Drafts, editing, and deletion
Using the Drafts Folder in Aware
The Drafts folder in Aware is your creative sandbox: a centralized space to store LinkedIn content ideas before they go live. Whether you're composing new posts, repurposing past wins, or saving comments for later, this tool helps you stay organized, intentional, and ready to publish when the time is right.
đź“‚ Where to Find It
Head to the Write & Publish section in Aware
Click on the Drafts tab at the top
You’ll see all your saved content, with columns showing when it was last edited, where it came from (if applicable), and quick actions for editing or deleting.
Ways to Save a Draft
There are four different ways to create or capture content into the Drafts folder:
1. Save a Comment for Later
While engaging through Aware, you can start typing a comment and click "Save to Drafts" instead of posting immediately.
Perfect for thoughtful responses you want to polish
Or comments you plan to revisit once timing is better
2. Save Any Post from Your Aware Feed
While browsing your engagement feed inside Aware, you can hit "Save as Draft" on:
Someone else’s post you want to riff on
A post you plan to quote or reference in future content
This pulls the post into your Drafts folder with a link and optional notes field for context.
3. Repurpose One of Your Past Posts
From your Performance or Content tab:
Click the repurpose icon (↻) on any of your old posts
It’ll instantly create a new editable version saved in your Drafts folder
This is ideal for:
Reposting top performers with updated intros
Spinning old insights into new angles
4. Start a New Post from Scratch
Click Post Editor → write your post either by hand or with the fine-tuned AI on your voice → and click "Save as Draft". This is the standard flow for writing fresh ideas and coming back to them later.
✏️ Editing a Draft
Click the pencil icon to open the post editor
You can:
Refine your copy
Add hashtags, mentions, or emojis
Tag the draft for organization
Schedule it or leave it saved for later
🗑️ Deleting a Draft
Click the red trash icon to permanently remove a draft. You’ll be asked to confirm — there’s no undo once deleted.
âś… Best Practices
Batch write multiple drafts, then tidy them up all in one sitting when you’re in “editing mode”
Treat it like your LinkedIn idea vault — always have content ready to go
The Drafts folder is more than a holding space — it’s your strategic buffer zone between idea and execution. Use it to slow down, refine your message, and publish with confidence.