Every question we have been asked, in one place. Organized by where the question most commonly comes up.
Can’t find an answer? Check the glossary (50 defined terms) or compare Kompozy vs your current tool.
If you produce across 3 or more formats, Kompozy wins on consolidation. If you only work in one format, the vertical specialist in that lane is usually cheaper and tighter.
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Most creators running multiple tools are paying for overlap. Audit your stack: any tool you use less than once a week is a candidate to cut.
from: The 8 best AI content tools in 2026 (honest comparison) →
Google penalizes unhelpful content, not AI content specifically. Well-edited AI-assisted posts rank fine. Focus on the helpfulness signal.
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ChatGPT is a generalist LLM. Kompozy is a pipeline with a Persona Brief, fact-anchor gate, format routing, and publishing layer. They solve different problems.
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A 60-minute episode typically fans out into 25–35 outputs: 4–8 shorts, 12–20 text posts, 4–8 image posts, 1 blog, 1 newsletter.
Yes. Most tools either generate one or require you to upload one. Quality matters — a garbage transcript means garbage outputs.
With Kompozy autopilot, yes — but ramp in over 7–14 days. Run manual review first, then flip autopilot on once the Persona Brief is tight.
Avatar = an AI spokesperson speaks a written script. Generative = the entire video is generated from a text prompt. Clipped = a segment cut from existing long-form video.
Clipped video wins on volume; avatar video wins on brand consistency. Most top creators mix both. Kompozy covers both in one pipeline.
Not entirely. AI video replaces the repetitive daily-post layer. Filmed video still wins for high-production launches and human-driven storytelling.
A scheduler posts content you gave it. A content engine generates the content first. Most "AI schedulers" are schedulers with a caption-writer bolted on; Kompozy is the reverse — a content engine that also schedules.
Yes, if you post heavily to niche platforms Kompozy does not cover. Most users do not need the overlap.
Write a Persona Brief once. Every AI output pattern-matches to it. Review the first 20 outputs, update the brief from edits, then ramp to autopilot.
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AI avatar video replaces 80% of the daily drumbeat. The 20% that cannot be replaced is your highest-stakes launches, keynotes, and authority content.
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A solo founder producing 20+ posts a week typically burns $50–150/mo across tools. Consolidating to Kompozy brings that to $49.
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For most people, ChatGPT at $20/mo is the best all-around pick on versatility and ecosystem. For long-form quality and on-voice writing, Claude is arguably better. There is no single winner — the best tool depends on whether you are drafting generally, writing marketing copy, writing fiction, or editing.
from: The 10 best AI writing tools in 2026 (honest comparison) →
ChatGPT, Claude, and Rytr all have capable free tiers. ChatGPT and Claude's free tiers are the strongest for general writing; Rytr's free tier gives a limited character allowance. Grammarly's free tier is the best free editing layer.
from: The 10 best AI writing tools in 2026 (honest comparison) →
ChatGPT is more versatile and cheaper ($20/mo vs Jasper's $39+/mo Creator); Jasper adds a mature brand-voice system, marketing templates, and team features. For solo or general writing, ChatGPT. For a marketing team needing consistent brand voice across many writers, Jasper can justify the premium — though it runs on wrapped frontier models underneath.
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Not by default. Google does not penalize content for being AI-written — per its official guidance, it penalizes low-value, mass-produced "scaled content abuse." AI-assisted content that is accurate, original, and genuinely useful is fine. See our AI content creation guide for the full breakdown.
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Yes for marketing content. For anything making specific financial claims or performance promises, keep manual review on — do not run autopilot for regulated claims.
BILT AI CRM handles cold outbound (LOI Blasting, cold email). Kompozy handles inbound content creation. Together they cover both sides of the lead pipeline.
No. Persona Shorts use a HeyGen avatar that speaks your script — no real-time camera, no face required. Good for investors who prefer to stay behind the scenes.
Yes. The Persona Brief accepts your reference frameworks verbatim; every output pattern-matches against them.
Yes. Kompozy fills the top of the funnel; your DMs close. The Persona Brief keeps social voice aligned with your sales voice.
The Persona Brief, fact-anchor gate, and pipeline-level routing do what a prompt never will. You also get video, image, blog, and newsletter — not just text.
