with duct tape . TThen you sit there for an hour picking AI-isms out of a "good enough" post one by one.Maestro replaces all of that.You get a content CMO — the agent you actually talk to. They make sure you're hitting your goals and that the rest of the team is doing their job. Underneath them, there's a writer, a designer/developer, and an analytics agent. They scour LinkedIn for what's working, adapt it to your voice, and check on your content while you sleep.There's also a Brain. That's where your business context lives — your calls, your offers, your opinions, and the things you never want the AI to write (it's not X, it's Y). It fills itself from your calls + any other resources you give it. Banned phrases get stripped through deterministic linting with 100% accuracy.Every function runs from the command line, so you can use it with your own agents if you like.Get in touch if this sounds interesting to you.
Highlights
- Big Audience — 63,231 followers · top 1%
- Top 5% in United States — Ranked #107 of 5205 creators
- Consistent Creator — 26 posts in 30d · top 5%
- High Impact — 221 avg engagements per post · top 10%
Recent posts
i just put together the ULTIMATE LinkedIn swipe file for ghostwriters and content agencies... (200+ post templates from the agency I scaled to $5M) **comment SWIPE and I'll DM it to you** there are more ghostwriters / content agencies struggling to crack the algorithm than ever. on top of that.... i keep hearing: "we're out of ideas by the 2nd batch" "client's voice is too specific to template" "every post takes 90 minutes from scratch" yeah, no. this resource is going to save you... i spent a good 2 months putting this ultimate swipe file together.... inside, there are 200+ templat
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Build in public — Day 8: we accidentally built Notion. Here's why talking to customers always wins. Last week we asked ghostwriters & content agencies to sign up as design partners. Within days, one pattern was impossible to ignore: Every. Single. Person. uses Notion to run their copywriting business. I knew this. I've worked with copywriters for years. But like a noob, I'd been designing based on what I thought the ideal UI should look like - instead of looking at what people already love. The real problems weren't the UI at all. They were: → Getting predictable, consistent results from
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I just built a full team of LinkedIn revenue agents. (trained from 19,000+ inbound leads & $5m in revenue) Each sub-agent has its own context window, loads only the knowledge it needs, and ships drop-in-ready work for its step. Every "AI agent for LinkedIn" I see tries to run all 5 steps of a revenue system in one giant system prompt. Why these break: - The context window blows up halfway through the week - You can't run ONE step without reloading the entire system - Knowledge relevant to one step is noise for another - Handoff between steps is implicit, you have to remember which prompt
6 reactions · 8 comments · 0 reposts