Ghostwriter quality. No retainer.
Hiring a LinkedIn ghostwriter costs $2,000 to $5,000 a month. You get on weekly calls, review drafts that don't quite sound like you, and still end up rewriting half of it. There's a better way.
No retainer. No contracts. No minimum commitment. Open the tool, have a conversation, get your drafts.
Instead of a 30-minute weekly call with a ghostwriter, you spend five minutes answering questions in a chat.
drafts every time. A ghostwriter sends you one draft and you go back and forth. This gives you three options up front.
They're expensive, slow, and still don't sound like you.
A good ghostwriter needs weeks to learn your voice. They schedule weekly calls to extract your ideas. They send drafts that are close but not quite right. You rewrite sections, send it back, and the final version still has that slightly-off quality — like someone who knows your vocabulary but not your rhythm.
Say Something skips all of that. It asks you direct questions about what happened this week, pulls out the details that matter, and writes three drafts that follow the patterns real writers use — not the patterns LinkedIn influencers use.
Like a ghostwriter on call. Without the invoice.
Share what happened
A board meeting that shifted your thinking. A customer call that surprised you. A hire you're proud of. Something real from your week.
Quick interview
Two or three follow-up questions to get the texture — the specific numbers, names, and moments that make a post yours and nobody else's.
Choose your draft
Three options. Different lengths, different angles. Each filtered through a kill list that bans emojis, engagement bait, and every cliché that makes AI posts obvious.
The ghostwriter you were thinking about hiring.
CEOs & Founders
You don’t have time to write posts. You barely have time to think about them. Five minutes gets you three options.
Sales Leaders
Your team should be posting but they’re not writers. This makes it easy enough that they actually do it.
CMOs
Employee advocacy programs fail because nobody wants to write. This removes the friction.
Professionals
You can’t afford a ghostwriter. But you can afford five minutes a week.