New For Creators! Add Services to Your Profile (and Get Booked Faster)

This new feature helps you turn your best services into clear, bookable packages! You can now add paid (and gifted) services to your Get Blogged profile. Here's how...
Picture of Lucy

Lucy

Lucy has been a content creator for 15+ years, plus co-founded Get Blogged in 2018.

New For Creators! Add Services to Your Profile (and Get Booked Faster)

We’ve just launched a new feature that helps you turn your best services into clear, bookable packages! You can now add paid (and gifted) services to your Get Blogged profile.

Think: a sponsored blog post for a set price, a UGC photo pack, a product review bundle, or a blog + socials package, all with pricing and inclusions upfront.

Brands can purchase your services directly, and they can add them to their basket alongside other campaign hires and collaborations.

Publishing services on a Get Blogged profile as a creator for brands to buy directly

What’s new

You can now:

  • Set your own prices
  • Explain what’s included (deliverables, timelines, add-ons)

Brands can:

  • See your services while viewing your profile
  • Purchase instantly (less back-and-forth)
  • Checkout with other collaborations in one go

Why we think this is great for creators

1) You get more of the right enquiries

When your offer is clear, brands self-select. You’re more likely to attract briefs that match what you actually want to deliver.

2) You spend less time negotiating

Your services do the explaining for you.

3) You can sell beyond a post

Not every brand on Get Blogged needs a blog post. Some need content assets: UGC, product photography, short-form video. Services let you monetise what you’re already good at.

4) You can increase your average order value

Services make it easier for brands to buy more than one deliverable from you without negotiating each item.

Editing and publishing services on Get Blogged as a creator

What’s in it for creators?

If you’re thinking, “This sounds great, but it’s going to take time to set up”, you’re not wrong. Writing strong service listings takes a bit of effort.

But here’s the payoff:

  • You create once, sell repeatedly. A well-written service becomes a reusable sales page that works while you’re offline.
  • You reduce friction. Brands are more likely to book when they can see price + inclusions instantly.
  • You control the scope. By defining what’s included, you protect your time and avoid the “just one more thing” request.
  • You’re early. Right now, only a handful of creators have added services, which means less competition and more visibility for those who do.
  • We’re going to showcase services more. As the services database grows, we’ll start highlighting services across the platform, so setting yours up now puts you in the best position to benefit when promotion ramps up.

Start with 1 or 2 services.

You don’t need a full menu on day one. Pick the deliverable you can fulfil confidently and consistently (and that you’re happy to repeat).

Example service listing

Here’s an example of what a Sponsored Post service could look like on your profile. Use it as a starting point and tweak it to match your niche, style, and workflow.

SERVICE TITLE: Sponsored Blog Post

DESCRIPTION:

What’s included

  • 1 x sponsored blog post on [your blog URL here] (1000 words)
  • 1 x dofollow backlink to your chosen URL (placed naturally in the content)
  • 1 x brand mention in the introduction
  • 1 x featured image and 3 supporting images
  • 1 round of edits (minor amendments)

What I need from you (brand checklist)

  • Brief + key talking points
  • Target URL + anchor text preferences
  • Any must-include claims/compliance notes
  • Product images or brand assets (if needed)

Turnaround time

10-14 days from receiving the full brief (or sooner if agreed)

Notes (set expectations + protect your time)

  • The post will be written in my usual tone and style to keep it authentic for my audience.
  • I don’t publish content that conflicts with my values or niche.
  • Any major rewrites or extra deliverables can be added as an add-on.

