Cool things our community did With Virtually Myself® this week (12 Real Examples)
Mar 21, 2026
One of the things we love about building Virtually Myself® is that we learn as much from watching our community use it as they learn from the platform itself.
Every community call, every message, every feature request surfaces valuable insights. And the range of use cases keeps expanding in ways that genuinely surprise us.
So based on our commuinity call today, we thought it would be useful to pull together a snapshot of how people are actually using Virtually Myself® right now, from everyday content creation to strategic business development and everything in between.
Some of these come from our community members. Some come from the founders' own daily use of the platform. All of them are real, and making the business of being an expert easeir and more profitable.
1. Writing Blogs and Articles (Obviously)
This is where most people start, and for good reason.
A leading author (with prominant books in every bookstore you'd visit) recently told us he has "an embarrassing glut of blogs" queued up for the next three months because the platform makes it so easy. But the part that surprised him was that the output was evolving his own thinking. "What is coming back is even better than what I would have written if I just wrote it," he said.
That's the vault at work. It draws on your full body of knowledge, not just what you happen to remember at the time of writing. And because it can make connections across your entire catalogue of ideas, it often surfaces angles you wouldn't have reached on your own in a single sitting.
2. Building an Entire Website
Several of our community members have used Virtually Myself® to write every page of their new websites.
Every single page of the Virtually Myself® site, including the demo page, was written using the platform with very little editing required. The approach is straightforward: describe the page, tell it who the audience is, and let the platform draft copy that reflects your essence, and showcases what you do in your best light, and is strategic to your busines goals.
Nina took it further by asking for two versions of the same page, one written for experts and thought leaders, and another for founders of small businesses with teams. From a single prompt, and no priming, the platform pulled out the different advantages and strengths and customised the messaging for each audience.
Darren is using it to rewrite pages optimised for specific keywords provided by his Google Ads consultant, asking the platform to make the content SEO-friendly and AIO-ready while keeping it distinct enough to avoid duplication penalties.
3. Celebrating Milestones
When Nina hit twenty-five years in business recently, she went into the chat and asked her virtual self how she might celebrate that milestone over twelve months. With no other context, it mapped out a calendar of monthly celebrations that matched her personality, her IP, her offers, and the trajectory she's planning.
Virtual Nina also drafted social posts and emails that charted the journey in a way that felt unmistakably like her - because it was drawing on her thinking, her experiences, her legacy content.
She then asked it for ten business lessons that would be unique to her experience specifically - not just mainstream advice about having the right people around you or playing the long game - but what was genuinely distinctive about her path. It gave her ten lessons that were absolutely bang on.
Two posts, two emails, a blog and a strategic calendar came from that single conversation.
4. Writing Proposals and Business Cases
Alex used this recently after a call with a client who mentioned she needed to write an internal business case before engaging him. Knowing his previous proposals, strengths, and after being briefed on what the client needed following the call, Virtually Alex draw on previous proposals already in the vault. By the end of the day, he had sent her a draft business case.
Her response: she was delighted, and estimated it saved her about a month of work. And yes, of cours ethe business case recommended him :-)
The workflow that made this possible was starting in chat to explore and analyse the key themes for the business case, then moving the strongest output into the writer's room where the personas could fact check and refine it.
5. Business Development Emails
This is one of the most frequent use cases across our community, and one of the areas where the platform consistently saves the kind of thinking time that adds up across a week. Custom emails for invitations, follow ups, introductions, demo invitations, event outreach. Lots of examples were shared.
The vault gives the platform enough context to inject points that are specifically relevant to the person or scenario, formatted in your language, with your voice.
Nina uses this more than any other feature beyond content creation, finding that the platform makes connections between a product, a person, and a situation that she might not have thought to make herself. The result is faster, sharper outreach that sounds like her and lands with relevance.
6. Designing Programs from Scratch
Christopher used the platform to create a coaching program he was conducting with a collaborator into a ten-month couples-in-business program.
The platform proposed a rotating content schedule, topic lists, and integrated business coaching themes with relationship coaching themes across fortnightly group sessions - using his unique IP, frameworks and coaching methodologies because it knows him and how he runs these.
