This mission control for OpenClaw is one of the most productive things that has changed my workflow since I started programming with AI.
It's incredible how fast you can get with it, and it's only just getting started 🔥
@leadgen_x this is smart, you cracked what a lot of people have been struggling with for a while now
everyone is familiar with cold DMs and imagine everyone doing the same thing, the chances of standing out and converting are pretty low
this is a game-changer
The best content creators aren't the best editors.
They're the ones who figured out how to spend 90% of their time creating and 10% editing.
Your tools should work like that too.
Most video tools are built by engineers who've never posted a TikTok.
That's why they have 500 features you don't need and miss the 5 things you actually use every day.
The YouTube Shorts algorithm doesn't care about your professional transitions.
It cares about hook, retention, and consistency.
Optimize for what matters.
Faceless channels are winning because they focus on systems, not skills.
While everyone's learning After Effects, they're scaling with automation.
Guess who makes more money?
I never run out of viral video ideas.
Because I systematized creativity.
I save trending audio, study viral patterns, and turn one good concept into 5 different videos.
Result? I can batch 30 videos in 2 hours.
Most creators wing it and wonder why they burn out.
AI video tools don't solve the real problem.
Everyone's obsessing over:
→ Perfect AI avatars
→ Fancy transitions
→ Hollywood-level production
→ 47 different video styles
But creators are still stuck spending 8 hours on a 2-minute video.
The real breakthrough isn't better AI.
It's better workflows.
Here's what actually moves the needle:
• Speed over perfection (ship 5 videos vs 1 "perfect" one)
• Template systems that scale (same structure, different content)
• Batch creation workflows (record once, generate 20 variations)
• Direct integration with your content calendar
• One-click publishing across platforms
Most AI video tools are building faster horses.
We need cars.
After launching 5 AI products and testing 50+ video tools, I've learned this:
Creators don't need more features.
They need more output with less input.
The video creation game isn't about having the best tool.
It's about having the best system.
What's your biggest bottleneck in video creation - the tool or the workflow?
I've shipped 5 AI products in 2 years. I don't care about being an "AI influencer."
While everyone's posting hot takes about AI and the future of work, I'm building tools that solve real problems today.
What I'm NOT chasing:
• Thought leadership clout
• Speaking at AI conferences
• Building the "next ChatGPT"
• Raising VC money for AI hype
What I AM focused on:
• Shipping products people actually use
• Automating boring business tasks
• Building sustainable revenue streams
• Learning by doing, not theorizing
The indie maker path hits different when you're not trying to impress anyone.
My latest project VidMe generates videos for e-commerce brands. Not revolutionary. Just useful.
The best AI opportunities aren't in the spotlight – they're in the mundane problems everyone overlooks.
What boring problem could you solve with AI today?
Stop learning complex video editors.
Start building systems that let you create without thinking.
Your brain should be on content ideas, not remembering which button does what.