I remember folks offering that service.....kids today will never know that struggle.
Judging by what I see online, having all the bells and whistles on their own computers still hasn't managed to make people more literate as far as grammar and punctuation are concerned.
That's part of what I offered. One girl asked me, "Do you guarantee me an A?" and I told her, "No. I guarantee that I will do my utmost to turn out a paper that has no spelling errors, is formatted correctly, and I will make sure the papers are grammatically correct, and so forth. The actual content of the paper is up to you, and if you write a paper that deserves an A, chances are good that your instructor will give you an A. If it's not good enough for that, there's nothing I can do about it." If I noticed that people had some specific, chronic issue with grammar, formatting, etc., I might briefly explain where they were going wrong, or recommend one of the group tutoring sessions the library offered.
In all the years I did this, only two people actually - blatantly, at that - offered me money to write the entire assignment for them. The first asked right in front of the Student Association secretary, and my grandmother said that had to be a test, to see if I was willing to break the rules (plagiarism of that sort would have resulted in immediate expulsion) because surely nobody could be
that stupid.
I told him off for even thinking of asking that. And later on, a guy in the science fiction club on campus offered to pay me to write an English essay for him. He got told off, too.
Evidently nowadays there are programs and websites to keep track of such shenanigans and identify plagiarized material. I get that students have a dozen things going on at once and are strapped for time, but buying papers and taking credit for things they didn't write... sheesh.
I wouldn't even make up a title for my clients if they forgot one. Every paper had to have one, and I did remind them of that. If we were talking about it over the phone, sometimes they'd say, "Will you make one up for me?" and I told them no. If they protested, I'd explain that first of all, it wasn't my paper, it was theirs, and they were responsible for its content - including the title. Second of all, just because I type a paper, it doesn't mean I actually know anything about the topic and wouldn't know a good title from one that wouldn't have anything to do with the topic. I wanted my clients to get the best marks they possibly could, and wouldn't want any mistake of mine to ruin that.
Over the years, I did learn a lot about various subjects. It's what led me to get into classical history, actually. Someone brought me an essay to type and I thought, wow, this class looks really interesting. So I took it the following year and it was one of the most interesting, fun courses I ever took.