When I’m not thrashing away writing my next children’s book, I’m also a freelance writer and a digital marketing/communications consultant.

I’ve been writing professionally for over 20 years, and have immersed myself in different aspects of the media spectrum including:

  • Public speaking and university lecturing
  • Writing and editing on a wide variety of topics including news, sports, entertainment, finance, gaming, motoring, betting and igaming.
  • Script writing, editing, ghost writing and speech writing
  • Marketing and communications
  • SEO and GEO
  • Website consultancy and site management
  • Social media management
  • Project, product and account management
  • Live data management
  • AI content management
  • Video and audio production

You name it and I’ve probably had a go at it.

What kind of work do you do?

I’m happy to lend a helping hand to produce great content, whatever the size of your business.

Perhaps it will help boost your website up the Google search rankings or future-proof your brand for GEO. You might want something a bit more interesting and entertaining for your internal or external publication.

But I don’t just do corporate work. As a creative writer, I’ve worked on scripts and speeches from CEOs to celebrities and can ghost write your books.

I don’t just write about sport; I’ve worked on a wide range of topics including gaming, news, film, betting, igaming, tv, finance and motoring.

You might even want to use me as a consultant for your businesses’ marketing and communications output.

I’ve worked for both big business and SMEs. Planning, implementing and delivering social media strategies, marketing campaigns, video, PR, SEO, podcasts, online and offline events, internal and external communications. You name it and I’ve probably done it.

If you are interested in discussing a potential project with me then please get in touch directly via my contact page on this site or on Linkedin.

For book enquires you can go through my literary agent Gemma Cooper at Gemma Cooper Literary

For school visits and speaking events you can come directly to me or Authors Aloud.

Examples of my writing work

Here’s some examples of the work and projects. Everything from writing, editing, website development and management through to public speaking and books. If this isn’t enough then please get in touch and I can show you other work in my portfolio.

If you want to read about how I started on this writing merry-go-round then there’s plenty of waffle about it below.

Where it began

My love of writing started thanks to my passion for West Ham United (don’t let that put you off me). As football took over most of my teenage years, I didn’t have a lot of time for books. My reading wheelhouse was limited to the Beano, the Dandy, Tintin, Asterix and the Panini Football Sticker Album.

I also studied the Playfair Football Who’s Who, and got my Dad to test me on it over Christmas dinner. He despaired at my amount of useless knowledge

‘If only you could spend the same amount of time on your school work, you’d pass your exams with flying colours,’ said my Dad. He was unimpressed that I could recite the career of midfielder Martin Kuhl (by 1992 it was Birmingham, Sheff U, Watford and Portsmouth), instead of being able to tell him the word for potato in German (kartoff…something or other). This is way before Wikipedia spoiled all football memory games like this.

First inspiration

Luckily my love of West Ham inspired me to become a writer. So I plucked up the courage and sent my first hand written article to one of the smaller West Ham fanzines – On a Mission.

I wrote it in claret biro, thinking that would help, and I called myself ‘Quantrill’. Named after the infamous bushwhacker from my favourite cowboy Top Trumps. Later I discovered Quantrill wasn’t a pleasant chap and was involved in several massacres. Where was Wikipedia back in the early 90s!

You couldn’t call the article, my 16-year-old self churned out, high brow. I theorised that West Ham players with beards are better than ones with moustaches. Not including the legendary Mexican-tashed Alan Devonshire in this half-baked theory. I sent it off and thought nothing more of it. Few people replied to letters in the early 90s.

First published article

A week later I was standing at the back of the North Bank at Upton Park (West Ham’s old ground…sob), when a bloke appeared in front of me and began to flick through the latest copy of On a Mission. He skimmed through the first handful of pages and then stopped and began to read. I peered over his shoulder, and there was my article in black and white with the words ‘Quantrill says…’ across the top.

I couldn’t believe it.

And so I made the first tentative steps towards becoming a proper writer (albeit without earning a wage). I continued to write for the fanzine for a few seasons.

That mild success gave me the confidence to write, illustrate and edit an underground school newspaper. A two page broadsheet full of ‘jokes’ about the teachers called The Huge Roast Potato. I published three issues before the school discovered my mini-printing press (felt tips and biros) and I was punished accordingly. Despite the setback I had no intention of being a boring writer.

Proper writer jobs

I continued to dabble with writing at university, and then in my final week of the third year, with the scary world of work looming ahead, I decided I should be a journalist. Besides I wasn’t good at anything else.

A major back operation, various unpaid journalism jobs and two years went by before I landed my first paid full-time job as a business reporter with the Press Association. The rest is history as they say…or just look at my LinkedIn page.