7. Refreshing Training You Have Delivered a Hundred Times
When you have been delivering the same methodology for years and want a new angle, the chat can suggest fresh approaches based on your existing material.
Dermot, who has been teaching presentation skills for over twenty years, asked the platform how to teach the same methodology in a new way. It came back with ideas making connections with his own vault he hadn't considered, giving him a starting point for reworking a program he knows inside out.
Think of it as brainstorming with someone who has read everything you have ever produced and can suggest variations you might not reach when you are too close to the content.
8. Generating Weekly Digests for Members or Clients
Nina created a reusable prompt that generates four short sections each week for her Marketing Me® Accelerator community: something to encourage you this week, something to inspire you, something to challenge you, and a topical insight drawn from recent vault uploads.
The value here is consistency without becoming a bottleneck. If you have fresh inspiration and something to say to client, you say it. But if you are travelling, deep in another project, or your head is in another space, the platform ensures your community still receives something valuable and personal, written in your voice, without you sending the same generic email every week.
The prompt can be handed to an assistant to run through her vault on a weekly cadence, and she can batch twelve at once, review them, and queue them out in advance.
9. Turning Podcast Appearances into Content
Upload a podcast episode where you were a guest. The Virtually Myself® platform instantly transcribes it, summarises it, and lets you chat with the content. From there, you can generate articles, social posts, and emails, all grounded in thinking you have already done.
Kelly recently had a podcast appearance that generated strong feedback, and Marion is now looking to secure more guest spots and turn each one into multiple pieces of content.
This is particularly useful because, as we often discuss, there is a credibility that other people can give you that you cannot give yourself. When someone has invited you onto their show, that is social proof worth leveraging. The platform makes it easy to translate one appearance into multiple pieces of content without starting from scratch each time.
Here's a link to see a demo of this workflow in real time - watch as Nina turns a recent guest podcast appearance into an article, email and suite of social posts.
10. Answering Audience Questions in Real Time
Alex set up a live email interface during a conference session so attendees could email questions to his virtual self and receive responses drawn from a narrowed version of his vault. Rather than waiting for the scheduled Q&A, people could get answers immediately.
Several of those answers were more comprehensive than what he covered in the session itself. He then displayed the questions and responses for the whole room, which created an unexpected layer of engagement.
Darren engaged with the Virtually Alex's email bot over the last weekend, asking questions about becoming a client of Virtually Myself® and getting responses that were detailed and grounded enough that, as he put it, he was able to get to the point of buying without having to talk to anyone. "It sold itself," he said.
We see this as a precursor for coaches and consultants who want to offer asynchronous support to clients, grounded in their own methodology, without needing to be available around the clock.
11. Image Recognition and Content Analysis
A recent addition to the platform analyses images embedded in your files. When you upload a PowerPoint, for example, it strips out each image and describes its content in detail.
Alex tested this with photos from a presentation about leadership and power, and the platform identified architectural landmarks, read text on street signs that he could barely see himself, pulled metadata including the date a photo was taken and which camera was used, and even identified the subject of a historical photo with no additional context provided.
We are genuinely learning more about our own content through this feature.
12. Self-Reflection and Strategic Thinking
Using prompts adapted from thinkers like Dan Pink, some community members are asking their virtual selves deep questions about where they are headed, what they are overlooking, and what makes them genuinely distinctive.
Alex ran a comparison test across ChatGPT, Claude, and Virtually Myself® using the same set of self-reflection prompts. ChatGPT gave generic encouragement. Claude was measured but general. Virtually Myself® told him deeply personal and eerilie accurate things that only it could know. And most importantly, the low-reach do-able things that he could do right now (knowing his personality and proclivities) that would get him the most leverage, the fastest.
Every prompt produced direct, specific, sometimes uncomfortable advice, the kind that only comes from a system that actually knows your history, your patterns, and your blind spots.
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The throughline across all of these use cases is simple: the platform knows you.
And the more it knows you, the more useful it becomes, not just for content, but for thinking, for strategy, for the kind of decisions that are easy to defer when you are running a business on your own.
If you'd like to see this in action and explore what's possible for you join us at an upcoming demo where you'll see a real live client case study in action using the platform and ask the founders your specific questions about how it could work for you.