Quick rule: If you open ChatGPT and say “write me a LinkedIn post,” you’re going to get… a LinkedIn post.
A
generic one. With the personality of lukewarm oatmeal.
The Auto-Authority Engine is built for a different job: Not “make words.”
Make you sound like the adult in the room — even when that little voice in your head is screaming, “Who am I to
say this?” Because here’s what imposter syndrome does to marketers:
- It doesn’t make you stupid
- It makes you cautious
- You start writing like you’re applying for permission
You over-qualify:
- “Maybe…”
- “Just my opinion…”
- “I’m not an expert but…”
And your readers
don’t consciously notice… They just feel it. They feel the wobble.
Here’s the simplest way to use the Engine:
1) Start
a new chat
One idea per session.
Cleaner thinking. Stronger output.
2) Drop your raw input
You don’t need polished
copy.
You can start with:
- a rough idea
- a belief
- a rant
- a question
- a
sentence fragment
Examples:
- “Most people misunderstand why content doesn’t convert.”
- “AI isn’t the problem. Weak thinking is.”
- “Turn this
messy thought into a confident post.”
3) Let it do the authority pass
Behind the scenes it looks for:
- where you’re hedging
- where contrast would sharpen your stance
- where you’re explaining instead of leading
- where certainty should go up
Then it outputs something usable immediately. No throat-clearing. No
filler. No “on the other hand” paralysis.
4) Optional: pick an authority style
Same idea. Different gravity. So if the draft feels too soft, you say:
- “Make this sharper.”
- “Less polite.”
- “More decisive.”
It doesn’t pep-talk you. It fixes the writing. If you want to see the Engine in action (and stop letting “not
ready yet” steal your sales):
Auto-Authority Engine
Bill Davis
Internet Marketing Muscle
bill@internet-marketing-muscle.com
Everybody should know how to cook, change a tire, and create an infoproduct!
PS - Join my Skool community even if you don't buy Auto-Authority Engine