Christine OKelly SEO CopywriterChristine started her career in journalism at the age of nine, publishing a neighborhood newspaper to an audience of more than 9 readers. Word of the hand printed newspaper eventually found its way to the feature pages of the much larger Crofton Crier newspaper, sealing Christine’s life-long love of writing and publication.

Since then, Christine has published news and magazine articles, developed training manuals, and produced hundreds of pages of search engine optimized reprint articles, press releases, and website copy.

After graduating from California State University San Marcos, she took the next logical step for any starry-eyed graduate clutching a Bachelors degree in Literature and Writing Studies – a sales career. While writing is a lifelong love, Christine learned quickly that it is also important to produce an income for such things as shelter and nourishment. Thus, a career in sales blossomed.

Having established herself as a top-producing sales person, Christine learned that the craft of writing and success in sales are not entirely unrelated. Both require the use of painting clear, emotion-driven images and scenarios through the use of words. She later moved into sales training where she taught many new sales people how to use powerful language to excel in sales.

Christine now sells products and services for a number of businesses using meticulously crafted text, pruned specifically to meet the needs of each client and their intended customer base. Hiring Christine for your writing project is the equivalent of hiring a sales person to sell your vision 24 hours a day, 7 days a week through the power of words.

Christine is detail-oriented, punctual, and a self proclaimed fun person to work with. Her goal is not just to write words, but to help clients deliver their visions with crystal clarity, boost sales numbers, and earn trust and repeat business from customers.

If you are still reading now, then she has successfully accomplished this task through this piece of writing, crafted in the 3rd person in an attempt to deflect the innate self-boastfulness of an “About the Author” page.