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Hoʻolaha — Wehe Kua AI

E hoʻololi i kāu ʻike kūʻai ma ka hoʻokumu ʻana i nā pilikuʻi mākau loa, i hoʻolālā ʻia e hoʻonui i ka hoʻouka a hoʻokō i kāu hana akamai.

E Hoʻomaka i Ke Hana Akamai

ʻOiai Ke Wehe ʻana i Nā Kumu

E hoʻōla i nā hola he nui o ka hoʻoponopono me kā mākou hoʻolālā hoʻokahi wehe ʻāpana ʻoi loa.

E Hoʻokumu iā Nā Hoʻolaha ʻAla ʻAlualu

Hiki maikaʻi i kāu nānā e holo i nā kahua pihi like ʻole.

Hoʻokūlike Kūʻu i Ke Kūʻai

Hoʻokō ʻia kā mākou AI holomua tagata paʻa ma nā kū paʻa ʻāpana ʻē aʻe.

E Hoʻoikaika i Kou ʻIke Kūʻai

Me nā kumu hoʻokumu ʻole i kumu, ʻaʻohe palena e noho nei i ka ʻike ʻole.

Nā Mea Hana i Paipai ʻia no ka Hoʻolaha

How a B2B SaaS hoʻolaha hui shipped a multi-channel launch in five working nā lā

A four-person hoʻolaha hui at a mid-stage B2B SaaS company had a feature launch on the calendar with five working nā lā of runway. The hua hui handed over screenshots, a hero diagram, and a few stylized nā kiʻi of the hui that needed to land on the moʻolelo, the in-app banner, three paid social formats, and a LinkedIn announcement, all consistent with the company's hōʻailona palette.

Instead of queuing up a mea hoʻolālā for every asset, the hui batched the nā kiʻi through the mea hoʻoponopono in one sitting. Each portrait got isolated, dropped onto the hōʻailona's flat charcoal backdrop for the LinkedIn variant, and onto the hōʻailona's gradient for the in-app banner. The same source kiʻi flowed into a square Instagram post, a vertical story, a LinkedIn cover crop, and a Pinterest pin, each at the right kiko dimensions because the templates already encode them. The moʻolelo post got the same person on a ʻāʻā backdrop layered over a pouli hero kiʻi.

The launch shipped on day four with all five surfaces consistent, no mea hoʻolālā queue, and one shared hōʻailona kit feeding every asset. The internal request log showed thirty fewer Slack pings to the design hui that pule. The hui kept the hōʻailona kit and re-ua hoʻohana it for the aʻe two launches, cutting the design ask from a pule to a day.

"Our mea hoʻolālā was on another launch and we had four nā lā to ship. Bulk-cutting the hui nā kiʻi and dropping them onto our hōʻailona palette in five social formats meant we shipped on day four, all surfaces consistent, no escalations to design."
B2B SaaS hoʻolaha manager Mid-stage hua launch
"I ua hoʻohana to spend a full day per client recutting nā kiʻi hua for new ad formats. Saving the cutout once and exporting into pūnaewele templates means a campaign refresh takes an hola instead of a day. The clients see it as faster turnaround, I see it as time hoʻi."
hōʻailona mea hoʻolālā Agency-side, retainer accounts
"Every moʻolelo post ua hoʻohana to need its own hero illustration. Lifting kā mākou hui off the keʻena wall onto a maʻemaʻe gradient gave us a recognizable hero treatment we could reuse across thirty posts. Read time and scroll depth went up the quarter we adopted it."
Content hoʻolaha lead Series-A SaaS

Picks that fit a campaign workflow

Common questions for hoʻolaha nā hui

Can the mea hoʻoponopono enforce our hōʻailona colours and palette across a campaign?

The hōʻailona-kit feature stores up to a dozen exact hex colours, fonts, and reusable backdrops in your browser's local storage. Every export pulls from that kit, so a banner from Monday and a story from Friday line up against the same swatches. The kit lives only on your device and is never synced unless you export it as a JSON faila to kaʻana with your hui.

How do we keep a six-ʻano asset set consistent without a mea hoʻolālā touching every export?

mālama the source cutout once, then run it through the pūnaewele templates: Instagram square, story, LinkedIn vertical, LinkedIn cover, Pinterest pin, and an in-app banner if you have one. Each template hard-codes the right kiko dimensions, palekana-area padding, and text-overlay zones, so the cutout lands in the same relative position every time. One source, six on-spec exports, no resizing math.

Is the mea hoʻoponopono palekana for confidential pre-launch assets that we don't want indexed yet?

By default the in-browser pipeline never uploads your kiʻi, so a pre-launch hero or unreleased hua shot stays on your device. Nothing is sent to a server and nothing is logged. For an extra layer, you can clear the mea hoʻoponopono's local storage after the export, which removes any trace from the browser. Pre-launch assets that never leave a mea hoʻolālā's laptop won't end up in a search index by accident.

Ship a multi-ʻano campaign without a mea hoʻolālā queue

mālama your hōʻailona kit once, then run every campaign asset through the matching pūnaewele template.

Hoʻokiʻi i Kou ʻIke Kūʻai I Kēia Manawa