I’m a digital content writer and editor. I’ve been immersed in the world of online content since 2018, when I landed my first industry job as the primary editor for a modest-sized content agency.
The writing I’m willing to take the blame for is listed below.
Glow
In 2024, I signed on as one of the primary editors for Glow, a period and ovulation-tracking app with some 25 million users.
In this capacity, I work with a team of other writers and editors, as well as pediatricians, OB/GYNs, and other physicians, to produce articles about pregnancy and women’s reproductive health.
I don’t have my name on this content—our medical reviewers are the stars of the show, and rightly so—but I’ve had my grubby little mitts on it.
Side Hustles
In 2023, I helped launch Side Hustles, a website about the gig economy. For it, I interviewed dozens of gig workers (Uber drivers, dog walkers, etc.) and small business owners about their work.
I’m still affiliated with Side Hustles, although I stepped back from it in late 2024. If you have questions about any of the articles published on it in 2025, like the one about micro-retirements that went viral, I’m not the person to talk to, but I’d be happy to direct you to someone who is.
Some work that I wrote or edited for Side Hustles that I like:
- A piece on the ethics of the blood plasma industry in America
- This interview with Spencer Jakab, who wrote a book about the 2021 GameStop short squeeze
- This (small) survey of freelance writers about how they feel about AI
Compose.ly
Compose.ly is a content agency and freelance writing platform that I worked for in 2018–2019. I oversaw a team of several other editors, worked with dozens of freelance writers, and edited work that ended up scattered on all four corners of the Internet.
Our clients included a wine retailer, an investing website, and (more notably) brands like Mailchimp, Atlassian, MasterClass, and WebMD.
Other work
Between my time at Compose.ly and Side Hustles, I worked for various other companies and websites, including a stint as a technical writer for D-Link, a networking company in Taiwan.
At that job, I once connected a router to a router to a router to a router to a router to a router to a router to a router using seven separate Ethernet cables to see how long it took until my boss noticed I wasn’t doing real work, which she never did.
Go back to the homepage.
Read about my counterpart, R.J. Gerard.