Writing on Content, Search, Trust, and Digital Culture
I write about how people read, trust, search, compare, and make sense of information online.
Some essays are about B2B content strategy, website messaging, AI visibility, and buyer trust. Others look at digital culture, media behavior, visual communication, and the way platforms change how information feels.
Together, they’re part of the same question: how does content become clear, useful, credible, and worth paying attention to?
Much of content strategy still starts with attraction
B2B content should do more than attract attention. It should answer the practical questions that help buyers justify the next step.
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.
What Is Story Structure: 8 frameworks every writer and strategist should know
Story structure isn’t only for novels and films. It’s a practical way to shape attention and meaning in marketing content, using a handful of repeatable frameworks you can choose based on your goal and format.
“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The idea that a brand needs “four posts a week” comes from an outdated production mindset.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.
Interactive Content in 2025: What Polls and Quizzes Actually Do (And What They Don’t)
Polls and quizzes promise engagement, but their value lies deeper: they structure interaction. When designed well, they qualify leads, surface insights, and build credibility. When done poorly, they entertain but don’t convert. In 2025, interactivity isn’t decoration—it’s a shift in how users expect to participate. The question isn’t “does it look fun?” but “does it create meaning?”
