Your content library

What to load, why approving matters, and exactly what Squawk does and does not touch.

Squawk writes from your material, not from thin air. The library is where that material lives. The more real substance you put in, the more your posts say something specific instead of filler.

What to load

Anything you have already made or written:

  • Blog posts and articles
  • PDFs, one-pagers, whitepapers
  • Slide decks
  • Transcripts from talks, podcasts, or calls
  • Photos and video
  • Links to things you have published

If you have been pasting the same documents into a chat window for two years, this is their home now. Load them once and every campaign can draw on them.

Two ways material gets in

  • Library items you add directly. Upload a file, paste a link, or write an entry.
  • Sources you connect, like an RSS feed, a sitemap, or an inbound email address, so new material flows in automatically as you publish it elsewhere.

Approving items

Squawk only drafts from items marked approved. This is deliberate. It means you decide what is fair game before anything gets turned into a post. If you add something and it never shows up in drafts, check that it is approved first. This is a common snag.

What Squawk does with it

It uses your approved library to draft posts for your workspace. That is the whole job. To be exact about the boundaries:

  • It does not scrape your social accounts. It only sees what you put in the library.
  • It does not train shared models on your content.
  • It does not share your material across other accounts.
  • You can delete anything at any time.

Your content stays yours. The library is just the raw material your voice gets built from.

Next: Your first campaign.