Truly.
You’ve looked at it too many times.
Rewritten the caption six times.
Rearranged the offer.
Saved 47 Reels about hooks.
And now you genuinely cannot tell what’s working anymore. Not because you’re bad at marketing, you’re just too close to it.
Which means the thing you actually need isn’t another template. It’s perspective. Real eyes on your real business. Someone circling the things you stopped noticing three months ago.
You fill out a quick onboarding form to go over your content, messaging, offers, platforms, and whatever’s been feeling off.
I go through it the same way an editor goes through a book: highlighting what’s working, circling what’s unclear, pointing out what’s not connecting and leaving feedback on what I’d fix first.
The useful kind of feedback. The kind that makes you pause halfway through and go: “OH. That’s the problem.”
→ you’ve been posting consistently but nothing is clicking
→ you can feel something’s off, but can’t pinpoint what
→ you’ve gotten generic advice before and immediately ignored it
→ you don’t need a full strategy overhaul, you need someone to just tell you what's wrong
→ you want someone to actually look at YOUR marketing
Chances are, you don’t need a whole new strategy. You just need someone to point at the thing that’s been right in front of you the entire time.
And if you finish your notes and want to go further? Your $97 applies toward The Marketing Edit: my 60-minute 1:1 strategy session. It's not a hard sell, just a natural next step if you're ready for one!
"I've gotten feedback before and it wasn't helpful."
Because most feedback is either painfully generic or weirdly performative. Margin Notes is neither. I’m not handing you a recycled framework with your name pasted on top. I’m looking at your actual business and telling you what I see.
"Couldn’t I just figure this out myself?”
Maybe eventually! But you’ve been staring at the same marketing for months already. The whole point of this offer is getting the perspective you physically cannot give yourself. And at $97, the cost of staying stuck is almost certainly higher.