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@ScriptCraftista

30+ books ghostwritten for founders & executives generating $$$$ | LinkedIn/X Ghostwriting · Ebooks · Narrative Strategy | 7 yrs | DMs open

Katılım Temmuz 2023
144 Takip Edilen27 Takipçiler
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Scripen@ScriptCraftista·
@nikitabier A real good news that brings relief to the creators like us.
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Nikita Bier
Nikita Bier@nikitabier·
We're rolling out a small tweak to boost visibility of your posts to your mutuals (people who you follow back). We noticed this data was missing from the algo and it made your friends appear less in your replies. This resulted in the reply section feeling more like a battleground with people you don't recognize. This should also help clusters form around interests more easily, which many people have asked for.
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Scripen@ScriptCraftista·
@Kelvincreates Genuinely packed with information. Just curious, how did you make sure you find the right people using search on X? I find it the most challenging, can you make a post on this? Thanks!
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Kelvin 👻
Kelvin 👻@Kelvincreates·
𝕏 is boring when you don't earn from it. i don't know how people build a business and still post for fun. every day: → post 2+ times → engage with 200+ accounts → pay for 𝕏 Premium that was me months ago. chasing vanity metrics thinking i was making progress. then i started cold outreach. it showed me if my content got attention. it showed me if people would pay for my offer. getting rejected in the dm game taught me more than months of posting. that's when 𝕏 stopped being social media and started becoming a business.
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Scripen@ScriptCraftista·
Day 29 as a Solopreneur One thing I’ve noticed after working with many founders: The ones who get the best results from their content are usually the ones who are willing to slow down and think clearly first, instead of rushing to post. It's not about chasing the next trend but being mindful about what's going out as content. Whether if your content is connecting with your audience well. Solving their problem or not. Or is it for them or you only. Once the thinking is done, content is bound to work in your favours. Just like how it has been working for me for the past 29 days (without me doing anything special other than posting content) When I started this journey I was at 934 followers, today I am at 1021 followers, all done naturally and organically. And 3-4 inbound leads till now. What is your biggest block of thinking as a founder?
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Scripen@ScriptCraftista·
Day 24 as a Solopreneur (founder's story) A founder came to me wanting to write a book. The first draft was 40 pages about himself. His journey, struggles, vision and company milestones. All real. All well-written. But all completely useless to the reader. I asked him one question: "Who is reading this, and what problem does it solve for them?" He went quiet. He had written 40 pages and never once thought about the person holding the book. This is the single most common mistake founders make when they decide to write. They treat the book as a legacy project. A monument to what they built. But the reader doesn't care about your monument. They care about one thing: what does this book do for me? When we rewrote it, same story, same experiences but told through the lens of what the reader needed to hear, everything changed. The book stopped being about him. And started being for them (readers). That's the difference between a book that sits on a shelf and one that opens doors. PS: It's day 23 and I am loving the work im doing. But honestly some days its tough because I have to do everything myself however it's still fun at the end of the day I enjoy what i do.
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Scripen@ScriptCraftista·
Day 23 as a Solopreneur Last week was a busy one. I couldn't post consistently because I was in meetings with founders/coaches who reached out to me. Some of them taught me lessons worth remembering. Others made me feel genuinely valuable. And many of them ghosted me. Yeah, I got ghosted too. I know ghosting hurts but it's part of the process and it is also the thing which makes it interesting to continue. The lesson here is--do not take it personal. Sometimes it may feel like they rejected us but the truth is they didn't. They may be too busy to decide at this moment so they preferred to go quiet. That is not rejection but just life getting in the way. I learned to not take it personal. Those founders/coaches are humans and humans forget things, it's absolutely normal. That does not mean your work is not worth it. It just means the timing was not right. Yet.
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Scripen@ScriptCraftista·
Day 19 as a Solopreneur It’s fun to talk to founders, get to know their products and understand their vision. Then implementing all those into my work and writing content in a strategic way to deliver the best result. Im loving it 😊
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Scripen@ScriptCraftista·
Most founders have strong ideas and real experiences. What they usually lack is someone who can help them organize those ideas into a clear structure that serves the reader. That’s the real job of a ghostwriter.
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Scripen@ScriptCraftista·
Day 16 as a Solopreneur Outreach is hard as a ghostwriter but so is writing. So is building your personal brand. So is attract right audience/customer for your work. I have been writing pre-AI tools era. The most challenging part of my job has been to THINK. Think strategically. Mindfully. Emotionally. Empathetically. In order to deliver the result that bring profitable outcomes. Be it via ebook ghostwriting or thought-leadership content. Nothing in this life comes easy, also if it comes easily it wouldn't stay anyway. My journey has taught me to be brave, bold and keep going anyway. Because hard is the new easy. What's your thoughts on this?
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Ricardo Dias
Ricardo Dias@theslowtell·
hi @X algorithm i want to connect with people who: - have small accounts but real signal - are building before it looks like building - care more about trust than followers - are figuring it out in public - notice patterns others miss if you are creating something useful before it becomes easy to explain, say hi. people say follower count matters. maybe it doesn't. or maybe the interesting work happens before anyone is counting. sometimes the best stuff is still under the radar, not even trying to be seen yet.
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Scripen@ScriptCraftista·
The biggest difference between a book that gets read and one that gets ignored is rarely the story itself. It’s whether the author made the reader the main character, not themselves. Founders write their book thinking that it’s about them but it rarely is. The truth is people always care about what they are getting in exchange of spending their time reading your book. And if it’s not valuable, they will smell it from afar. That’s why it’s crucial to write book in such a way that your readers always feel they are the one benefitting from it the most. Like if they don't finish it, they'll miss something real. That shift, from author-centered to reader-centered, is exactly what I help founders make.