Service ideas creators can list

A few popular examples:

  • Sponsored blog post
  • Product review
  • Link insert in existing post
  • Guest post
  • UGC photo pack (e.g., 10-20 images)
  • UGC video bundle (e.g., 3-5 short videos)

How services can work alongside other collaborations in the Get Blogged Marketplace

Brands can combine your services with other hires, so you might see bookings like:

  • Hired on a sponsored post campaign in the Marketplace + your UGC photo pack service from your profile
  • Hired for your product review service + your short-form video service
  • Hired on that link insert opportunity in the Marketplace + your Instagram story service

Tips to make your services convert

  • Use a clear name (what the brand gets)
  • List exactly what’s included (deliverables + quantity)
  • Add a realistic turnaround time
  • Clarify any usage rights if relevant
  • Offer a simple add-on (extra images, extra platform, faster delivery)
  • When you’re pitching your ideas for a brand campaign in the Marketplace, mention that they can also add any of your other services from your profile.

Creator FAQs

If you’ve got a little voice in your head saying, “Yeah, but…” Totally normal. Here are the most common concerns and questions that creators have, and how to think about them.

Do I need to add lots of services?

No, start with 1 or 2 strong, repeatable offers. You can add more later.

What if brands don’t buy services yet?

You’re early. As more creators add services, we’ll showcase them more across the platform , and having yours live means you’re ready when demand increases.

Can I change my pricing later?

Yes, you’re in control. Update your services as your experience, demand, or costs change.

How do I avoid scope creep?

Be specific about what is included (and what’s not). If you offer add-ons, list them clearly.

What should I write in my service description?

Focus on outcomes and clarity. List what the brand receives, how many deliverables, timeline, and any requirements (product sent, brief, etc.)

What if I price it wrong?

You’re not locking yourself in forever.

  • Start with a price you feel good about based on time, costs, and experience.
  • Watch what gets booked (and what doesn’t).
  • Adjust as you go.

A simple approach would be to set a baseline price for your standard turnaround. Then you could offer add-ons for extras (more words, more images, faster delivery, extra platforms).

I don’t want to be boxed into a package.

Packages don’t remove flexibility; they remove confusion.

  • Your service is a starting point that makes it easy for brands to say yes.
  • You can still say no to briefs that don’t fit.
  • You can still offer add-ons (or suggest a different service) when a brand needs something slightly different.

What if a brand expects more than what I listed?

That’s exactly why services are helpful: they set boundaries.

  • Be specific about deliverables (quantity, format, word count, platforms).
  • Include what counts as minor edits vs. a rewrite.
  • Use add-ons for anything outside the scope.

I’m worried it’ll attract bargain hunters.

Clear pricing tends to do the opposite. It filters.

  • Brands that can’t afford you won’t waste your time.
  • Brands that value speed + clarity are more likely to book.

If you want to avoid low-budget requests, position your service around outcomes (quality, process, reliability) rather than just deliverables.

I don’t have time to create services that look good.

You don’t need a perfect menu.

  • Start with one service you can deliver in your sleep.
  • Write it like a checklist: what’s included, what you need, turnaround time.
  • Improve it later.

Remember: done beats perfect, especially while services are still new on the platform.

What if I’m not chosen because someone else is cheaper?

Cheaper isn’t always better, and brands aren’t only buying a deliverable.

  • They’re buying your niche fit, your style, your audience trust, and your reliability.
  • Your service description is where you show what makes working with you smooth and worth it.

What if I get booked and the brand isn’t a fit for my niche?

You’re never forced into a collaboration that doesn’t align.

  • Review the brief and make sure it suits your audience, values, and content style.
  • If it’s not a fit, you can gracefully decline. It’s better to say no than deliver something that feels off-brand.

Tip: add a short line in your service notes about what you do (and don’t) cover. It helps brands self-select before they book.

What if I get booked and I’m already at capacity?

You’re in control.

  • Only list what you can realistically fulfil.
  • Set a turnaround time that protects your schedule.
  • Update/unpublish your services when you’re busy.

It’s time to add your first service to your Get Blogged profile!

If you have any questions about what to offer, what to price your services at, or anything else, leave a comment below or email us. We’re here to help you!

Feedback

Join the ultimate blogger outreach platform for free today

The users raving about their favourite blogger outreach platform...​

Share:

Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
LinkedIn

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *