You know you should post on LinkedIn. You just don't know what to say.
Say Something asks you a few questions about your week, then writes three LinkedIn posts in your voice. No templates. No fill-in-the-blank. Just a short conversation that becomes something worth posting.
A conversation, not a form.
Tell us what happened
A company win, a hard lesson, an industry shift you noticed. You don't need a polished idea. Just something real.
We ask a few follow-ups
Two or three short questions to pull out the details that make a post specific and worth reading. Takes about two minutes.
Pick from three drafts
Three different angles on your story — short, medium, and long. Each one sounds like you on your best writing day. Copy, paste, post.
What most LinkedIn posts look like vs. what yours could.
“Thrilled to announce that our team just closed a major deal! 🎉 This wouldn’t have been possible without our amazing team. Hard work pays off! Who else is crushing their Q4 goals? Drop a 🔥 below!”
We just signed our first enterprise customer. Took fourteen months from first conversation to signed contract. The deal almost died three times — once because we didn’t have SOC 2, once because their procurement team went through a reorg, and once because I sent a follow-up email that was, in retrospect, way too aggressive.
The thing that saved it each time was that our champion inside the org genuinely believed the product would make her team’s life easier. Not because of our pitch deck, but because she’d been using the free trial for six months and had already built three workflows around it.
People with real things to say.
Everything we trained our AI not to write.
Most AI writing tools produce the same patterns because nobody told them not to. We built a kill list — a set of rules about what Say Something will never put in your post. No emojis. No “I’m humbled.” No single-line dramatic paragraphs. No hashtag stacking. No “repost if you agree.”
The result is posts that read like a person wrote them — because the ideas are yours, and the writing follows the same patterns good writers use. See how it works.