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Scripen@ScriptCraftista·
Day 15 as a Solopreneur Organic growth is difficult not really difficult but time-taking and wherever there is time involved, a human's patience starts wavering. But patience is the only thing that makes someone successful or not. Without patience, its hard to grow. I started my journey on X 2 months back and I'm currently at 28 followers, maybe 10k+ impressions (don't know the exact number because i need 50 followers to see the full insights). What this journey taught me is that if I keep up showing up consistently and focuses on doing my thing, I will definitely have a great brand by the end of this year. Patience is definitely going to be tested and I am ready for that. Because that's the lesson of my journey that I have learned so far. Wat has been your learning in your journey? What did you find most hard to do?
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Scripen@ScriptCraftista·
Here’s how most founders approach writing a book, and why it usually doesn’t work well: They sit down and start writing everything they know. Their experiences, their lessons, their journey. While all of it is valuable, the book slowly turns into a long personal diary instead of something useful for the reader. The result? Readers feel lost, the message gets diluted, and the book rarely creates the impact the founder hoped for. This is extremely common. What changes when you work with a ghostwriter is simple but powerful: Instead of writing *about* yourself, we focus on writing *for* the reader. I take your stories and lessons and structure them in a way that actually helps someone else. Whether it’s a self-help book, business lessons, memoir, or fiction, the goal is always the same: the reader should walk away feeling like they gained something. If you’ve been wanting to write a book but keep getting stuck or feeling like it’s becoming too scattered, DM me I’ll send you the simple framework I use. Ps: Have you ever felt that a book you were writing (or reading) lost its direction halfway through?
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Scripen@ScriptCraftista·
Day 14 as a solopreneur Here is what 15 days of outreach has taught me: The founders who need you most are not always the ones who respond first. Sometimes the silence is not rejection. Sometimes they are just not ready yet. Because of any XYZ reasons. Keep going anyway. Because the moment you stop is the same moment you accept you are giving up. And giving up should not be a style of a solopreneur. Btw Day 12, and Day 13 were weekends and I took an off on Sunday, enjoyed time with family. So didn't post the update on that. But here we are at Day 14, and we have made 1002 genuine connections on LinkedIn (all organically). Woohoo! I never thought I'd ever cross the 1k mark, but here we are. It shows that showing up consistently not just work for you but for your entire brand. Signing off, see you tomorrow ;)
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Madz
Madz@heyizmadz·
After helping 100 personal brands sell their products online, I've realized the bottleneck was almost never consistency. It was poor communication. Too much fluff, vague promises, paths & timelines. People take words for granted. They choose words that create friction instead of removing it.
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Scripen@ScriptCraftista·
Day 13 as a Solopreneur Growing on X is no joke. I always wonder at the end of the day after finishing all my work, what extra do i need to do to get there. Or What am i missing? Or Is there something that im not following? These questions sometimes annoy me but they also make me realize the fun of it. I mean what’s the point of getting something so easily? If im working hard today to grow here and its taking time, im sure when the results come, I’ll genuinely be proud of myself for not quitting. And just the thought of that makes it even more enjoyable. Happy Sunday you all!
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Scripen@ScriptCraftista·
Day 11 as a Solopreneur ghostwriter The real work in ghostwriting isn’t typing words. It’s sitting with the founder’s thoughts and turning them into something clear, structured, and valuable for the reader. That’s the part most people underestimate. It's not easy, it requires listening skills and empathy. To be truly able to observe their life and then portraying it in a structured book or thought-leadership content. It's fun though.
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Scripen@ScriptCraftista·
Here’s how most founders struggle with writing their own ebook: They start with a strong idea and powerful personal experiences. But as they keep writing, the book slowly loses direction. It becomes a collection of their thoughts instead of a clear message for the reader. Many founders end up with hundreds of pages that feel scattered because they never learned how to properly structure a book. This is where ghostwriting changes everything. I help founders take their raw ideas, stories, and lessons and turn them into a well-organized manuscript that actually guides the reader from start to finish. Whether it’s a self-help book, business lessons, memoir, or even fiction, the goal is the same: the reader should feel like the book was written for *them*. Structure is what turns a good story into a book that people actually finish and remember. If you’ve been thinking about writing a book but feel stuck on how to organize your thoughts, DM ‘CLARITY’ and I’ll send you the framework I use with founders. What’s one book you started reading but couldn’t finish because it felt all over the place?
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Scripen@ScriptCraftista·
@mabhi1999 @Invook_ai Start with what doesnt take much of your energy. Invook is already built as far as I know so focus on its growth while on the other if you afford in terms of time and energy, start with other projects. Here you need to decide smartly
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Abhishek Kumar
Abhishek Kumar@mabhi1999·
need your help in deciding. Currently I am building @Invook_ai and Invook is absolutely need in my life. Few year ago, I registered an LLP company, which I didn't close and kept filling nil GST (India). Now I am confused. Should I close it or Build some small projects under LLP ? I do love playing with new technologies. I also build some small utility apps to assist me. The question I want to ask is: Should I fully focus on Invook or bootstrap with other projects ? I do inspired by @levelsio @marclou and their works.
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Scripen@ScriptCraftista·
@KevinFengX We are not supposed to work everyday and no every day is supposed to be productive. Sometimes we need break and rest to reset our minds to get the mental clarity we actually need for all our decisions
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Kevin Feng
Kevin Feng@KevinFengX·
I had no idea what to do today. Didn't start my day with intention. No to-do list. No priority tasks. No non-negotiables. Before I knew it, it was 4 PM. I felt like I had wasted the entire day. Brain fog was through the roof. And then I journaled for 15 minutes. I came out of that journaling session with complete mental clarity. I knew exactly what I had to do next. A reminder that not all your writing needs to be for someone else. Sometimes, it's good to just write for yourself.
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