These three sample posts are pulled straight from your 24-post calendar and written out in full. They do two jobs at once: each is a real post you could adapt and publish, and together they're a reference library of layouts you can reuse for years. Notice how each one is built differently — that variety is what keeps a blog from feeling repetitive.
Treat them as templates, not scripts. Borrow the shape — the drop-cap opening, the pull-quote, the step-by-step walkthrough, the comparison table, the FAQ — and pour your own expertise and voice into it. When you publish for real in Sanity Studio, your live site applies its own styling; what carries over is the structure and the writing.
Featured example
The Case for OutsourcingThe Overflow Problem: Taking On More PI Cases Without Hiring
An editorial, persuasive opener — drop cap, a pull-quote, and a row of stats. The layout to reach for when you're making an argument rather than walking through a process.
More examples
From 800 Pages to 8: Inside a Medical Records Chronology
A behind-the-scenes process post — a before/after block, numbered steps, an inline figure, and a checklist. The format for showing how your work actually gets done.
The Business CaseIn-House vs. Freelance Paralegal: An Honest Cost Comparison
A data-driven comparison — a side-by-side table, cost stats, a pros/cons grid, and an FAQ. The layout for analytical, decision-helping posts.
When it's time to write your own, skim these for the building block that fits your topic — then open the Publishing guide to drop it into Sanity Studio. Three layouts in rotation is plenty to keep a year of posts feeling fresh.
Want these turned into your real first posts?
If you'd like help adapting these into polished, published posts in your own voice, Frostbyte Web Solutions is a message away — drafting, editing, or a fuller content plan.