Yes. Point Kompozy at an RSS feed or webhook from your changelog and every release becomes a social launch post, a blog entry, and a newsletter item automatically.
Not on Agency tier today. Enterprise plans offer white-label options — contact sales.
Typically 3–5 brands depending on output mix. Heavy-video brands burn more credits; mostly-text brands stretch further.
Not if you invest 30 minutes in the Persona Brief. That is the entire point of the brief: kill the generic LLM tone.
Yes. Point Kompozy at your channel via RSS or direct upload; it will turn old videos into fresh social content.
Yes, via our publishing integrations. Schedule from the Kompozy calendar; posts go out at the time you set.
Roughly 40–60 clipped shorts, or 20–30 avatar shorts, depending on which else you produce.
Better, if you invest in the Persona Brief. Ghostwriters capture voice after 10+ hours of interviews; Kompozy captures it after a 30-minute brief and 20 edits.
LinkedIn does not penalize AI content; it penalizes unhelpful content. Well-edited Kompozy output ranks fine.
A tweet-styled image card rendered with your avatar, handle, and styling. Post it to any platform — Instagram, LinkedIn — as a quote-graphic.
40–60 clipped shorts, or roughly 1 Short per day.
Not if they match your brand. The Persona Brief keeps Shorts voice aligned with your long-form voice.
Yes. Carousels are one of the 5 output buckets. Each slide is generated with consistent styling and voice.
Only if you skip the Persona Brief. With a tight brief and a 5-minute edit pass, outputs read as you, not as AI.
Yes. Review the Pipeline Queue each morning; approve or tweak. 15 minutes a day covers everything.
Not yet. Mailchimp is live; Substack is on the roadmap.
No. It generates teasers; the full modules stay gated behind your course platform.
It can be configured in the Persona Brief to include an FTC-style disclosure on relevant outputs.
It generates the content; you post to Google Business manually. Direct Google Business API integration is on the roadmap.
Yes, on the Agency tier — multiple workspaces, one persona per workspace.
Yes. The POV Hook → Demo template is purpose-built for paid cold traffic.
Yes. Upload the manuscript as a source.
Not cleanly. At that size, contact sales for Enterprise credit pooling.
Run manual review permanently for regulated claims. Do not flip autopilot on for anything that could be construed as medical advice.
Threads does not publicly penalize AI content. Quality of engagement matters more than source.
Business page publishing is live; Groups is a Meta Graph API permission we handle per-workspace.
Not deeply. Pair it with a Pinterest analytics tool for keyword input.
Not yet. Mailchimp is live; Substack is on the roadmap.
Via our publishing integrations when Bluesky API access is available to your workspace.
No. Reddit content requires manual posting to maintain account reputation. Kompozy drafts; you post.
Not if you set the canonical tag — Kompozy handles this by default when you publish to both.
Kompozy clips well but does not match OpusClip’s specialist viral-clip detection. The 90% you get plus four other output types is the math for most switchers.
No direct import. OpusClip does not expose an export API. Download the clips you want, then re-ingest the original source into Kompozy for fresh generations.
Two weeks end-to-end: 1 week overlapping both tools, 1 week ramping into Kompozy autopilot.
Kompozy’s defaults test fine on TikTok and Reels. Submagic’s top-tier animated style is more visually striking. If captions are your artistic differentiator, run both.
No. Submagic does not expose a template export. You will rebuild caption style preferences in Kompozy.
No. Kompozy connects to HeyGen via API — your existing avatars stay in HeyGen and become available in Kompozy.
No. Kompozy marks up HeyGen minutes ~2x for orchestration. The math works when you use Kompozy’s other 4 output types — the consolidation saves more than the markup costs.
Yes. Keep both accounts. HeyGen direct for one-offs, Kompozy for the daily pipeline.
Not on Creator or Pro tiers. Enterprise plans offer it — contact sales.
No. Kompozy integrates with HeyGen, not Synthesia. If you have a Synthesia-trained avatar you rely on, consider keeping Synthesia alongside Kompozy.
Kompozy covers 9: TikTok, Instagram, LinkedIn, X, YouTube Shorts, Threads, Facebook, Pinterest, and email. Buffer covers more niche platforms (Bluesky, Mastodon). If you post heavily to those, keep Buffer.
