Tool GuideMarch 2026·VoiceLoom

VoiceLoom: Rewrite Your Content to Sound Like You

Your copy might be technically correct and still not sound like you. VoiceLoom rewrites content to match a target voice. Preserves meaning, changes delivery.

Transparency note: This post was generated using Fieldroot, InkSynth's own SEO content tool, and published without modification to the body copy. The internal links have been updated from the development URL to the production domain. We use our own tools on our own content, and this is what the output looks like out of the box.

The Problem: Copy That Doesn't Sound Like You

You know what you want to say. The problem is the words on your website don't sound like you said them.

Maybe you wrote the copy yourself and it came out stiff. Maybe someone else wrote it and it's technically fine but feels generic. Either way, a visitor reads it and gets a version of your business that doesn't quite match the real thing.

This is a common problem, not just for Fort Wayne and NE Indiana small businesses, but for anyone who has ever looked at their own website and thought: this isn't how I talk.

That's what VoiceLoom is built to fix.


What VoiceLoom Does

VoiceLoom takes content you already have and rewrites it to match a target voice.

You paste in your content, tell it what the voice should sound like, and it returns a rewrite that delivers the same information, same meaning, same facts, in a different way.

That last part matters: VoiceLoom preserves meaning and changes delivery.It is not a paraphrasing tool and it does not rewrite your facts. If your copy says you've been in business for 12 years, the rewrite still says that. What changes is how it sounds: the rhythm, the word choices, the register.


Four Ways to Specify Your Voice

You have four ways to tell VoiceLoom what the target voice should be:

1. Preset style

Choose from a set of built-in voice styles. Useful if you have a general direction in mind but no specific reference to point to.

2. Written description

Describe the voice in plain language. Something like: "Direct and conversational. No jargon. Sounds like a person, not a press release." VoiceLoom uses your description as the target.

3. Pasted writing sample

Have a piece of writing that already sounds right, such as a past email, a blog post, or a paragraph you like? Paste it in. VoiceLoom analyzes the sample and uses it as the voice model.

4. URL to analyze

Point VoiceLoom at a webpage. It reads the content at that URL and extracts the voice from it. Useful if the voice you want to match is already published somewhere.

Each method gets you to the same place: a rewrite calibrated to a specific delivery, not a generic output.


Before and After

The best way to understand what VoiceLoom does is to see it run on real content.

See the live demo, with the same source content processed through VoiceLoom with a specific voice target applied. Same meaning. Different delivery. Read both versions and you'll see exactly what changes and what doesn't.


How to Get Started

Create a free account at InkSynth and run your first VoiceLoom job.

Each run costs 1 credit. Results are delivered by email. If you have copy that's technically correct but doesn't sound like your business, that's the right place to start.

Try VoiceLoom. 1 credit per run.

Free account, starter credits included. Paste your content, set your voice, get the rewrite by email.

Get started free