Advantages 👍
- - Speedy drafts: A 1,000-word outline lands in under twenty seconds, shaving hours off my prep time.
- - Template variety: The built-in library covers outreach emails, ad headlines, press releases and even podcast show notes, removing the need to hunt for external swipe files.
- - Tone slider actually works: Shifting from formal to conversational required a single drag; the output changed immediately without sounding forced.
- - Live collaboration: Clients can jump into the same document, leave comments and trigger fresh suggestions without any install.
- - Fair pricing: £19 each month includes unlimited generations, making it cheaper than my old stack of separate grammar, headline and outline tools.
Drawbacks 👎
- - Occasional factual slip: Twice, product descriptions cited features that don’t exist, so a manual check remains essential.
- - Limited third-party links: At present, it only connects directly with WordPress and Notion, leaving out platforms like Squarespace or HubSpot.
- - Learning curve on commands: Power prompts unlock deeper control, yet the shortcut syntax feels cryptic until you’ve read the help guide.
- - No offline mode: A dodgy train connection halted my progress because everything runs in the cloud.
- - Interface clutter: The right-hand panel can hide long form feedback beneath fold-out menus, slowing down quick fixes.
Inner AI is an online workspace that turns scattered thoughts into clear, share-ready writing.
How to use Inner AI
- Sign up at innerai.com and open a fresh project.
- Drop your notes, links or audio into the main panel.
- Pick a template that suits the piece you want to craft—article, email or social post.
- Click “Generate” and watch the draft appear alongside editing suggestions.
- Tweak tone, length or structure with the side controls, then export straight to Word, Google Docs or HTML.
What I learned while working with Inner AI
I spent three weeks weaving the tool into daily client work, swapping between long-form blog posts and snappy newsletter copy. Below is the balance of strengths and weak spots that surfaced during that period.
Advantages
- Speedy drafts: A 1,000-word outline lands in under twenty seconds, shaving hours off my prep time.
- Template variety: The built-in library covers outreach emails, ad headlines, press releases and even podcast show notes, removing the need to hunt for external swipe files.
- Tone slider actually works: Shifting from formal to conversational required a single drag; the output changed immediately without sounding forced.
- Live collaboration: Clients can jump into the same document, leave comments and trigger fresh suggestions without any install.
- Fair pricing: £19 each month includes unlimited generations, making it cheaper than my old stack of separate grammar, headline and outline tools.
Drawbacks
- Occasional factual slip: Twice, product descriptions cited features that don’t exist, so a manual check remains essential.
- Limited third-party links: At present it only connects directly with WordPress and Notion, leaving out platforms like Squarespace or HubSpot.
- Learning curve on commands: Power prompts unlock deeper control, yet the shortcut syntax feels cryptic until you’ve read the help guide.
- No offline mode: A dodgy train connection halted my progress because everything runs in the cloud.
- Interface clutter: The right-hand panel can hide long form feedback beneath fold-out menus, slowing down quick fixes.
Summary
Inner AI shaved production time, offered flexible tone control and handled live feedback smoothly, though it still needs tighter fact checking, broader integrations and a tidier layout. I’m keeping it in my kit, with eyes peeled for the next update.