Brochures, product pages, catalogues — the copy that meets people at the point of decision. Different from advertising (which earns attention) or websites (which guide journeys), this copy has to work for a reader who's already interested enough to look closer.
Property brochures, product catalogues, company profiles, capability documents, sales leave-behinds — longer-form, but structured for the reader who scans before they read.
E-brochures, downloadable guides, PDF catalogues. With no salesperson handing them over, the document has to do all the talking itself.
Descriptions, feature explanations, specs presented readably — plus the supporting copy that builds trust: materials, sourcing, guarantees.
Shorter-form copy for marketplaces and stores. Character limits, keywords, quick communication — written to work within the constraints and still sound like your brand.
A call with your product team, existing materials, or a detailed brief — and the product itself where it helps.
Who they are and what they need — tone, detail and structure all follow from that.
Information architecture as much as words — what leads, what gets highlighted, what sits in support.
Copy ready for your designer, or straight into your CMS or e-commerce platform.
Creative insights, an eye for detail, quality execution, broader perspective and timely deliveries. That's what you can expect from Nabina.
Product businesses, real estate, B2B and industrial, e-commerce and D2C — copy that presents what you sell clearly and persuasively, from a full catalogue to a single e-commerce listing. Delivered ready for your designer or straight into your platform.
White-label brochure and product copy for client projects and pitches. Structured for design handoff, voice matched to the brand, and as visible or invisible as the credit line requires.
Both, in balance. The old rule says sell benefits, and that's true but incomplete. For technical or high-consideration products, people want the features too. The skill is knowing when to lead with what the product does for them, and when to give them the specifications they're looking for.
Yes — that consistency is part of the job. A brochure, a product page and a marketplace listing might describe the same product; they should sound like one brand. I pay attention to voice and terminology so the copy feels coherent wherever it appears.
A proper understanding of the product — a call with your team, existing materials, or a detailed brief. For physical products it helps to see them, or at least good photographs and documentation. From there, who the reader is and what helps them decide.
A single product description or an entire catalogue — send what you have and I'll come back with how I'd take it on.
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