You built a brand with design taste. You ship with typography decisions, a locked palette, and a feed that looks considered. Postkeet is the first AI social tool that keeps that taste intact — so your feed scales with every drop, without the obvious AI look your customers can smell.
The default look from every other AI tool — stock-grid composition, soft-lit renders, same five hand poses — reads as template. Your customer scrolls past a hero shot that undermines the $68 candle or the $240 sweater sitting in it.
A boutique content agency runs $4,500–$9,000/month, plus a two-week ramp per launch. You get four decks, a feedback round, and a revision round — for one drop. It doesn't scale to a roadmap with monthly product launches.
Drop a new SKU, restock a sold-out one, spin up a holiday campaign — every event needs hero, carousel, lifestyle, Pinterest, and Stories in one voice. Manual production breaks. Generic AI breaks brand. Something else has to give.
Postkeet's Premium-Hybrid mode generates the hero shot with your product styled into a composed scene — then renders your brand wordmark, your exact serif, your size-scale and kerning, as a typography overlay. Not a filter. A real layout pass. The hero looks like something your design team would've signed off on.
"We were quoting a $6,200/month retainer for what Postkeet ships in a Tuesday morning — and the hybrid tier is the first AI-rendered post I've been willing to put on our grid. Our brand serif renders correctly. That's the whole ball game."
You run one DTC brand. You post 3–10 times a week across Instagram, Pinterest, and Facebook, with the occasional LinkedIn founder post. You want the Premium-Hybrid tier, the asset library for your product shoots, and a feed that scales with every launch.
See Creator plan →You run several DTC brands — in-house across a holding co, or as a boutique agency managing founder-led labels. You need brand isolation, client approvals, white-label reporting, and team seats. Brand lock works per-brand, every one kept typographically distinct.
See Studio plan →Yes — this is the first thing most founders test, and it's the correct thing to test. On Creator and Studio plans you get an asset library: upload your packshots, lifestyle shoots, flatlays, and campaign imagery, and Postkeet composes with your real assets first. Generated product photography is the fallback for moments you haven't shot yet (a pre-launch teaser, a holiday edit, a restock announcement).
When a render is used, it's clearly flagged in the draft view — you approve it explicitly before it ships. Nothing auto-posts on a tier where a render could land on your grid without a human pass.
This is the core of what the Premium-Hybrid tier was built for. You load your brand kit once — wordmark files, exact typography (both display serif and body sans), palette with constraints, spacing logic. From that point the tokens are enforced at render time across every aesthetic, every post type, every channel.
"Drift" is the industry term for when an AI tool uses something close to your brand but renders a generic substitute when it can't find the exact glyphs. Postkeet's hybrid tier doesn't approximate typography — it places your real typefaces into the layout as a compositing pass, the same way a designer would in Figma.
If you connect Shopify (or a direct inventory feed), post templates become inventory-aware. A "launching Friday" asset automatically swaps to "available now" on launch time, then to "final units" when stock falls below your configured threshold, then to "sold out" — or "waitlist open" if you've turned that on.
You can also lock specific assets to specific SKUs, so the right drop post fires at the right moment without you touching the calendar. It's the one DTC workflow the big scheduling tools have never gotten right.
Yes, and it's a primary channel for us — not an afterthought. Pinterest is where your customer lands six months before they buy, and the platform still drives the longest half-life in referral traffic per pin in ecommerce. Postkeet supports native Pinterest publishing with product-tagged pins, the correct 2:3 aspect ratio, SEO-optimized descriptions, and board-aware scheduling so your pins hit the right board at the right cadence.
Holiday season is where the agency model breaks for most DTC brands: four launches, a gift guide, a sale arc, and 30+ pieces of asset — in six weeks. Studio plan users typically set up a campaign group (e.g., "Holiday '26"), upload the capsule imagery, load the campaign brief, and let Postkeet sequence the calendar across Instagram, Pinterest, Facebook and email teaser copy.
You review the calendar, approve or edit in the queue view, and ship. The common feedback is that the hardest single week of the DTC year compresses into one afternoon of review work.
Fourteen days free. No card. Load your brand kit, ship one launch, decide from there.