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About me

Hi, I'm Sarah. I'm a quality-obsessed nitpicker who can also zoom out to the big picture to see what each piece of content needs to resonate with readers.

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Clients in the healthcare, education, technology, publishing, and marketing industries turn to me to ensure that their copy is accurate, accessible, and error-free every time.

 

If you need an expert editor to help your writing reach its full potential, you're in good hands. If you need to translate complex clinical or technical information into actionable content for nonexperts, look no further.​ Even if you simply need a second set of eyes on an already polished piece, I can help.​

Select clients

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt

Duke University Press

Texas Oncology

Alcon

Texas Education Agency

Salesforce

Health.com

American Cancer Society

Invisalign

Culver Company

With a background that spans consumer and professional education, healthcare marketing, academic publishing, and more, I have edited an incredibly wide array
of digital and print communications.

  • Short-form projects: ads, web pages, blog posts, content marketing articles, emails, newsletters, brochures, press releases, case studies, video scripts

  • Long-form projects: journal articles, white papers, slide decks, reports, assessment materials, apps, end-to-end websites

  • Book-length projects: scholarly monographs, textbooks, peer-reviewed journals, memoirs and other creative nonfiction, biographies, poetry collections

Good editors bring much more to the table than attention to detail and excellent grammatical skills. With a devout focus on the reader experience, we apply strong analytical, critical-thinking, and problem-solving skills to maximize content clarity, logic, and flow while maintaining a uniquely human voice.

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The best thing I can do for the writers I work with is continually ask, "Will this resonate with the target audience based on what they value, what they already know, and what they need to learn? What will they take away from this, and will it
benefit them?

I eat wordiness for breakfast, jargon for lunch, and grammatical errors for dinner. Shall we get cooking?

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