Hey, it's your man Dirk


I found copywriting by accident.
It was late 2024. I was scrolling through Instagram with no real plan, and a post made me stop.
Whoever wrote it had a way of thinking I admired right away. Clear, structured, and not boring. I clicked the bio. Copywriter and Creative Strategist.
And you guessed it, he's been my mentor ever since.
November 2025 is when I started actually doing the work. I'm about six months in now. Most of what I've written so far is self-directed practice on real brands. No big client projects yet. Every week is another round of writing and studying, trying to push the level up.
(Have totally no clue what brought you to this page, but welcome!)
The thing about most copywriters
They work alone. They take the brief, lock themselves in a doc, hand it back, and disappear. They're proud of the craft, slow on feedback, and ready to defend any line you push back on. They treat copy like art that exists on its own.
It doesn't.
Copy gets judged by what the project actually does in the real world. Did sales go up? Did the list grow? Did the launch convert?
Those answers never come from one writer typing alone in a room. They come from a team moving in the same direction. Strategist, designer, media buyer, brand owner, writer.
So my job isn't to write copy and ghost you. My job is to plug into your team, take feedback without ego, and write copy that fits the place it's actually going to live.
That's the part most copywriters skip. It's the part I lead with.
What you should actually know
I'm not going to pretend I've been doing this for ten years. I haven't.
What I do bring is this:
I prepare obsessively. Before writing, I read every customer review I can find to capture the actual language buyers use, study competitor angles to know which hooks are already stale, and dig into the offer until I can explain it better than the brand can. 70% of the word is done by the time I write.
I work hard. I was never the smartest kid in the room growing up, but I outworked plenty of people who were.
I show up. I confirm briefs within hours instead of days, send updates before deadlines instead of after, and turn revisions around the same day. The bar isn't high, but most writers fail it anyway, which is exactly why this matters.
I learned from the right people. My mentors are both Top 3% freelancers on Upwork, featured on the platform's "Best Copywriters for Hire in Vietnam" list, $90K+ earned.
If the copy doesn't land, you don't pay. Same deal as the homepage. I'd rather lose the project than ship something that doesn't earn its place.
If that sounds like the kind of writer you want on your project, let's talk!
Or Leave Me A Message 👇
