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?
Thought Leadership Without a Concrete Problem Becomes Static Content
Most thought leadership looks smart but does not help people make decisions. Expertise starts working only when it is tied to a concrete problem, a decision context, and a usable solution path.
What Trust in B2B Content Actually Looks Like
Trust in B2B content no longer looks like a polished brand voice or confident claims. It looks like proof a buyer can use: case studies, pricing logic, clear methodology, third-party validation, and content that reduces uncertainty before a sales call. As more buyers research independently and involve wider internal groups in the decision, the most trusted content is the content that helps people verify, compare, and defend a choice.
What Does “Casual” Actually Mean at Work?
“Casual” at work no longer means fewer rules. It means softer rules, more ambiguity, and more pressure to interpret context correctly.
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The idea that a brand needs “four posts a week” comes from an outdated production mindset.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.
How AI Is Transforming Communication in 2025
AI is no longer just a tool—it co-authors our conversations, translates across contexts, and shapes how empathy and efficiency are felt at scale. Yet with every gain, something is lost. The real shift is not technical but human: what does it mean to communicate when mediation is everywhere?
How “Expertise” Is Perceived in the Age of Influencers
Expertise once meant credentials, training, recognition. Today it often looks like visibility, reach, and authenticity. Influencers reshape what it means to be credible, blurring the line between depth and familiarity. We are left with a subtle question: is expertise about knowledge—or about perception?
Why Sometimes It’s Better Not to Post Than to Post Like Everyone Else
The pressure to always share—thoughts, takes, images—creates sameness. But silence can be strategy. Choosing not to post is also a form of voice: a pause, a regrouping, a reminder that meaning is not measured in feeds. Sometimes what you don’t publish says more than what you do.
Content Marketing Doesn’t Work If You Forget This One Thing
You can write clearly, post regularly, optimize for search—and still miss. Why? Because content without purpose is just activity. Every piece should guide a reader toward an action, a decision, a next step. Without intent, content drifts into noise. With it, content builds journeys that convert.
