Lindsey has always believed the right words can make anyone care about anything.

Lindsey has a simple conviction about her craft: good writing isn’t industry-specific. If something is written well, people will want to read it, and it doesn’t matter what the subject is. That is what’s driven most of her career decisions, and what’s made copywriting feel less like a job and more like a calling. Words either work or they don’t. She’s spent her career making sure they do.

Before FieldWrk, she spent five years as the in-house copywriter for an organic clothing company, writing across every channel imaginable. Web, social, email, campaigns, product descriptions, if it needed words, it landed on her desk. That kind of range builds a certain confidence. You stop being tentative about subject matter and start caring about the thing that actually matters: whether the writing connects.

That’s exactly what brought her to FieldWrk, where the client roster spans everything from aggregate producers to demolition contractors. Her days are spent writing and rewriting web copy, social content, scripts, project pages, and everything in between. She shows up genuinely excited about every project, collaborates easily with the team, and connects warmly with clients.

Lindsey is a firm believer in the Oxford comma and will defend it at length. She also believes life is too short to finish a book you don’t like, which may be the most practical philosophy on this entire team.

Lindsey calls Fort Collins, CO, home — the best city in the world, she’ll tell you. When she’s not writing, she’s running easy races, skiing powder, camping in her Westfalia, or biking to breweries with her husband. She also, at any given moment, has a deck of cards on her, just in case the moment calls for a card game. Or a magic trick.

“Good copywriting isn't picky. Whether you're talking about underwear or underground utilities, if something is written well, people will want to read it.”
The(o)