I Hate Writing. So I Talked This Article Instead.
There's nothing between writing an article yourself and letting AI write the whole thing. The missing middle is talking it out first — and it's the only version I'll put my name on.
I didn’t write this article. I talked it.
I hate writing. I’m not good at it, and I’ve made my peace with that. But my head is full of things I want to say, all the time, and until recently I had no way to get them out. The ideas were there. The path from idea to page wasn’t.
Getting my ideas out used to cost real money
The old version of this went like: find someone, pay them to interview me, pay them to transcribe it, pay them to turn the transcript into something readable. Ghostwriters, content people, an afternoon of someone else’s time per piece. Expensive. So most of the ideas just stayed in my head.
Now I open Outerview and talk to Maya. She interviews me, the transcript writes itself, and then I run that transcript through different AI skills to make different kinds of content. The afternoon-and-an-invoice version became a few minutes of talking. That’s the whole unlock.

There’s nothing between writing it yourself and letting AI write it
Here’s the gap nobody names. You’ve got two options, and they’re at opposite ends.
Write the article yourself: every one of your thoughts goes onto the page, which is the point — but it’s slow, it’s painful, and if you’re me, the result isn’t good.
Prompt an AI to write it: fast and clean, but none of your actual ideas make it in. The model fills the space with whatever sounds plausible. It hallucinates thoughts and hands them back to you as yours. They’re not.
There’s nothing in between. That’s the problem. Talking is the in-between. You speak the ideas, the transcript catches them, and the AI works from your words instead of inventing its own. Your thinking goes in. The AI just shapes it.

When I prompt from scratch, I read it back and it isn’t me
This is the test I trust. I read the thing and ask: is this me?
When I prompt cold, the answer is no. It reads fine, but I don’t recognize the thoughts. I wouldn’t say it out loud, so I won’t put my name on it.
When I talk first and prompt from the transcript, the answer is yes. The ideas in the writing are the ones I actually have. I can stand behind it. I’m not posting AI slop with my face next to it — I’m posting things I believe, in roughly the order I’d argue them. That difference is the entire reason I do it this way.
My ideas are fine. My structure is the problem.
When I write on my own, I get stuck on shape. Where does this start? How does it end? The ideas are all there, jostling around, but I can’t line them up into something with a beginning and a finish.
That’s exactly the part the AI is better at than me. It takes the pile of things I said and gives it a start and an ending. I bring the thinking; it brings the structure. I’ve made a stack of articles this way — a few minutes of talking each, and they come out as things I’m proud to publish. This one included.
Maya asks the question I wouldn’t have asked myself
The reason talking works for me isn’t just that it’s faster. It’s that I’m not talking into a void.
Maya keeps going deeper. She asks the follow-up I didn’t see coming, and it pulls something out of me I wouldn’t have reached on my own. Sometimes it genuinely surprises me how far into a subject it gets. Sitting at a blank page, I’d have stopped three layers up. In a conversation, I can talk all day — and the good stuff usually lives in the layers I only get to because someone kept asking.
Authentic just means you actually thought it
I can’t give you a clean definition of what makes a piece feel real. But I know what I’m aiming for.
I want content that answers the questions people are actually typing into search. SEO that earns its place. But I also want it to be worth reading — relevant to the person who lands on it, not just more text on the internet. Those two goals only meet in one spot: when your own thought is in the piece.
Generate enough content with no point of view and almost all of it is filler. Put your actual thinking into it and it becomes something. The talking is what gets your thinking in there. Everything after that is just polish. (More on sounding authentic on LinkedIn when everyone else sounds like a press release.)
This article started as a conversation, not a blank page — which is the only way I make them now. Try it at outerview.app
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