A draft that wanders from the brief, buries the main point or runs twice as long as it needs to is not ready for review. Ellis rewrites drafts that follow the brief structure, lead with what matters and read well enough for an editor to make decisions from.
For first drafts, AI-generated drafts that need shaping, and rewrites where the brief has changed.
Most first drafts, from writers and from AI, cover the right territory without covering it in the right order. The main point is buried. Sections drift. The introduction spends three paragraphs warming up. Getting a draft ready for review means more than fixing sentences.
↘ shape the draft, then review itWe are a leading provider of innovative solutions. Founded in 2018, our team of dedicated professionals works hard every day to deliver value to our valued customers. We believe in excellence.
Good content handoffs take two rounds of revision instead of five. The difference is having a brief that everyone on the project has actually read before writing starts.
Ellis does the drafting and rewriting that gets content to reviewable quality. The goal is not a finished piece; it is a draft that has a clear shape, follows the brief and gives an editor something real to work with.
ELLIS → Ellis gives it structure and a lead, turning output into a reviewable draft.
He reshapes without rewriting the whole thing, preserving what works.
Ellis rewrites the affected sections against the new direction.
One clean rewrite pass against the original brief restores consistency.
A clean first draft saves the revision cycles that vague first drafts generate.
Ellis produces a tight draft that gives clients something real to react to.
A shaped draft is an input to editorial, not the finished product. Ellis rewrites to get content to reviewable quality. Creative decisions, sign-off and final changes are editorial and client decisions.
Add Ellis to your workflow and every draft reaches review already shaped, structured and brief-led.