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Content writing

The discipline of writing the things that get read — website copy, blog articles, sales emails, proposal documents. How to brief a writer, what's a fair fee, and how to spot generic AI-generated copy in 2026.

Most small-business websites read the same: bland, vaguely positive, technically correct, and completely forgettable. The reason is usually the brief. Writers can only produce what the client describes; vague brief, vague output. The fix is upstream of the writer.

How to brief a copywriter

Half a page is enough:

  • What is this for? A specific webpage? A press release? A proposal section? Different beasts.
  • Who reads it? Not "everyone." A specific person — an SME owner shopping for an accountant, a homeowner looking for a roofer, a procurement manager comparing software vendors.
  • What do you want them to do after reading? Phone you? Submit a form? Just understand?
  • What's the single most important thing for them to take away? One sentence. If you can't write it, the writer can't either.
  • Three pieces of competitor copy. Two you like, one you don't. Specific examples beat adjectives.
  • Length and format. 800 words on a webpage. 200 words for an email. 60 words on a leaflet.

What you should expect to pay

Irish copywriting rates in 2026 (rough bands):

  • €80–€180 for a single landing page — entry-level freelancer, fast turnaround, suitable for foundational website pages.
  • €250–€500 for a long-form article (1,500–2,500 words, researched) — experienced freelancer.
  • €600–€1,200/day for senior copywriters doing brand voice work, campaign copy, or substantial editorial.
  • €2,500+ for a full website's copy from someone who can interview your team and produce six to ten coherent pages.

Anyone offering "10 SEO-optimised blog posts for €100" is reselling generic AI output. The cost-per-word is too low for human writing — be honest about which you're buying.

Spotting AI-generated filler in 2026

  • The rule-of-three structure repeated everywhere. Every section has three bullet points; every list has three items; every paragraph has three sentences. Human writers vary.
  • Empty-calorie phrases. "In today's fast-paced world." "Game-changer." "Cutting-edge solution." "Empower your business." All flag-words for AI output (or, fairly, lazy human writing).
  • No specifics. Generic copy says "we deliver excellent service." Specific copy says "we returned 17% of customer queries within 90 minutes last month." AI struggles to invent the specifics.
  • Confident factual claims with no source. AI is fluent and confident, including about things it's wrong about. Verify any claim of statistics, percentages, or named institutions.

Used well — for first drafts, for outlines, for breaking writer's block — AI is a useful tool. As the finished product, it shows.

The single rule of website copy

Every page should answer the question: what is this, and why should the reader care? in the first two sentences. If they have to scroll to find out, you've already lost most of them.

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Ready to commission this kind of work?

The Marketing Pod is a journal — we don't take on client projects directly. For copywriting, content audits and editorial production we recommend our studio, Raven Design — experienced Dublin web design and digital marketing for Irish businesses.

Visit ravendesign.ie →