This isn't ChatGPT
with a different skin.

You can absolutely open ChatGPT or Claude and type "write me a LinkedIn post." You'll get something. It'll be grammatically correct. It'll probably have emojis and a call to action and sound like every other AI-generated post on the platform.

That's the problem we built this to solve.

General-purpose AI writes general-purpose posts.

ChatGPT doesn't know what good looks like on LinkedIn. It doesn't know the difference between a post that makes people scroll past and one that makes someone stop and actually read. It defaults to the same patterns every time: emoji openers, dramatic one-line paragraphs, hashtag dumps, and "Agree? Let me know in the comments."

The result is content that technically exists but doesn't actually sound like you. And your network can tell.

What ChatGPT gives you

🚀 Thrilled to share some exciting news! After months of hard work, our team just closed a HUGE partnership! 💪 Here are 3 lessons I learned along the way: 1️⃣ Never give up 2️⃣ Teamwork makes the dream work 3️⃣ Stay focused on the customer What lessons have you learned from big wins? Drop them below! 👇 #partnerships #growth #leadership

What Say Something gives you

Our team just locked in a partnership with one of the largest hotel chains in North America. It took four months of back and forth, a complete rework of our pitch deck halfway through, and a last-minute demo that our engineering team pulled together in 48 hours. The thing that made the difference? We stopped selling the product and started solving their specific loyalty program problem. Sometimes the deal closes when you stop trying to close it.

Not just a prompt. A system.

01

It interviews you first

ChatGPT takes your prompt and runs. Say Something asks you questions designed to pull out the specific details that make a post worth reading. The thing you'd tell a friend at dinner but wouldn't think to include in a draft.

02

It's trained on real posts that work

The system was built by studying dozens of LinkedIn posts that actually perform well, not viral growth-hack content, but thoughtful posts from real professionals. Every voice pattern, structure, and writing rule comes from what actually works.

03

Three drafts, three angles

You get a short, medium, and long version, each taking a different angle on the same material. Pick the one that feels right, refine it, and you're done. No staring at a blank screen.

04

It knows today's news

Say Something has live web search built in. If you want to post about something that happened yesterday, it pulls in the latest information automatically. No copy-pasting articles into a chat window.

Things we will never write.

Every draft runs through a strict filter. If any of these show up, the system catches it before you ever see it.

xEmojis. Zero. None. Ever.
x"I'm humbled/honored/thrilled to announce"
xSingle-line paragraph stacking for dramatic effect
x"Repost if you agree" or "Drop a comment below"
xHashtags of any kind
xFabricated story hooks
xEngagement bait or hot takes
xRhetorical questions as openers
x"Thoughts?" or "Agree?" as closers
xListicle format
xSelf-congratulation disguised as gratitude
xPreachy motivational monologues
xArrows or numbered prompt lists

Professional but human. Specific but not stiff.

Every post follows a simple structure: what happened, why it matters, and a clean close. Not a hook. Not a rhetorical question. Just the thing itself, then the context, then a natural ending.

The system is trained to open with what actually happened, not a manufactured attention grab. To admit uncertainty when you don't have all the answers. To give credit to specific people without tagging your entire company. To write paragraphs that sound like real thoughts, not copywriting.

The result is a post that sounds like you wrote it on a good day, not like a machine wrote it on your behalf.

Try it yourself.

Tell us what's on your mind. We'll turn it into something worth posting.

Start Writing