Blog on Content Strategy, Brand Voice, AI Visibility, and Writing
Articles on content strategy, brand voice, AI visibility, writing, and the structures that shape how people read, trust, and use information online.
How Micro-Skills Make an Author’s Writing Memorable
Memorable writing is usually built from small, repeatable choices: clearer phrasing, concrete details, cleaner transitions, and rhythm that reads well out loud. This article breaks those micro-skills into quick drills and a 30-minute editing protocol you can use to make your drafts feel sharper and more like you.
Quick Signs Your Writing Screams AI, And How to Hide Them
AI writing gives itself away fast, not through mistakes, but through a hollow feeling. I explain the three signals readers notice instantly, then share a 15 step workflow to keep voice and meaning intact when AI is part of the process.
Digital Anthropology: Why Content Strategists Should Think Like Researchers
Digital anthropology helps explain the reasons behind audience behavior. It shifts content strategy from producing posts to studying the meanings, rituals, and language that shape how people understand a brand.
“We Need Four Posts a Week.” I Asked: Why?
The idea that a brand needs “four posts a week” comes from an outdated production mindset. In 2025, frequency matters far less than how quickly an audience can absorb information and how much meaning each post delivers. The real metric is not volume but relevance.
Copywriting Frameworks Without Myths: Insights for 2025
In 2025, competition for user attention has reached its peak—58.5 % of Google searches in 2024 ended without a single external click.
Copywriting frameworks stay relevant not because they are formulas, but because they align with how people think, feel and decide.
Why multitasking is a myth
Multitasking feels fast. But it isn’t.
Each switch of attention comes with a hidden cost — seconds that stretch into minutes, fragments of thought that never return. Recent research shows productivity can fall by nearly 40% when tasks compete for focus.

