I write your
A support coordination copywriter writes your website so it follows the NDIS Code of Conduct, stays independent, and still wins referrals. I'm Amisha Sharma, and I've delivered 200+ regulated Australian projects with zero breaches.
Amisha Sharma · 200+ regulated projects · zero breaches
Amisha Sharma is a compliance-first copywriter at Commas & Chaos and an ISB alumna. Since 2019 she has delivered 200+ regulated Australian projects for NDIS support coordination providers with zero compliance breaches. Every page she writes is checked 226 ways before it ships.
"The support coordinators the NDIS recommends. We guarantee more funding and connect you to the best providers."
It implies the NDIA endorses you, promises an outcome you cannot control, and hides that "best providers" may be your own. That is three problems in one line.
"What a support coordinator does, explained plainly. How we help you use your plan, protect your choice and control, and give independent advice."
Honest, specific, and calm. This is the version a worried family enquires with.
Compliant copy has a reputation for being boring. That is a writing problem, not a compliance one. I fix the writing.
NDIS marketing is watched by the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission. If your pages mislead, hint that the NDIA backs you, or hide a conflict of interest, some of them may be breaking the rules right now. Not sure? Check in 60 seconds, whether your site is live or still being written.
Six quick questions. Your results, straight away.
I'm an NDIS support coordination copywriter. Your website is the core, and it's where most providers start. Need Google Ads, social, or SEO articles too? I write those as well.
The page that decides if they stay or bounce.
How support coordination works, the way the Code allows.
Your coordinators and experience. The trust page.
The questions families are unsure how to ask.
For a campaign or a referral push.
Ads that pass Google and follow the NDIS Code.
Captions that survive Meta review and stay honest.
The questions participants Google, answered by you.
What to publish, where, and in what order.
One writer for all of it. Quoted flat, upfront.
One writer for your whole site.
Start a conversation →NDIS marketing sits under the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission. I write to the NDIS Code of Conduct every day, across 200+ regulated projects, with zero breaches. Your standing is safe with me.
I structure your pages so Google and AI search can understand them. That gives you a real shot at showing up when families look for a support coordinator nearby.
Copy that reads like an expert coordinator, not a discount deal. It brings in the participants who stay, not the ones who drift off.

You are never a ticket number in an agency queue. Your pages are never handed to a junior or a content mill. You brief me, I write, and the person answering your email is the person who wrote your homepage. That is why the quality holds, from page one to page fifty.
Tell me about your service and what you need written. Five minutes.
A 30-minute call, then one flat fee. No hourly billing, no lock-in.
Every page written, checked, and handed over ready to publish. Two rounds of edits.
Ready to take the words off your plate?
Start a conversation →
I'm Amisha Sharma, a compliance-first copywriter for regulated Australian brands, NDIS support coordination providers included. I am an ISB alumna and a former agency content lead. Since 2019 I have delivered 200+ regulated projects with zero breaches. My job is copy that passes compliance review, ranks on Google, gets quoted by AI, and still sounds like a human wrote it. Every page runs through my 226-point GhostRank audit before it ships. I write like my own name is on the line.
Because most of them will get your service flagged. Here is the honest comparison.
Ranks you, then gets you flagged. They know Google. They have never read the NDIS Code of Conduct.
Keeps you safe and hands you copy no one reads. Safe and invisible is still invisible.
Copy that gets pulled. You save a few hundred dollars and risk a complaint.
Fast, generic, no judgement. It cannot tell a safe sentence from a breach.
Compliant, ranks, cited by AI, wins referrals. I do all four. And I personally watch every word, so you always know who is writing: me. Every page passes the 226-point GhostRank check first.
Short version: you can market your service openly, but you must be honest, stay independent, and disclose any conflict of interest. Here is how that plays out on a real support coordination site.
None of this is guesswork. The rules are public, and I write to the primary sources. The clearest place to start is the NDIS Code of Conduct, which sets out how every provider must act: with honesty, integrity and transparency. The detail that catches most coordinators is the duty to act in the participant's best interest, protect their choice and control, and disclose and manage any conflict of interest. A support coordinator must not improperly steer a participant to the coordinator's own or related services. Registered providers also work to the NDIS Practice Standards, which set the quality bar for how you deliver and describe your service. I read both every time the rules touch a page. In 2026 that reading is not optional. It is the difference between a website that grows your service and one that quietly waits for a complaint.
Not sure where your site stands?
