▲ 2 r/LookingforJob+1 crossposts

[FOR HIRE] The VA who actually answers — Legal Intake & Healthcare Support, 100% response rate

Most VAs say they're "detail-oriented." I had 80-100 patients/customers messaging me daily on a behavioral health account and kept a 100% response rate — for over a year. That's the difference between saying it and doing it.

Here's the short version of me:

⚖️ Legal Intake — worked warm leads start to finish: contact, qualify, log, follow up. No lead left hanging.
🩺 Healthcare Support — appeals & grievances, credentialing, sensitive patient info handled with actual discretion (not just a buzzword on a resume).
📥 Inbox/Ticket Chaos → Calm — I don't let queues pile up. Ever.
🛠️ CRM, Google Workspace, Microsoft Office — I show up already knowing the tools.

I've been doing remote work independently since 2019, so I don't need hand-holding — just tell me the goal and I'll run with it.

If you're a law firm, clinic, or busy founder who needs someone to actually pick up the intake and keep it picked up, let's talk.

💬 Rate: $6/hour (negotiable based on scope)
💳 Payment: Wire transfer
🕐 Availability: Flexible — happy to align with EST/PST or any US business hours

Drop a comment or DM — I reply fast (see above 👆).

reddit.com
u/Reliable_VA — 4 hours ago
▲ 4 r/LawFirmMarketing+1 crossposts

Beware with FindMyLawyer.co

I recently had a negative experience with a third-party service called FindMyLawyer, which charged an upfront $500 fee without guaranteeing legal representation and distributed my personal information to multiple firms. Are these types of 'lawyer matching' platforms required to disclose how they handle client data, and is it standard practice to charge such high fees for a simple referral service? I am concerned about the transparency and ethics of these platforms and would appreciate any professional insight on how to vet legal matching services safely.

reddit.com
u/Reliable_VA — 3 days ago

Beware with FindMyLawyer.co

I recently had a negative experience with a third-party service called FindMyLawyer, which charged an upfront $500 fee without guaranteeing legal representation and distributed my personal information to multiple firms. Are these types of 'lawyer matching' platforms required to disclose how they handle client data, and is it standard practice to charge such high fees for a simple referral service? I am concerned about the transparency and ethics of these platforms and would appreciate any professional insight on how to vet legal matching services safely.

reddit.com
u/Reliable_VA — 9 days ago