Remote Content Writer (MN)
Do you believe words can open doors?
If youâve ever seen someone light up after reading something you wrote, you know the kind of magic weâre after. Some days, youâll help a Minnesota founder launch their first product. Others, youâll puzzle over how to explain an industry term without putting the reader to sleep. Sometimes your writing brings in a rush of new usersâand sometimes itâs just the right note in a help article that keeps a customer from leaving. If you get a kick out of any of that, keep reading.
What Your Work Means Here
You know how to spot the heart of a storyâeven if itâs buried under jargon or half-finished notes. Your words wonât just fill up a page; theyâll cut through the noise. When a product launches, your copy helps it make sense. When a partnerâs on the fence, your case study tips the balance. We move quickly, sureâbut we care more about the story than the speed.
What a Week Might Look Like
No two weeks are the same. Monday could start with an early-morning Zoom, brainstorming headlines while sipping your own (probably too-strong) coffee. By midweek, you might be deep in a Notion doc, rewriting a landing page after a burst of inspiration from a customer interview. Sometimes youâll trade Slack jokes with designers trying to get just the right shade of playful. Friday? Maybe youâll find yourself quietly proud after seeing analytics show your article did, in fact, double the click-through rate. Not every piece will be a home run, but youâll always know where you stand.
How Youâll Shape Things
- Take half-baked ideas and spin them into something people actually want to read.
- Jump into product launches, weaving in real stories that stick with readers.
- Chat with folksâcustomers, teammates, the occasional neighborâs dogâif it helps you get the story right.
- Trust your gut, but verify the data using tools like SEMrush and Google Analytics to refine your next draft.
- Challenge yourself. Try video scripts. Rework onboarding flows. See if you can make even error messages sound inviting.
How We Get Things Done
Remote isnât just a checkbox for usâitâs the whole deal. We work from home, favorite coffee spots, and even the occasional cabin up north. Meetings? Kept short and useful. Deadlines matter, but we care more about the work than clock-watching. We use Notion, Figma, Google Docs, and all the usual suspects, but we also trust you to bring any additional tools that make your process more efficient.
Sometimes youâll have the floor in a team call, sharing what youâve learned. Sometimes youâll have hours to go heads-down and lose yourself in a tricky draft. Either way, youâll know your words matter.
Room to GrowâYour Way
If you spot something broken, youâll have the freedom to fix it. Do you want to pitch a new blog series or a completely different approach to the FAQ page? Do it. Here, growth doesnât come from a checklistâit comes from following your curiosity. Weâre not afraid to admit when we donât know something. Youâll get access to mentorship, training, and (if youâre into it) the latest content tools. No oneâs looking over your shoulder. We hired you for your brain and your instincts.
What You Actually Need to Succeed
- A knack for making complicated things sound simpleâwithout dumbing them down.
- Comfort working with half-formed ideas, imperfect notes, or a sudden shift in plans.
- Curiosity. Youâll ask a lot of questions and sometimes challenge the brief.
- The ability to give and take feedback like a pro, without ego.
- Basic analytics know-how. If youâve ever used Google Analytics, poked around SEMrush, or even just tracked a postâs performance, youâre in good shape.
- The drive to manage your own deadlines (but not afraid to ask for help when needed).
- An interest in tech, business, or just figuring out how things workâbecause our projects are always changing.
Salary & Real Work-Life Balance
Annual pay is $84,151. Thatâs it, no tricks. Remote means remote. If you want to work in slippers, go for it. Need to block off time for a mid-afternoon walk or to dig out after a Minnesota snowstorm? We get it. If youâre rested, youâll write better. Simple as that.
Why This Job Now?
Currently, a small team in Minnesota is developing something that could be significantâbut nobody knows it yet. You might be the one who finds the right words at the right time, turning potential into momentum. The next success story could start with something you write before your second cup of coffee.
One Last Thing
Weâre not looking for perfection, just someone who cares about doing the work well. If youâre excited to learn, to try, to experimentâand youâre not afraid to write a line, delete it, and try againâweâd love to meet you.
Letâs see what we can build together.
Remote opportunity with global reach â applications are welcome from candidates in any country.