Lots of content
A wide variety of copy
Fast & effective copy
Long term contracts
To pay for a big package of stuff you mostly don’t need
The expense of an in-house writer
Endless back & forth emails/zoom meetings
I’ve retooled my offerings in a way that benefits me and gets my clients the volume of great content they need at an incredible price. (Don’t misread that—I’m not a cost leader. I’m leveraging a better way of working with clients that creates a win for me and my clients.)
I'm offering a subscription model for content.
You pay a monthly fee up front.
You put as many items in the queue as you like.
You put them in any order you like.
I will revise your project in one to two business days and notify you when it's done. When you're happy with it, you move it to the Approved Column, and move another project into the WIP Column.
Let’s say your W.I.P. is an entire newsletter. While you’re welcome to put that in your W.I.P. column, I define a single article for a newsletter as a piece of content. Other examples are a single blog post, or a single email.
The best feature of this method is the massive reduction in time spent meeting/ talking/ emailing about contract and project specifications. I spend that time doing the actual writing you need. It’s a win/win!
My Signature Suite!
I love talking to clients and interviewing their clients, but this requires time and scheduling away from the work of producing content for you. For this reason, I charge more for certain large projects.
For more information on My Signature Suite please schedule a brief zoom with me.
Yes. This keeps everyone on a level playing field, keeps the project chunks small, and the turn around fast. What if for example, you own an agency that has multiple clients, and you want them each to benefit from this service? Anyone with an active subscription can add subscriptions at 60% of the base price for your original subscription.
I’m responsible for the quality of what you receive and I’m pretty fast at creating effective content. My goal is to keep myself busy and make consistent money. I love collaborating with people, but I’m not looking to manage people. For this reason, I only “sub work” out to a trusted colleague if I’m ill or travelling where there is no internet. Maybe a couple times a year.
Yes. I give myself a two-day buffer, but if it’s slow and your WIP is small, I return it when it’s ready.
Yep. It happens. Make sure to note in the project description—using words in all caps like, ATTENTION I SWITCHED PROJECTS PLEASE DO THIS ONE 1st or words to that effect.
A contract enumerates the things I’m either going to do for you or fail at. At my price point--just try me. The upside is we don’t spend days emailing, negotiating, e-signing, etc. And you can quit at any time. We writers do all this work up front, and the contract is to prevent us from getting stiffed. Guess what, it doesn’t work. So now you pay a discounted rate, up front, and we both win.
$1000 / month