Bad copy doesn't announce itself. That's the problem
I got interested in copywriting the wrong way not from a YouTube course, but from noticing ads that made me actually want to buy things. I'd read them twice. I'd screenshot them. I wanted to know how they worked.
That led me down a weird rabbit hole. Old direct-mail ads. Split-test case studies from the 80s. Copywriters arguing on forums about whether long or short copy converts better. I got hooked before I ever wrote a word professionally.
I write copy for SaaS founders, coaches, and service businesses email sequences, sales pages, landing pages, B2B outreach. Usually for someone who built something genuinely good and is frustrated that the words around it aren't pulling their weight.
The research part is what I spend most of my time on, honestly. Before I touch a draft, I want to know what your buyers say in reviews, what language they use when they complain, what they tried before they found you. Real buyer language beats "compelling copy" every time the trick is finding it, not inventing it.
Based in Karachi. I work fully remote and have clients in different time zones, so turnaround is usually quicker than you'd expect.
Work Terms
I'm not going to pretend I have a decade of results. I don't. What I have is time I go deep on every brief, I rewrite more than most, and I actually enjoy the research that a lot of copywriters skip. If that sounds useful, I'd like to work with you.
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