Boston, MA — 2026-05-28

Concepts of a Book Turns Document Piles Into Manuscripts Without AI Ghostwriting

One-time purchase tool assembles sermons, journals, and transcripts into structured DOCX drafts using the author's own words

Website Screencapture

Archieboy Holdings has launched https://www.conceptsofabook.com/, a five-stage AI workflow designed for writers who have already done the writing but cannot turn their accumulated documents into a book manuscript. The tool targets a specific and underserved gap: authors who arrive with 50, 100, or even 200 source files — sermons, journals, interview transcripts, workshop notes — and need an organizer rather than a generator. Unlike AI writing tools that produce text from a prompt, Concepts of a Book works exclusively with material the author has already created, assembling it into a chapter-structured DOCX file ready for an editor or publisher.

The product emerged directly from customer behavior on BookBud.ai, an earlier Archieboy Holdings tool that generates book drafts from a single idea. Dozens of BookBud users arrived instead with large collections of existing writing that needed structuring, not generation. Bo Bennett, owner and founder of Archieboy Holdings, built Concepts of a Book specifically to close that gap. The distinction matters because the two problems require fundamentally different workflows: one starts from nothing, the other starts from an overwhelming surplus. The new tool is the first in the Archieboy portfolio built explicitly for the second scenario.

The workflow moves through five discrete stages, each requiring author approval before the system advances. In stage one, users upload source documents in any combination of DOCX, PDF, TXT, or Markdown formats — the platform imposes no cleanup requirement on incoming files. Stage two presents a structured onboarding wizard rather than open-ended prompts; users select book type, intended audience, voice preferences, and how much editing latitude the AI should take. The no-blank-prompt design is deliberate: structured choices remove the friction of staring at an empty text box while still allowing enough specificity for the tool to make meaningful organizational decisions. Stage three delivers a proposed chapter outline — reorderable, renameable, and editable — before a single page of manuscript is assembled.

Stages four and five complete the assembly and export loop. After the author approves the outline, the AI organizes source material into chapters, writing only the connective tissue — transitions and brief bridging paragraphs — while keeping the author's original language intact. Users can flag what the system got wrong and request revisions through guided controls or written notes; the system incorporates that feedback and produces a new draft. The final export is a clean DOCX file. The voice-preservation mechanism is adjustable: users who want lighter AI intervention can restrict the tool to pure reorganization, while those comfortable with more editing can allow the system broader latitude. The platform explicitly accommodates both preferences.

What separates Concepts of a Book from general-purpose AI writing assistants is its refusal to generate content from scratch. The tool's stated purpose — and its technical constraint — is to work only with what the author has uploaded. Competing tools in the AI writing category, including large language model interfaces used for book drafting, default to producing new text. Concepts of a Book treats that as a bug rather than a feature for its target audience. The result is a manuscript that can credibly be called the author's own work, assembled rather than written by the AI, which matters for pastors, memoirists, and professional speakers whose authority rests on the authenticity of their voice.

"You just drop all your documents in there and boom, it makes a complete, full, ready to go book," said Bo Bennett, Owner and Founder, Archieboy Holdings.

The primary audiences are four: pastors and ministers with multi-year sermon archives, memoir writers with decades of journals and personal correspondence, coaches and speakers whose talk transcripts and workshop notes contain the substance of a book, and publishers or book coaches managing multiple author projects simultaneously. For the pastoral use case specifically, the tool is designed to preserve the preacher's voice rather than flatten it into generic prose. For memoir writers, the system can organize material by era, theme, or emotional arc rather than by upload order. For coaches, it surfaces the frameworks embedded across scattered client-facing documents. Each use case shares the same underlying problem: the writing exists, but the structure does not.

Concepts of a Book is available now at https://www.conceptsofabook.com/ under a one-time purchase model with no subscription and no recurring billing. Three tiers are offered: a Single Book slot at $49, which includes unlimited source file uploads, full manuscript assembly, DOCX export, and unlimited revisions; a Publisher 10-Pack at $349 covering ten project slots with priority email support; and a Publisher 25-Pack at $649 for 25 slots, also with priority support and a volume discount. All tiers include lifetime access. Checkout is processed through Stripe. Consumed project slots are non-refundable per the platform's terms. The one-time pricing structure reflects the reality that most individual authors have one book to complete, while the volume packs address the repeat-use needs of coaches and small publishers without forcing a subscription on users who do not need ongoing access.

Concepts of a Book is part of a broader product strategy at Archieboy Holdings that favors structured onboarding over open-ended AI prompting across its entire tool portfolio. The same design philosophy appears in AgentOutreach and AuthorVoices, two other tools in the Archieboy stack. Bennett has described the pattern as removing the blank-prompt problem — the moment where a user faces an empty text box and does not know what to type — by replacing it with guided choices that still allow meaningful customization. The launch of Concepts of a Book represents the portfolio's first explicit move into the manuscript-organization category, and positions Archieboy Holdings to serve the full authorship workflow: from idea generation via BookBud.ai to manuscript assembly via Concepts of a Book to downstream publishing support through its network of more than 50 author-tool websites.

Archieboy Holdings, accessible at https://www.archieboy.com/, is a portfolio of AI-powered writing and publishing tools founded by Bo Bennett, PhD. The company reports having supported more than 10,000 published books since 2011 and paid more than $5 million to authors across its platforms. Its tools span book generation, manuscript organization, author outreach, and voice development. Concepts of a Book, available at https://www.conceptsofabook.com/, is its latest release. Bennett founded his first company, a web hosting and affiliate marketing business, in 1994 after graduating from Bryant University, and has operated in the digital publishing space for more than two decades.


Press contact: Bo Bennett · pr@archieboy.com
Distributed by PitchBud — personalized PR for the journalists who actually cover your beat.