how to get AI writing to sound like you

Your Voice Profile Doesn’t Create Your Voice — It Reveals It

When someone completes their Aligned Voice Profile and reads it back, the most common reaction isn’t surprise. It’s recognition. They’ll say something like “yes, that’s exactly how I talk” — and then they’ll laugh a little, because they didn’t expect to learn something they already knew.

There’s an assumption people bring to the process that I want to name, because it shapes how they engage with the work. They believe a voice profile creates something — that before you have one, you have a generic AI content problem, and after you have one, you have a distinctive voice. That the profile is what gives you that voice. It doesn’t work that way.

You already have a voice

You developed it over years of client conversations, discovery calls, emails you’ve written at 11pm when you were too tired to be formal, explanations you’ve given to people who didn’t understand what you do. Your voice is the product of your background, your profession, the specific way you think about your field, and the kind of person you’ve become. The problem is that it exists in your head and in your relationships — not in a format that an AI tool can work from.

When you hand Claude a blank prompt and say “write in my voice,” it can’t do that. It has no data to work from. It falls back on patterns from everything it was trained on — polished, generic, competent, and completely not yours.

What the profile actually does

Building a voice profile is closer to an archaeological dig than a construction project. You’re not building something new. You’re uncovering something that already exists and giving it a form that can be handed to a tool.

The questions in the profile process are designed to surface things you know but haven’t articulated: how you explain what you do to someone who’s never heard of it, what you’d push back on in your field, what you assume your clients already understand versus what you always have to explain from scratch, words and phrases that feel like you and ones that make you wince when AI writes them.

Why this distinction matters

If you think a voice profile creates your voice, you’ll approach the process passively. You’ll wait to be given something. You’ll fill out the prompts quickly and wonder why the output still doesn’t sound quite right.

If you understand that the profile reveals your voice, you’ll engage differently. You’ll slow down on the hard questions — the ones that ask you to articulate things you’ve never bothered to put into words because you just knew them. That’s where the real work is.

The clients I see get the most out of their voice profiles are the ones who treat it like an interview with themselves. They write the way they talk. They go long where it feels important. They don’t try to sound good — they just answer honestly.

After the profile exists

Once your voice is documented in a format Claude can work from, the output changes. You’ve replaced a blank slate with a reference. Instead of trying to describe your tone in every prompt — “professional but conversational, warm, not too salesy” — you can be direct: use my voice profile, write a post about [topic]. The heavy lifting has been done once, and you’re not repeating it every time.

The editing process changes too. When AI output doesn’t sound like you, you can usually point to exactly why: it used a word you’d never say, it built to a conclusion you’d have stated up front, it hedged in a place where you’d be direct. The profile gives you language for the gap, which makes the gap easier to close.

The practical version

If you haven’t built your voice profile yet: the goal when you do it is to be specific. Specific beats comprehensive every time. One phrase you actually use is worth more than five paragraphs describing your general tone.

If you have a profile and it’s not working the way you hoped: go back through it and look for places you were being aspirational rather than accurate. The profile works when it reflects how you actually write, not how you wish you wrote.

The voice was always yours. The profile just makes it usable.


Related reading:
What “Write in My Voice” Actually Means to Claude
Why AI Content Never Quite Sounds Like You
How to Get the Most Out of Your Aligned Voice Profile


If writing has been the obstacle, the Aligned Voice Profile is a $37 tool that removes it.

To get my instructions and support while you create your profile and start publishing, try my $5 mini-course (only for those who are serious about starting and finishing the work to create your authentic content engine). Get the $5 AI Voice Fix Mini Course

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