about

30 years in the room where these cases actually happen.

I did not study family law from the outside and decide to write about it. I spent three decades inside high-conflict divorce. That is what every piece of copy I write draws from.

The background

What 30 years inside family law actually teaches you

“My competitors learned family law to write about it. I was already inside it.”

The fastest way to lose a lawyer’s attention is to sound like every other vendor.

What 30 years inside family law taught me guides how my team writes for companies selling to lawyers. Attorneys want less risk, fewer problems, and trusted support. We focus on clear, relevant messaging that speaks to real priorities.

Confused clients do not hire.

What 30 years inside family law taught me guides how my team helps firms turn interest into retained clients. People want clear direction, honest expectations, and a sense of control. We write messaging that reflects real conversations so prospects understand their next step and feel confident choosing you.

30

Years inside high-conflict divorce

Not observing from a distance. Present for the consultations, the negotiations, and the decisions.

3x

The experience behind your content:

  • Family law attorneys
  • Writers with real family law experience
  • Legal copywriters rigorously trained and held to standards shaped by 30 years inside family law

1

Niche, practiced deeply

Family law only. The depth from specializing for decades cannot be replicated by a generalist with a research tab open.

What I believe about the work

Three principles behind every page we write

Specificity converts. Generality does not.

The family law client who reads “we fight for you” and the one who reads copy written for their exact situation are not in the same emotional place. Only one of those phrases earns a call.

Every line earns its place or it comes out.

No filler. No hedged language. No phrases that are technically accurate but say nothing. If a sentence does not move the reader toward a decision, it is cut.

Voice is not style. It is credibility.

When copy sounds like it could belong to any firm or any vendor, it belongs to none of them. A distinct voice is not a preference. It is what makes the reader believe the page.

Good fit

This works well if you are serious about positioning.

The clients who get the most from working with me come in knowing their current copy is underperforming and willing to examine why.

Not a fit

This is not the right fit for every project.

I specialize in one area and take a limited number of clients per quarter. I would rather say so upfront than take work I cannot serve well.

Ready to talk?

Your copy should sound like someone who knows this world.

The discovery call is 30 minutes. No pitch, no pressure. Just a straight conversation about whether this is the right fit.