1
Brief decoding (15 minutes)Project manager reads your brief, identifies the marking rubric, the referencing style, the expected word count and the specific learning outcomes the tutor is testing. Outputs a one-page internal brief for the writer.
2
Subject matching (15 minutes)Brief assigned to a PhD-qualified writer with credentials in the exact subfield (e.g. UCL Bartlett architecture brief goes to a writer with a UCL Bartlett PhD, not a generic architecture writer).
3
Drafting (variable)Single-author drafting from a blank document. No content reuse, no template padding. Reading list pulled from peer-reviewed sources within the last 5 years (or seminal works as appropriate).
4
Editorial review (30-60 minutes)A second senior academic reviews the draft against the rubric, checks the referencing format (OSCOLA, Harvard, APA, Vancouver) and tightens the argument structure.
5
Pre-flight integrity check (15 minutes)Turnitin similarity check (target <5%) and Turnitin AI check (target 0%). Both reports attached to the delivery email so you can verify before submission.
What does 'PhD-qualified writer' actually mean?
Every Projectsdeal writer holds at minimum a PhD from a UK or international research university in the specific subfield of your coursework. Many also hold active teaching or visiting fellowship positions. We verify credentials at hire and re-verify annually. We do not hire generalist writers.
How is your editorial process different from competitors?
Five distinct stages, none optional: brief decoding, subject matching, drafting, second-academic editorial review, pre-flight integrity check. Most competitors run two stages (drafting + spell check). Our work goes through five sets of expert eyes.
Do you handle every UK referencing style?
Yes. OSCOLA (4th edition), Harvard (UK and university variants), APA 7, Vancouver, AMA, IEEE, ACM, MLA, Chicago and Turabian. References are verified against the source, not auto-formatted by software.
Are your writers familiar with my university's marking rubric?
If your university publishes a rubric (UCL, KCL, Imperial, LSE and most Russell Group institutions do), we map your brief to the rubric explicitly. If your tutor's specific rubric is in the brief PDF, we extract and map it. Rubric alignment is part of the editorial review.
Will my professional coursework pass Turnitin AI detection?
Yes. Every Projectsdeal coursework ships with a Turnitin similarity report (typically <5%) and a Turnitin AI report showing 0% AI generation. The pre-flight integrity check is non-skippable, regardless of deadline pressure.
Can I see writer credentials before ordering?
We don't share writer names or full credentials publicly to protect the writers and the confidentiality of student work. Your project manager can confirm the writer's degree, university and years of UK academic experience for your specific subfield before you commit.
What's the difference between Professional and Standard coursework here?
There isn't one. Every Projectsdeal coursework, regardless of level or deadline, goes through the same five-stage editorial process and is written by a PhD-qualified UK writer. We don't operate tiers.
How does your service handle very specialised subjects?
We refuse briefs we cannot subject-match to a domain-expert PhD writer. If you're studying something niche (e.g. UCL SSEES Russian literature, SOAS development economics, RHUL information security), confirm subject capacity on WhatsApp before ordering.
Is using a professional coursework writing service legal in the UK?
Yes. Under the Skills and Post-16 Education Act 2022, providing model-answer and academic-coaching support is legal as long as the work is not submitted as the student's own without appropriate disclosure. Our deliverable is a model answer for your reference and adaptation.
How do you maintain confidentiality?
NDA on file. Project-ID system on our servers (no student names stored). We never publish, share or resell coursework. Zero confidentiality breaches in 23+ years of operation since 2001. Reviews are publicly verifiable on Sitejabber, Yell and Google.