Congratulations — you’re not wearing a mask!
Your voice is a striking shadow right now. We’re going to color it in.
- Your pages sound suspiciously like whoever you read last.
- Every new project starts with trying on styles like outfits. None of them zip up right.
- You have an easier time naming what you’re NOT.
I know we’re not supposed to play favorites, but this one is clearly mine.
As the world’s first iPod Silhouette, I know a thing or two about being defined by your edges. In an era when every ad sold a famous face, this ad campaign blacked ours out completely: a lone dancer against a wall of neon.
It became one of the most iconic campaigns in advertising history because of everything it left out.
A silhouette is unmistakable from its edges alone.
And so are you.
Knowing what you’re NOT isn’t a gap. It’s the sharpest outline there is.
You are The Silhouette!
You can’t say what it IS, but you know exactly what it’s NOT. Every bio and pitch makes you panic because there are just so many ways you could answer.
The great thing is, the Silhouette is a compass. Most writers can’t articulate their edges at all. You lead with them.
The myth: your uniqueness has to be invented.
It’s already there. It just has to be uncovered.
Actors don’t build characters from scratch — they use specific techniques to reveal what’s been there all along. Voice works exactly the same way. You don’t make it up. You find its edges.
My favorite lesson in the 3 Hollywood Secrets to Unforgettable Author Voice Workbook doesn’t teach you what your voice is — it tells you what it’s not. It was built especially for you. (Jay-Z or Tide? You’ll see.)
One sentence. In 20 minutes*. The outline you’ve been circling, finally colored in.
*But feel free to spend as much time as you like with it, and return to it again and again.
Color in the silhouette. Reveal the voice.
- The full 20-minute video presentation — straight from casting sessions and film sets
- The EXPANDED workbook, with new exercises (including the Voice Sample Comparison and the Anti-Voice Exercise)
- A large-font format, friendly to visually impaired writers
- Your one-sentence voice anchor — in about 20 minutes
Watch it today. Know your voice tomorrow. Then finish your book.