Find the offer
Most creators have an audience asking to buy something but no clear product to point them to. The first job is figuring out what that product is — and whether the market is actually there.
The operator behind the scenes — systems, launches, and the follow-through that makes them work. For creators who've built something real and are ready for what comes next.
Most creators have an audience asking to buy something but no clear product to point them to. The first job is figuring out what that product is — and whether the market is actually there.
Landing pages, email sequences, payment flow, delivery. The operational backbone underneath the launch — quietly assembled, properly tested, ready when the audience is.
Pre-launch warm-up, launch week itself, post-purchase follow-through. I'm in the trenches with you — not handing off a deck and disappearing.
If that sounds like you, let's talk.

Hi — I'm Mia.
Originally from Israel, now based in Italy where I'm studying medicine. In my spare time I help creators build the business side of what they've already built — the thing that quietly became my second obsession.
My focus is digital products: courses, memberships, paid communities — and the systems that make them actually sell. I work with a small number of creators at any one time, in the rooms where the real work happens.
If you'd rather skip the call and just send me a note, I'm at mia@miatauman.com.
A digital product partner works alongside a creator to turn their audience into a business. That means identifying the right product to build — usually a course, membership, or community — then setting up the operational backbone (landing pages, email sequences, payment flow, delivery) and running the launch end-to-end. Unlike an agency, a partner stays in the trenches throughout, rather than handing off a strategy deck.
Agencies typically focus on traffic and ads. Consultants typically focus on advice. A digital product partner is closer to a fractional operator: directly involved in building the product, the systems, and the launch, with skin in the game on whether it actually sells. The work is hands-on, not advisory.
Independent creators in the 5,000 to 100,000 follower range, posting consistently around one clear topic, still running everything themselves with no operations team in place. The fit is strongest with creators whose audience is already asking them to sell something.
Engagements run in three phases: a positioning and product phase (defining the offer based on what the audience actually wants), a build phase (assembling pages, emails, and payment infrastructure), and a launch phase (pre-launch warm-up, launch week, and post-purchase follow-through). The full cycle typically runs six to twelve weeks depending on scope.
I'm studying medicine in Italy, and the creator-operations work started as a side project that quietly became a second discipline. The medical-school background means I work with a small number of creators at a time, with the same precision and follow-through the rest of my life requires. It's a feature, not a bug.