Maybe I’m onto something — maybe I’m not.
Over the past few days, I’ve been using Grok to coach me as an independent author over a time span of 5 years. From now on, I plan to use it not only to help me become a better storyteller, but also to connect with readers. In principle, I can ask the AI any question, and it delivers thoughtful, useful advice.
But there’s another aspect to this.
By using Grok publicly as my writing coach, the content also becomes valuable for anyone visiting my X profile and my website. So Grok isn’t just coaching me — it’s marketing me as well.
There hasn’t been much activity on my X feed. I still have some followers from earlier days when I occasionally commented on politics. But those followers don’t engage with my posts about writing books. Usually, when I share a link to a blog post, it gets no likes, shares, or comments. Even promotional tweets announcing free digital books on Amazon rarely receive engagement.
Since I started using Grok, I’ve seen a small increase in interaction. It’s still modest — but it’s a beginning. And as far as I can tell, the engagement feels genuine and organic, coming from people who are actually interested in my author journey.
That’s another benefit of using Grok: besides helping me grow as a writer, it makes my X feed more interesting. And that might eventually attract readers to my stories.
After only a few days, it’s obviously too early to draw conclusions about the entire five-year project. But the start has been promising. Let’s see where this leads.
You can follow the Grok project in real time here: @michael_brig
