Service

Every page on your site is either earning the next step or losing it.

The homepage earns the first impression. The practice area page earns the shortlist. The landing page earns the form fill. What that next step looks like is different depending on who is reading: a frightened prospective client, a person trying to handle their own legal paperwork, or a skeptical attorney evaluating a vendor. Most pages were written once, never updated, and are not built for the specific reader landing on them.

The problem

A page that describes the service is not the same as a page that sells it

Your pages inform. They do not persuade.

Most practice area pages name the service, list what the attorney does, and add a contact form. They answer the legal question while ignoring the human one underneath it: is this the right firm for my exact situation. A prospective client reads that page and feels nothing, so they keep looking.

Your pages explain the product. They do not earn the trust required to buy it.

A person filling out their own prenup or custody paperwork is doing something they did not expect to need, often without legal guidance and without much confidence. A page that lists features and pricing skips the one thing this buyer actually needs first: a reason to believe the product is safe to rely on.

Your pages pitch like every other SaaS company. Attorneys do not buy like every other SaaS buyer.

A page built from a generic B2B template loses a family law audience immediately. Attorneys evaluate vendors with the same skepticism they bring to opposing counsel. A page that leads with feature lists and growth metrics instead of credibility and specificity gets closed in five seconds.

What I write

The pages each audience actually needs

Homepages & Internal Pages

Written for the parent searching custody questions at midnight. Answers real questions in plain language. Ranks in organic search. Converts traffic into consultation requests.

Product & Trust Pages

Pages written for a user who is doing their own legal paperwork and needs to feel confident before they pay. Less legal jargon, more plain language, with credibility built in at every step.

Sales & Landing Pages

Pages written for the attorney evaluating whether to buy. Specific, credible, and built around how the product fits into a real law firm, not a generic feature list.

Why it performs

The reader is a specific person. The page should know that.

Specificity converts a frightened prospect

A custody page written for a parent afraid their spouse will use the children as leverage is a different page than one written for “anyone going through custody.” Only the specific version earns a call. That specificity comes from 30 years inside these cases, not from a keyword tool.

Confidence converts a hesitant user

Someone filling out their own legal paperwork is weighing the risk of getting it wrong against the cost of hiring an attorney. A page that addresses that exact tension, clearly and without condescension, is what moves them from browsing to buying.

Credibility converts a skeptical attorney

Attorneys do not respond to enthusiasm. They respond to proof, specificity, and language that signals you understand how a law firm actually operates. A page that sounds like it was written by someone who has been inside that world closes deals the generic version cannot.

Common questions

Answers before the call

Can you refresh existing pages instead of starting over?
Yes. I review what is underperforming and rewrite accordingly. A refresh can produce meaningful improvement when the existing structure is sound.
How many pages can you write at once?
For a full site build, most projects run 8 to 15 pages: practice areas, FAQ, and key landing pages. Scope is established before any work begins.
Do pages include SEO metadata?
Yes. Every page includes a meta title, meta description, and H1 recommendation. Each one is written to earn the click, not just fill the field.
Can you write for a product that is not yet launched?
Yes. Pre-launch pages are common. I work from your product roadmap and the user research you have rather than live usage data.
I write the surrounding copy and flag where a disclaimer is needed. The disclaimer language itself should come from your legal counsel, not a copywriter.
Plain language throughout, with legal terms explained the first time they appear. The goal is a reader who feels confident enough to keep moving forward, not one who gets lost and leaves.
Both are required and both are covered in the discovery process. I learn your product in depth before writing a word, the same way I already understand the attorney buying it.
Can you write case studies?
Yes. These are often the highest-converting pages for a legal vendor audience, because attorneys want to see exactly how a similar firm used the product.
Do you write for demo request and free trial pages?
Yes, including the specific objections attorneys raise before requesting a demo, which differ from a typical SaaS buyer.

Ready to build pages that work?

Every underperforming page is a conversion you are not getting.

The discovery call is 30 minutes. We talk about which pages are the highest priority for your firm, platform, or business, and what better copy would do for each one.

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