You Don't Have Time to Write a Book. That's the Point.
You’ve been saying it for years. “I don’t have time to write a book.” “Maybe when things slow down.” “Someday.”
Here’s the truth: you’re right. You don’t have time.
You don’t have time to sit down for four hours a day and write chapters from scratch. You don’t have time to learn story structure, narrative pacing, and seventeen different ways to handle flashbacks. You don’t have time to stare at a blank screen wondering why the words won’t come.
Nobody has that kind of time. Not CEOs. Not coaches. Not the retired executive who thought retirement would finally be relaxing.
I’ve ghostwritten 113+ books. I’ve worked with Fortune 50 executives whose books helped them raise over $30 million in venture capital. And here’s what I’ve learned: the people who get their books written aren’t the ones with more time. They’re the ones who found a different path.
The Time Myth
When someone tells me they don’t have time to write a book, they’re really saying they don’t have time to write a book the way they imagine it has to be written.
They see themselves alone in a cabin somewhere, laptop open, coffee steaming, grinding out pages like Hemingway. They see months of isolation, sacrifice, and discipline they know they can’t sustain.
That’s one way to write a book. It’s not the only way.
Your book doesn’t need your typing. It needs your stories, your expertise, your perspective. The writing itself is mechanical. The content is what matters.
What It Actually Looks Like
When I work with clients, their time commitment looks like this: one to three interviews per week, about an hour each. We talk. They tell me their stories, share their frameworks, explain what they’ve learned over decades in their field. I record everything, transcribe it, and turn their spoken words into polished chapters.
That’s it. An hour here, an hour there, talking about things they already know.
No blank page. No writer’s block. No learning curve. Just conversation.
I’ve worked with surgeons who operate twelve hours a day. They found time. I’ve worked with parents of young children, caregivers for aging parents, people in the middle of career transitions and health crises. They all found time.
Because it wasn’t about time. It was about finding the right path.
The Math
Let’s say you need 60,000 words for your book. A solid business book or memoir runs about that length.
Writing that yourself at 500 words per day, you’re looking at 120 days of writing. Four months of daily discipline, assuming you never miss a day, never get stuck, never rewrite anything.
Now add the learning curve. Figuring out structure. Wrestling with transitions. Cutting the chapters that don’t work. You’re looking at a year. Maybe two. Maybe never.
Or you could spend 20 to 30 hours total in conversation with someone who’s done this hundreds of times. You’d have a finished manuscript in six months.
The question isn’t whether you have time. The question is how you want to spend it.
The Cost of Not Having the Book
Here’s a calculation most people never do.
If you bill at $500 an hour as a consultant, and you spend 300 hours writing your own book, that’s $150,000 in opportunity cost. Time you could have spent serving clients, building your business, being with your family.
A ghostwriter costs a fraction of that and gives you back all those hours.
But it goes deeper than money.
The speaking engagements you didn’t get because you had no book to establish authority. The clients who went with your competitor who did have a book. The legacy you didn’t leave because “someday” never came.
The Real Obstacle
When you say “I don’t have time,” you’re saying “this isn’t important enough yet.” And that’s fine. Maybe it isn’t. Maybe the book can wait.
But if it is important, if you’ve been carrying this story or this knowledge around for years, if you know the book needs to exist, then the time objection is just a wall you built to protect yourself from starting.
You don’t have to write your book alone.
You don’t have to figure out structure, wrestle with prose, or learn a craft that takes years to master. You don’t have to sacrifice your evenings and weekends. You don’t have to choose between the book and everything else in your life.
You can just talk. Tell your stories to someone who knows how to capture them. Share your expertise with someone who can shape it into something readers will devour.
Your job is to know what you know. My job is to turn it into a book.
Five Years From Now
What do you want to be true?
Do you want to still be carrying this book around in your head, waiting for a magical window of free time that never opens? Or do you want to be holding the finished product, seeing your name on the cover, knowing your story exists in the world?
The people who get their books done aren’t the ones with more time. They’re the ones who decided to stop waiting.
You have time for what matters. The only question is whether this matters enough.
If you’ve been carrying a book around in your head for years, let’s have a conversation. No pitch. No pressure. Just a chance to talk about your book, what’s stopping you, and whether working together makes sense.
Schedule a free consultation:
https://contact.thewritingking.com
Your book won’t write itself. But you don’t have to write it alone.

