Say what you actually help with
A useful service title and summary should explain the real kind of problem you help solve.
People should be able to tell, in plain language, whether your service is relevant to their situation.
Guide
A practical guide for helpers who want to publish clearer services and explain their fit more credibly.
A strong service page makes it easier for other people to understand what kind of help you offer, how you usually work, and why someone should trust your judgment or experience.
A useful service title and summary should explain the real kind of problem you help solve.
People should be able to tell, in plain language, whether your service is relevant to their situation.
If you do the work yourself, say so. If your value is access, relationships, or introductions, say that clearly too.
That distinction helps people choose the right path before they ever reach the offer workflow.
The most useful service pages show practical experience, clear context, and realistic boundaries.
That does not require big claims. It requires clarity about what you know, how you help, and when you are a fit.
It should explain the kind of help being offered in plain language so people can judge fit quickly.
No. Clear limits are often more credible than broad promises.
See the full library of practical guides about asking for help, comparing services, and working with helpers.
Review public requests to understand how people describe real situations and outcomes.
Compare public capabilities and see how helpers explain the kind of help they offer.
See helper profiles and the public work they are connected to.
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