We write newsletters. You get the credit.
Dockside Media is a newsletter ghostwriting and content strategy studio for small businesses and solopreneurs.
Our Story
Dockside Media exists because too many leaders and creatives know they should be publishing a newsletter - and aren't.
Not because they don't have anything to say. Because they don't have time to say it every week, in the right words, in a format that actually works.
That's the problem we solve.
We're a ghostwriting and content strategy studio specializing in newsletters for small businesses, creatives and solopreneurs. We help business owners find their voice, build their audience, and publish content they're proud of - without it taking over their lives.
How We Work
Dockside Media is built on one belief: the best newsletters are specific, consistent, and written in a voice worth subscribing to.
We don't believe in content for content's sake. We don't believe in templates that sound like they came from a template. And we don't believe you should have to choose between running your business and showing up for your audience.
Every newsletter we write is designed to:
- Build trust through consistency
- Create value that keeps people coming back
- Sound unmistakably like you
- Do real work for your business (not just fill an inbox)
Whether we're launching your newsletter from scratch or writing it every week as your ghostwriter, the goal is the same: a newsletter that works for you, not the other way around.
Behind the Dockside
Who Runs This
Dockside Media is run by Mary Kate Feeney - a writer and strategist with a career built on helping people communicate clearly and consistently.
Before Dockside, Mary Kate built a career in communications and community engagement. She's a local elected official, a co-facilitator of a monthly marketing workshop series through the MetroWest Chamber of Commerce, and has written for audiences ranging from city government to small business to the general public.
What that means for you: she understands how real people communicate, what makes readers trust a business, and how to write something that sounds like you—not like a marketing template.

