Draft
Your next post,
already drafted.
Paragraph reads everything you've published, then drafts what should come next: new posts, newsletters, and refreshes of pages that are slipping. Every draft starts from your archive, so it sounds like you from the first line.
Drafting Thursday's newsletter Writing
Refreshing a post losing traffic Up next
6 cover images for your launch post Done
A refreshed post regained 2,300 views Measured
Everything it can draft
Hand it a blank page or a backlog. Paragraph takes the first pass on the writing that fills your week.
Like you wrote it, on a good day.
Starts from your archive
It learns your phrasing, your structure, and your favorite openers from everything you've published. Drafts arrive sounding like you, not like a chatbot.
Knows what's worth writing
It reads your analytics and your niche, then queues the drafts most likely to earn readers: a refresh, a follow-up, or something new.
Waits for your OK
Every draft comes to you to edit, approve, or reject. Nothing ships with your name on it until you've said yes.
How it works
- 1
Connect your site, or start one. Paragraph reads your archive to learn your voice.
- 2
It drafts where the wins are: new posts, refreshes, and follow-ups your readers are waiting for.
- 3
You edit, approve, or reject. It learns your taste from every change.
Nothing ships without your OK.
See how approvals workExplore the rest of Paragraph
One agent across drafting, distribution, upkeep, and the approvals that keep you in control.
Frequently asked questions
Yes. It learns your voice from everything you publish, and nothing ships without your approval, so every draft reads like you wrote it.
Posts, newsletters, refreshes of older pages, titles, descriptions, and cover images. If it's made of words on your site, Paragraph can take the first pass.
Only when you want to. It suggests drafts from your archive, your analytics, and what's moving in your niche, and you can hand it an idea any time.
Always. Paragraph is a full publishing platform, and the agent works around whatever you write yourself.
Put Paragraph to work
Start free, connect what you've already published, and let the agent take the first pass while you approve what ships.