What it does
Responding to every comment and DM in a consistent voice is slow, so Reply Helper does the drafting for you. You paste the message someone sent, and it returns three reply variants written in your brand voice (pulled from your onboarding brief and any active style references): a warm acknowledgement, a direct answer, and a curious opener that invites more conversation. You can optionally tell it which platform the message is on and what the original post was about so the tone fits. Every set you generate is saved to your reply history so you can revisit or reuse past drafts. Nothing is auto-posted: you choose a draft, edit it if you want, copy it, and send it from the platform yourself.
How to use it
- 1
Open Reply Helper
Go to the Replies section in your dashboard (/dashboard/replies).
- 2
Paste the comment or DM
Drop in exactly what the person wrote (up to 1500 characters) so the drafts match their energy.
- 3
Add optional context
Pick the platform and type a short note about the original post (up to 800 characters) to sharpen the tone — both are optional.
- 4
Generate the drafts
Click Generate replies (or press Cmd/Ctrl+Enter) to get three variants labeled Warm acknowledge, Direct answer, and Curious open.
- 5
Pick, copy, and send
Choose the variant that fits, tweak the wording if needed, hit Copy, then paste and send it from the platform yourself.
- 6
Revisit past drafts
Open History from the Reply Helper header to see your last 100 generations, newest first, and delete any you no longer want.
Tips
- Paste the message verbatim, including emoji and slang — the drafts mirror the sender's tone, so a cleaned-up paste loses that match.
- Filling in the platform and original-post context produces noticeably more relevant drafts than leaving them blank.
- Treat the three variants as starting points: the wording is yours to edit before you send, and the angle labels (warm, direct, curious) help you pick fast.
- Keep your onboarding brief and style references up to date, since that is what makes the replies sound like you rather than generic.