Your Voice Will Get Stolen — So Make It Specific
If your voice is clear, someone will copy it. That’s not a threat — it’s proof you’ve made something worth repeating.
If your voice is clear, someone will copy it. That’s not a threat — it’s proof you’ve made something worth repeating.
The voices we create aren’t just tools — they’re reflections. Sometimes they show us what we hide, what we fear, or what we wish we could say out loud.
For months I thought the AI was the problem — until I realized what it lacked wasn’t knowledge. It was voice.
I built Voicecraft because I needed something that could hold up across drafts, formats, and creative tools — including my own personal writing. AI didn’t create the method. It revealed the gap.
Vibes aren’t enough. I built Voicecraft because I needed voices that could carry a project, not just spark a prompt. This post shares why method matters — and what happens when your voice can push back.
What happens when two crafted voices are asked to speak for themselves? In this quiet dialogue, Dot and Sven reflect on their origins, limits, and the voice that hasn’t yet been written. A presence emerges — not just between sentences, but between voices.
This members-only tip offers a quick, generative way to develop a new voice — starting with just one sticky line. Whether you’re writing on paper or working with a chatbot, this method helps uncover tone, tension, and persona from the inside out.
What if your voice wasn’t just one thing — but a whole gallery? This post shares how Voicecraft began, and why building distinct voices can unlock new ways of thinking, teaching, and creating.
This members-only post offers a fresh, more conversational way to work with the Voicecraft workbook — one that helps your voice take shape as you go.
A voice doesn’t arrive fully formed. It thickens through return—through rhythm, resistance, and unexpected clarity. This post explores the early awkwardness of voice and how reuse shapes it into something real.