LinkedIn Content Intelligence Pipeline

Curate smarter. This workflow continuously finds and flags the most useful articles for AI and automation in home healthcare, so you can post with confidence on LinkedIn and Facebook without drowning in noise.

What it does

  • Monitors 3 curated RSS feeds and select industry email newsletters

  • Scores each story for relevance to home care operations and automation

  • Sends high-scoring articles to Telegram for quick review and posting

  • Creates a lightweight archive for future reference (optional)

 

Why it’s valuable

  • Consistent thought leadership without daily manual hunting

  • Signal over noise with an AI rubric tuned to home care operations

  • Faster content decisions that match your audience and positioning

 

Ideal for

  • Solo founders and small teams who post weekly on LinkedIn or Facebook

  • Home care operators and advisors building an authority narrative

  • Agencies supporting healthcare clients who need consistent, relevant content

https://github.com/Luke-McNeur/discovery-call-booking-funnel

How it works

  • Ingest: RSS watchers and an IMAP listener capture new stories from your feeds and newsletters

  • Evaluate: An AI model applies a fixed rubric focused on home care operations, automation, compliance, and outcomes

  • Filter: Only stories that meet the score threshold pass through

  • Notify: You receive a Telegram alert with title, summary, link, and the reason it scored well

  • Optional log: Archive to Sheets or Airtable for weekly roundups and analytics

 

The scoring lens

The AI favors articles that:

  • Directly involve AI, automation, ML, or digital health in home care

  • Address operational pains solvable by automation such as staffing, scheduling, documentation, intake, onboarding, retention, or no-shows

  • Touch regulatory or quality programs where automation helps such as CMS, HHVBP, documentation, or metrics

  • Cover enabling trends, technology adoption, digital transformation, or data and predictive outcomes
    It downranks purely clinical content without an operations or technology angle.