Buffer does not expose a public import API. Export the CSV for reference and rebuild your cadence in Kompozy (it is a 5-minute step, not a migration).
Not today. If watermarking is critical, keep Publer as a lightweight overlay layer.
Yes. Export the CSV for reference. Platform-level analytics live in each platform’s native dashboard anyway.
Basic only. If you run formal approval chains across many seats, keep Hootsuite.
No. That is a Hootsuite / Sprout Social lane we do not compete in.
Close. Repurpose.io has more mature framing / format transforms. For raw mirroring workflows, keep Repurpose.io.
No. Migrate one source at a time to verify parity before consolidating.
No. Jasper is tuned for 500–2,000-word marketing copy. Kompozy writes blogs and newsletters tied to source content — a different job.
Only if your workflow genuinely includes landing pages and long-form email. For daily social plus blog, Kompozy is enough.
No. Kompozy assumes you already know your trusted sources. Discovery is upstream.
Yes. Discovery via ContentStudio, generation + publishing via Kompozy is a valid stack.
For social-first content - short-form video, talking-head explainers, listicle/marketing videos, graphics, and the writing around them - yes, and it also publishes to 9 platforms, which InVideo never did. The one thing it does NOT do is cinematic text-to-video scene generation via Sora 2, Veo 3.1, or Kling. If that specific capability is core to your work, keep a low InVideo tier for it and run both.
No. Kompozy is a generation-plus-publishing engine, not a manual timeline editor. If you do precise, frame-by-frame editing of arbitrary footage, that is a genuine reason to keep InVideo Studio and use Kompozy alongside it for persona-driven generation and multi-platform scheduling.
No. InVideo has no project export API and no voice-clone export, so editable projects and cloned voices stay locked to InVideo. You can download finished MP4s, and you recreate your avatar and voice once in HeyGen (BYO IDs) for use across all Kompozy video formats.
InVideo charges in AI minutes and credits that do not roll over and are consumed even by failed or watermarked generations. Kompozy spends from a credit line per generation across all 18 formats, so a regeneration costs credits but never burns a non-refundable "minute" on a dead render. Creator includes 2,500 credits; Starter is $99/5,500, Pro $299/18,000, Agency $799/55,000.
Creator at 2,500 credits is the honest one-for-one replacement for InVideo Max plus the clipper, writer, and scheduler you were paying for separately. Founding ($39/mo BYO-key) is cheaper if signups are still open before 2026-08-31 and you bring your own model keys; otherwise start on Creator and move up to Starter or Pro only when your monthly volume actually demands it.
First-person perspective video that opens the short — usually a camera POV of the creator noticing or doing something. POV hooks consistently outperform third-person hooks on TikTok cold traffic.
Template shorts cost 20 credits. Creator tier (2,500 credits/mo) covers about 125 template shorts per month, factoring other outputs.
The first 2-3 seconds carry the click. A first-person POV puts the viewer inside the moment before they decide to scroll, which is why it beats a third-person product shot on paid social. The template pairs that hook with a tight demo so the payoff lands while attention is still high.
No. The POV hook can be generated via Kling or HeyGen, or you can supply your own footage. The demo segment is auto-captured, and HyperFrames composes the two with captions and an outro card.
Carousels save and re-share at 3-4x the rate of single images on Instagram. LinkedIn carousels earn the most dwell time of any format on the platform.
8 credits per slide. A 6-slide carousel is 48 credits.
Six is the sweet spot for Instagram and LinkedIn — enough to develop one idea per slide without losing swipe-through. The template sizes to your source, so a denser source can run longer; the goal is one strong claim per slide, not padding.
Yes. The render is brand-exact at both platforms' expected aspect ratios, and you can schedule the same carousel to Instagram and LinkedIn directly from Kompozy.
No. Persona Tweets are styled like tweets but render as standalone image cards. You can post them on any platform.
A screenshot is locked to whatever the original tweet looked like and carries no brand styling. A Persona Tweet card renders with your handle, avatar, and brand-true fonts at full resolution — clean, consistent, and posting-ready for Instagram, LinkedIn, or a blog embed.
Yes. The card is styled like a tweet but is a standalone graphic, so you can turn any line — a quote, a stat, a hot take — into a tweet-style card without ever posting it to X.
