Every session involves real writing. Not invented scenarios. Your own emails, your own reports, your own clients.
Each project type below is covered across the six sessions. You'll produce real, usable documents by the end of the course.
You bring three real emails you've sent to clients. We rewrite them together, identifying what each phrasing choice communicates to an international reader and why an alternative works better.
This is the most immediate project in the course. You see the difference in the same session.
You leave with a personal weekly report template built specifically for your client type. The structure covers what happened, what's in progress, what's blocked, and what the client needs to do — in that order, for a reason.
The template is yours to keep and adapt as your client base changes.
You draft a three-email sequence for following up on an overdue invoice. First message, second message, and a final message. Each one is firmer than the last without becoming rude or damaging the client relationship.
This is the project participants say they needed most. Late payments are common. Most people don't know how to address them in writing.
Short, clear project updates that clients actually read. You'll practice the format: status in the subject line, key information in the first two sentences, detail below for clients who want it.
The goal is an update your client can read in 30 seconds and know exactly what's happening.
By the end of six sessions, each participant has produced real, usable writing assets.
A one-page reference document of your specific writing patterns, what to avoid, and preferred alternatives. Built from your own feedback across six sessions.
A ready-to-use template structure adapted to your client type. Fill in the sections each week — the structure stays, the content changes.
Three draft emails for different stages of a late payment conversation. Customized to your voice and your typical client relationship.
All the emails you rewrote during sessions, with notes on why each revision works. A reference library you can return to.
A focused look at one specific writing pattern or principle. Short. No padding. Just the concept and why it matters for your specific client context.
Everyone writes. Same prompt, different approaches. You see how eight people interpret the same scenario differently and which approaches work for which client types.
Participants share drafts. Group and instructor give specific, structured feedback. This is the part where the real learning happens — hearing why something does or doesn't work.
The between-session assignment is explained. It always uses your own work — not invented scenarios. You bring back the revised version to the next session.
Apply for the next cohort and bring your actual emails and reports into the course.