Ghostwriting Guide
Helps you write content that authentically matches another person's voice and style. Analyzes existing writing samples to identify linguistic patterns, vocabulary choices, sentence structure preferences, and tonal markers.
Usage
Provide samples of the person's existing writing (blog posts, tweets, emails, speeches) and describe the new content needed. Specify the topic, format, and publication context. The more samples provided, the more accurate the voice matching.
Examples
- "Here are 5 of my CEO's LinkedIn posts. Write 3 new posts about AI adoption in manufacturing in her voice"
- "Analyze these blog posts by our founder and draft a keynote speech introduction for a tech conference"
- "Match this author's essay style to write a book foreword on sustainable business practices"
Guidelines
- Study sentence length patterns: some writers favor short punchy sentences while others prefer flowing complex structures
- Identify signature phrases, recurring metaphors, and vocabulary preferences unique to the person
- Match the emotional range: some writers are consistently optimistic while others blend skepticism with hope
- Preserve the person's opinion tendencies; don't make a cautious writer sound overly enthusiastic
- Read the final draft aloud to catch voice inconsistencies that look fine on screen but sound wrong spoken