Check your site in 60 seconds →GhostRank is my proprietary 226-point audit. It checks how a page ranks on Google, how it reads to AI search, and where it breaks the NDIS rules. Providers pay $500 for this audit on its own. When you hire me, every page runs through it before it ships. You never pay for it.




A landing page, or a small site.
Your full site. Ads and articles, if you want them.
The audit alone sells for $500. Every project includes it free. Do the maths on a $600 page.
Dear support coordinator,
You built this service to help people use their NDIS plans well. You listen carefully. You put the participant first. You send people to the provider that suits them, even when it is not you.
Then you look at the websites other coordinators run. Big promises. Words that sound like the NDIA sent them. Claims that everything is covered. And you wonder how they get away with it.
Most of them will not for long. The NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission watches this space closely. The NDIS Code of Conduct asks you to be honest and act in the participant's best interest. If you also deliver other supports, any conflict of interest has to be disclosed and managed. The service that oversells is one complaint away from a hard review.
You do not have to play that game. The coordinators that grow look honest, sound capable, and explain things plainly. That is what a worried family wants. It is also what the rules push you toward.
That is the copy I write. I explain what support coordination is and who it helps. I show how a good coordinator protects a participant's choice and control and stays independent. I answer the questions people ask before they trust anyone with their plan. Compliant, because it never implies the NDIA endorses you and it discloses conflicts honestly. Persuasive, because it feels safe.
I have written for regulated Australian brands for years. Over 200 projects. Zero breaches. I treat your registration like my own. You will never wonder if a line could draw a complaint, because I have already checked it 226 ways.
You look after the participants. Let me look after the words that bring them to you.
P.S. When you are ready, send me a message. I read and reply to every message myself. That is where we start.
Yes. You can market support coordination openly. The NDIS Code of Conduct means it must be honest. You cannot mislead people about what your service can do, and you must never imply the NDIA or the NDIS Commission backs you. If you also deliver other supports, you must disclose that conflict of interest and explain how you keep advice independent. Full guide here.
Yes. Most services come to me in 2026 with a site that is either bending a rule or saying nothing. I run every page through a 226-point GhostRank audit first. Then I rewrite the pages that need it, usually the homepage, the service pages, and the about page. You keep what already works and fix only what is at risk.
Yes. Compliant copy is more specific, and specific is exactly what Google and AI search reward. Vague claims get filtered, while clear service detail gets cited. Across 200+ regulated projects, compliant pages have ranked on Google and been quoted by AI tools. You never trade honesty for visibility.
I write to the current NDIS Code of Conduct and add a short note on why each claim is safe. That note makes your next compliance review fast and cheap. No writer can promise a regulator's final view. Across 200+ regulated projects since 2019, not one page has been flagged.
Yes, as an add-on. NDIS ads must clear Google policy, Meta policy and the NDIS Code of Conduct at the same time. I write them to pass all of it at once. That means fewer rejected ads, less wasted budget, and campaigns that stay honest and stay live.
About a week for a single page. Two to three weeks for a small site of five to eight pages. Two rounds of edits are included in every quote. Rush timelines are possible if your launch date is tight, so tell me the deadline up front.
Projects start at $600 AUD and scale with scope. Every quote is a flat fee, agreed upfront, with no hourly billing. The 226-point GhostRank audit is included free, and it sells on its own for $500. So a $600 page effectively costs $100 once you count the audit.
Yes, with the participant's genuine informed consent, and always with respect for their dignity and privacy. Testimonials are not banned in support coordination the way they are in some health advertising. A real, consented story is some of the most persuasive proof you have. Never pressure anyone, and never share details they have not agreed to.
The NDIS Code of Conduct and the NDIS Practice Standards are the rules I work under every day, across 200+ regulated Australian projects since 2019. I write in Australian English, for Australian participants and the NDIS Commission. I keep up with each 2026 update to the guidance, including the rules on conflict of interest. Your copy reads like it was written down the road, not offshore.
Your pages ship written to the rules current at delivery in 2026, with a note on why each claim is safe. That makes future reviews fast and cheap. If the rules shift while we are still working, I rewrite the affected lines before handover at no extra cost. You are never left holding copy that has quietly gone out of date.
Tell me about your service and what you need written. I read every brief myself.
Currently taking on new support coordination projects
Faster on your phone? WhatsApp me your website link.
Prefer email? amisha@commasandchaos.com