The Secret Economy of Professional Ghostwriting
Most people think writing for others is a low-paid grind, but the truth is that high-net-worth individuals and busy tech founders are desperate for voices that sound like them. I started ghostwriting on a whim, and within six months, I was pulling in over $6,000 a month without ever putting my own name on a byline. It is not about writing books; it is about owning the narrative for people who have the money but lack the time.
📹 Watch the video above to learn more!
What Exactly is a Ghostwriting Agency?
Unlike traditional freelancing where you bid for scraps on platforms like Upwork, a ghostwriting agency focuses on authority positioning. You are essentially a consultant who manages the personal brand of an executive or creator. You write their LinkedIn posts, their newsletter, and their thought-leadership articles. You are the invisible hand shaping their public reputation.
Why This Model is Recession-Proof
The market for personal branding is exploding. Every CEO knows they need a presence on platforms like LinkedIn or X (formerly Twitter), but they cannot write a coherent post to save their lives. Because you are selling authority rather than just words, you can charge premium retainers. Clients aren’t paying for a blog post; they are paying for the status and leads that come with a strong personal brand.
How to Build Your Agency From Scratch
You don’t need a journalism degree or a massive portfolio to start. You need a process and a willingness to reach out to the right people.
Step 1: Choose Your Niche
Don’t be a generalist. Pick a specific industry where the clients have deep pockets. Think SaaS founders, venture capitalists, or specialized medical consultants. When you understand the jargon of a specific industry, your value skyrockets.
Step 2: Create a ‘Proof of Concept’
Before you pitch, write three high-quality samples in the voice of a hypothetical CEO in your niche. If you are targeting real estate investors, write a series of LinkedIn posts that sound like a seasoned developer. This is your portfolio.
Step 3: The Cold Outreach Strategy
Skip the job boards. Go directly to LinkedIn. Search for founders who have a profile but haven’t posted in three weeks. Send a short, personalized DM: “I noticed you have a great vision for [Industry], but your feed has been quiet. I’d love to draft a few high-impact posts for you for free—if you like them, we can talk about a monthly retainer.”
Step 4: Productize Your Offer
Once you have a client, don’t charge hourly. Sell a ‘Personal Brand Package.’ For example, $2,000/month for 12 LinkedIn posts and one newsletter. This makes your income predictable and scalable.
Realistic Earnings and Expectations
When you start, you might land your first client at $500 per month. That’s your first dollar earned. Within three months, as you refine your voice-matching skills, you can easily scale to $2,000 per client. With three clients, you are at $6,000 monthly. The time investment is roughly 10-15 hours per week once you master their voice.
Essential Tools to Master
- Taplio: The gold standard for scheduling and analyzing LinkedIn content.
- Otter.ai: Use this to record 15-minute weekly interviews with your clients to gather their ‘raw’ thoughts.
- Notion: The best place to organize your content calendar and client drafts.
- ChatGPT: Use it as a drafting assistant, but never as the final writer. Your human touch is the value.
Common Pitfalls to Avoid
Don’t Over-Promise
Never promise viral reach. Promise consistency, quality, and accurate representation of their brand voice. Viral success is luck; consistency is a strategy.
Don’t Use Generic Templates
Clients can smell AI-generated fluff from a mile away. If your writing sounds like a robot, you will lose the contract. Always edit heavily to ensure the personality shines through.
Don’t Ignore the Data
If a post performs poorly, analyze why. Use the metrics to inform your next week of content. Being data-driven makes you indispensable to your clients.
Your Next Step
Stop waiting for the ‘perfect’ time. Today, identify five potential clients in a niche you understand. Draft one piece of content for each of them. Send those drafts over, not as a sales pitch, but as a genuine effort to help them grow. That single action is the bridge between where you are and a recurring income stream that pays you while you sleep. Go get them.
