Your “Work With Me” Page Is Confusing. Here’s How to Fix It.

A lot of service providers don’t have a marketing problem.
They have a “what do you actually do?” problem.

People find you. They like you. They vibe with your content.
Then they click Work With Me… and hit a wall of chaos:

  • Ten different offers
  • Vague promises
  • Zero prices
  • Buttons that feel like traps

And then you sit there wondering why “people never take action.”

Let’s clean that up.

You don’t need a fancy funnel to start. You need a simple Work With Me page that tells people three things, fast:

  1. Who you help
  2. What you actually do
  3. How to take the next step

That’s it. Everything else is garnish.



Why Your Current Work With Me Page Isn’t Converting

Let’s hit the usual suspects.

1. Too many choices

If your page reads like a restaurant menu with six pages of options, most people will bounce.

Your brain might love building a whole “value ladder.” Your visitor’s brain just wants to know:

“Is there a clear next step for someone like me?”

If they have to decode your packages like a puzzle, they’ll click away and tell themselves they’ll “come back later.” They won’t.

2. Vague, feel-good language

“Empowering women to step into their highest potential” could be coaching, breathwork, a course, a cult… no one knows.

If they can’t picture what actually happens when they work with you, they will not book.

3. Hiding the logistics

No mention of price range. No clarity on how long it takes. No idea whether this is a one-time session or six months trapped in a Voxer chat.

Confusion always kills action.


What a Simple Work With Me Page Has to Do

Your Work With Me page is not a brochure. It’s a decision-making tool.

By the time someone scrolls to the bottom, they should either:

  • Think “yep, this is for me” and click your button, or
  • Realize “this isn’t what I need right now” and move on

Both are wins. Clarity is never the problem.

A solid Work With Me page does four jobs:

  1. Names your person so they feel seen
  2. Describes the core problem in their language
  3. Shows your main way of helping (your offer)
  4. Gives a clear next step with zero mystery

Let’s break that down into sections.


Section 1: The Hero That Actually Says Something

Skip the fluffy headline. You don’t need to “sound professional.” You need to be clear.

Instead of:

“Helping driven women step into their next level”

Try:

“Tech + funnel rescue for solo service providers who are tired of broken launches”

Clear > cute. Every time.

Add one short supporting line that explains what that actually means in real life.

Then one button:

[Work With Me] or [Book a Call] or [Start Here]

Not five. One.



Section 2: Who You’re For (and Who You’re Not)

This is where you filter people on purpose.

A short paragraph is enough:

“I work with solo service providers and tiny teams (usually under $500K/year) who are great at what they do, but their digital systems are a mess—broken funnels, clunky checkout, DIY websites that leak leads. If you’re looking for a massive agency build or a ‘grow to 7 figures in 90 days’ promise, that’s not me.”

Notice what that does:

  • The right people feel relief.
  • The wrong people self-select out without wasting anyone’s time.

No bullet list required.


Section 3: Your Main Offer (Not Your Entire Catalog)

Pick one primary way people start with you.

Not twelve packages. Not “it depends.” One front door.

Describe it like this:

  • What it is
  • Who it’s for
  • What problem it solves
  • What they walk away with

Example:

“The Website + Funnel Rescue Sprint is a focused 2–3 week engagement where we fix what’s actually breaking your sales flow: tangled tech, confusing pages, and missing follow-up. You walk away with a clean, working system that doesn’t fall apart the minute you send traffic.”

You can give a price range if the exact price varies:

“Most projects land between $1,200 and $2,500 depending on scope.”

That alone will cut down on “I thought this would be $97” conversations.



Section 4: Proof from Real People

Screenshots and metrics beat poetry.

You don’t need 20 testimonials. Two or three strong ones that speak to:

  • The before (confused, stuck, overwhelmed)
  • The after (site working, launch shipped, more sales, less chaos)

Example layout:

  • Client name + business
  • One sentence about their situation
  • One sentence about the result
  • Optional: small stat like “booked 4 new projects in a week” or “checkout conversions doubled”


Section 5: How It Works (in Plain Language)

People want to know what happens after they click the button.

Keep it stupid simple:

  1. You tell me what’s breaking. Quick form so I can see what you’re dealing with.
  2. We decide if it’s a fit. Short call or Loom video with my recommendations.
  3. We fix it. I clean up your site, funnel, or tech and we test it together.

That’s it. No 47-step flowchart.



Section 6: The Actual Call to Action

Don’t bury this. Don’t apologize for it. Don’t make them hunt for it.

End the page with a direct invite:

“If you’re done babysitting broken tech and half-finished funnels, and you just want your stuff to work when people click—this is where we start.”

Button:

Fix My Funnel / Site / Systems

Below that, you can add a short FAQ if you really need it:

  • How long does this take?
  • Do you work with ____?
  • What if my stuff is a disaster?

Keep answers tight. Nobody wants a novel in the FAQ.


Where Launch Squad Fits Into All This

If you’re reading this thinking:

“Cool, I can totally write this page… after I untangle 12 different tools and 4 half-built offers”—

that’s exactly the kind of thing we work through inside Launch Squad.

It’s for solo service providers who:

  • Are tired of duct-taped tech and confusing offers
  • Want a simple, clear path for people to work with them
  • Need feedback and implementation help, not more theory

We keep it practical: one offer, one funnel, one step at a time, with real humans looking at your stuff.

When you’re ready to stop rewriting your Work With Me page every quarter and actually ship the thing, come join us here:

👉 letsjustlaunch.com/squad

Your page doesn’t need to be fancy.
It needs to be clear, honest, and simple enough that a distracted, half-tired potential client can read it and say:

“Yep. That’s me. That’s my problem. That’s the next step.”

If your Work With Me page can do that, you’re already ahead of most of the internet.

Ready to stop researching and actually launch?
Get my free Weekend Launch Checklist—the exact steps I use to take projects from zero to live in 48 hours.

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Hey, I'm Jen

I’m a digital experience architect who’s spent 25+ years making other people’s funnels actually work. Now I help heart-driven solo entrepreneurs stop overthinking, clean up their tech, and finally launch what they’re called to build—without the hype or burnout.

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