I talked for six hours. She handed me back my life in twelve chapters.

Richard Ashworth

Former CEO, Ashworth Capital Partners

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No commitment. 30 minutes.

Ghostpen Studio

The writer who
disappears
into your voice.

Memoirs for retired executives. Thought-leadership books for founders who think in bullet points. Keynote speeches that sound like you wrote them at 2 a.m.

Your story already exists. It just needs a writer.

How It Works

The transparent process.

Most ghostwriters keep the curtain down. Here is exactly what happens from first call to final page.

01 / 05

Two hours. Everything on the table.

We talk. You ramble. I ask the questions your therapist never thought to ask. By the end, I know which chapter opens the book and which story you've been telling wrong for fifteen years.

Deliverable

Story Map Document

Timeline

2 hrs

01

of 05

01
Voice Calibration
Blog post → Chapter excerpt
Raw Material

Voice memo transcript — 11:43 PM

"...so basically the thing I always tell people is, you know, it started with — actually no wait, it started before that, when I was in — god, what year was that — maybe 2003? And my dad, he had this thing he used to say about, uh, about risk and I never really got it until we were about to lose everything in Q3 and I remember thinking, okay, NOW I get it..."

The Chapter

Opening paragraph — Chapter One

My father had a saying about risk that I spent thirty years pretending to understand. He'd deliver it at dinner, fork in hand, with the particular gravity of a man who'd built something from nothing and lost it twice. I smiled. I nodded. I had no idea what he meant. I figured it out on a Tuesday in October, watching $4 million leave our account in eleven minutes.

03
Story Architecture
Email thread → Book architecture
Raw Material

Email to consultant — Monday 7:14 AM

"Re: book outline — ok so I think the core thing is that most people get leadership wrong because they think it's about authority but it's really about trust and I have like 5 frameworks I've developed over 20 yrs that prove this, there's the STAR model and the accountability loop and the thing I call the 3 clocks and I think each one could be a chapter but maybe some should be combined, also should we start with a story or just go straight into the frameworks??"

The Chapter

Chapter architecture — Part II

Part Two opens not with a framework but with a failure. In the spring of 2009, I gave a speech to four hundred people about accountability. Forty minutes. Standing ovation. The next morning, I fired someone for the wrong reason. The three frameworks in this section — the STAR Model, the Accountability Loop, and what I call the Three Clocks — were not invented in a conference room. They were reverse-engineered from mistakes I made in front of people who trusted me.

05
Final Manuscript
Napkin notes → Legacy manuscript (ISBN-ready)
Raw Material

Napkin notes — scanned photo

"Legacy letter ideas: — what I want kids to know about money — the thing about Grandpa's watch — regrets? maybe not regrets — lessons — be specific don't be vague — something about the house on Meridian — tell them I was scared too — don't make it sound like a will — make it sound like I'm still there"

The Chapter

Legacy letter — Final draft

There is a watch in the top drawer of the mahogany desk. It runs eleven minutes fast. Your great-grandfather set it that way and never fixed it, and I never fixed it after him, and I want you to know why. He believed that arriving early was the only form of respect that cost nothing. By the time I understood what he meant, he was gone. So I kept the watch wrong on purpose, so I would keep thinking about him. I want you to have something that keeps you thinking about me.

You already know
what you want to say.

After the Voice Calibration phase, every client says the same thing: “That sounds exactly like me — except I would never have said it that clearly.”

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30 minutes · No commitment · Calendly

The book exists. People read it. My speaking fee tripled. I haven’t thought about the process once — because it sounds like me, not like a book that happened to me.

Margaret Osei-Bonsu

Strategy Consultant, 20-year practice

The next step

The call is where
it begins.

Thirty minutes. You tell me the story you’ve been meaning to write. I tell you whether I can write it, and what the first chapter looks like. No proposal. No pitch deck.

We talk about your story, not my process

I tell you which chapter opens the book

You leave knowing if this is worth pursuing

Book a Story Call

Free · 30 minutes · Calendly scheduling

Ghostpen Studio · Est. 2019