Caption-first wins when the script is the content and the face would distract. Avatar shorts win when personality and trust signals matter.
Yes. The full-screen animated caption carries the message on its own, which is why the format works for muted-autoplay feeds. You can add a voiceover or background track, but the words are designed to land with sound off.
Text-dense niches where the claim is the content: finance breakdowns, productivity tips, education, and how-to. Anywhere a face would distract from a number, a step, or a definition, caption-first tends to outperform.
Clipping is good. OpusClip’s specialist viral-clip detection has a lead on edge-case viral moments.
Thirty to ninety seconds is the range that travels across TikTok, Reels, and Shorts. Long enough to land one complete idea, short enough to hold retention. The template clips to that window and captions every word.
Yes. One source episode can produce several framed clips — each a separate render — so a single recording fans out into a week of short-form without re-editing.
Yes. Same source content can simultaneously generate a newsletter draft and an announcement card.
Release notes, changelog entries, feature launches, milestones, and event news. You paste the launch copy and the template renders a clean branded visual sized for the platform you are posting to.
Yes. The same launch copy can render as a tweet card, a carousel slide, and a standalone image — plus a newsletter draft — so one announcement covers every channel without re-writing it per platform.
Yes. Upload or reference both the "before" and "after" state.
Side-by-side or stacked, with an animated reveal between the two states. The template handles the split geometry and the transition; you bring the two assets and the caption copy comes from your Persona Brief.
Anywhere change is the proof: fitness and beauty transformations, SaaS or agency case-study results, and real estate before/after renovations. The format converts because the result is visible in one frame.
No. Use a Persona Shorts avatar instead of face-cam footage. The PiP positioning stays the same.
An article, a tweet, a competitor video, a chart, or any source media. The template positions your face-cam (or avatar) over the source, adds a source-attribution bar, and auto-captions your commentary.
In a corner picture-in-picture position over the source media, so the thing you are reacting to stays visible while your commentary plays. The placement and captioning are pre-set by the template.
Yes, connected via API key. Your HeyGen avatars become selectable in Kompozy.
Per minute, no. Per workflow, yes — Kompozy adds captions, B-roll, scheduling, and 4 other output types on one credit line.
Depends on idea density. A contrarian single-point thread wants 4-6 posts. A framework walkthrough wants 8-12. Kompozy sizes per idea.
Not if you invest in the Persona Brief. Banned words kill the generic LLM opener; reference posts pattern-match to your actual voice.
Styling is governed per-workspace. Per-render customization is on the roadmap.
Yes — H2 structure, internal links, keyword placement, and FAQ sections are default. Tight Persona Brief + source anchoring is what gets them to rank.
Direct Substack integration is on the roadmap. Mailchimp is live today.
They will notice recurring themes, which is the point — your audience learns what you stand for through repetition.
Not if done right. Clipped shorts with attribution drive traffic back to long-form.
Both. Pre-webinar threads tease the content and drive signups. Post-webinar threads extract the best moments.
Not if you pick the right moments. Product walkthroughs, customer wins, and behind-the-scenes clips are all safe.
Yes. One blog post can produce an Instagram carousel and a LinkedIn carousel simultaneously.
Run manual review permanently for regulated industries. Do not flip autopilot on for compliance-sensitive content.
Only if you let it. Kompozy generates teasers — full modules stay gated.
Yes. Upload old issues; Kompozy fans them out as if they were fresh.
2-3 weeks. Autopilot needs time to ramp on the new source; scheduler fills the calendar in advance.
Yes. HeyGen requires an API-enabled tier. Downgrade to the smallest API tier and let Kompozy orchestrate usage.
Voice Design requires the Creator tier or higher — not Starter.
Yes — Blotato powers the publish layer. Each workspace connects its own.
Not yet. Substack is on the roadmap. Mailchimp is live.
Yes, on the free or paid tier. Apify runs the actors; Kompozy consumes the output.
No. Only threads with a label you explicitly grant access to. No inbox-wide reads.
Yes. Workspace export is JSON-structured and available in Settings.
Posting through API is treated the same as native posts for algorithm purposes.
Yes. Connect either Personal or Company profile via Blotato.
Drafts only. Final publish remains a human approval by default.