Safety

Safety, both ways.

For both sides of an introduction.

For subscribers

Recognizing the inquiries that aren’t real.

The over-eager buyer.

The inquiry that mentions wiring you money before you’ve discussed the work, or asks you to accept payment outside your normal process, is almost always a scam. Real prospects ask questions before they ask to pay.

The off-topic inquiry.

Messages that don’t reference the work you actually do — generic “I’m interested in your services” with no specifics, or requests for services you don’t offer — are usually mass-sent. Reply if you want, but treat them like cold marketing, not real leads.

The pressure to move off-platform.

A real prospect is happy to keep talking through the channel they found you on. An inquiry that immediately wants to move you to a personal messaging app or a side email — before you’ve talked at all — is often setting up something you’d rather not be part of.

For visitors

Evaluating any service provider online.

A few patterns to help you decide who’s serious.

Look for a real presence, not just a profile.

A professional online should be findable across more than one place. A real hub page, a real email signature that matches, a real inquiry surface — these are signs of an operator who takes their business seriously enough to maintain it. A single social profile with a stock photo isn’t.

The handle should be consistent.

The name on their hub, in their email, on their social profiles, and on any invoice should all match. Inconsistent identities — different names across platforms, mismatched contact info, an email address that doesn’t match the business — are reasons to slow down before paying.

Don’t pay before you’ve talked.

Whether through their inquiry form, a phone call, or a video meeting — exchange real words about the work before exchanging money. Anyone running a real business expects this. Anyone who resists it is worth a second thought.

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