Every creator has more ideas than hours. The graveyard of great content isn't the idea — it's everything after the idea: the script that never got written, the thumbnail that never got designed, the caption rewritten at 11pm, the post that never went out.
PipeLoom started as an internal machine built by an operator who runs companies by day and a content channel by night — someone with a camera, a point of view, and exactly zero spare hours for the production line behind a post. So the production line got automated: an idea agent that pitches like a producer, a script writer that knows hooks and retention, a humanizer that keeps your voice yours, thumbnail and caption specialists, video enhancement, b-roll generation, and a board that moves the work through it all.
It worked. One person started running a full multi-channel content operation in the gaps of a working day. PipeLoom is that machine, opened up for every creator.
You do the two things only you can do. Pick the idea. Press record. Everything else — scripting, packaging, thumbnails, captions, enhancement, publishing — is loom-work, and loom-work should be automated.
Your voice is the product. Every draft passes through a humanizer tuned to sound like you, not like AI. Every agent is yours to edit — its audience, its positioning, its prompt.
Honest metering. You pay for what the AI actually does, from a credit balance you can see, with every call itemized. No seats, no tiers of locked features.
PipeLoom runs Claude (Anthropic's frontier models) for ideation, scripting, and packaging, with specialized video models for enhancement and b-roll. It's hosted on Google Cloud and built to run your whole pipeline without you babysitting it — email an idea in from your phone and it's on your board before you pocket it.