• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

EveryWriter

A New Community of Writers

  • Home
  • Reading
    • Blog
    • On Writing
    • Interviews
    • Famous Authors
    • Stories
    • Poetry
  • Writing
    • Writing Tips
    • Writing Inspiration
    • Playground
    • Writing Prompts
  • Publishing
    • Publishing Tips
    • Literary Magazines
    • Book Publishers
  • Promotions
    • Book Promotions
    • Promoting Tips
    • Classifieds
    • Newsletter
  • Submit
    • Submit
    • Privacy Policy

Promoting Your Writing

Promote Your Literary Blog

February 26, 2017 by admin Leave a Comment

This is to all literary magazine editors and publishers. We want to link to your feeds. That means your latest posts on your site will come up on our home page. With over 500,000 visits per month, we should be able to boost your blogs. We hope to be the place on the web for people to read literary magazine news.

Basically this is an aggregation service. Your site will show up on our front page, but when people click on it, it will go to your site. If you are interested, please fill out the form below, and we will contact you soon.

Fieldset

 

Verification

Filed Under: Promoting Your Writing

How to Create a Successful Writing Blog

December 4, 2016 by admin

How to Create a Successful Writing Blog

computer-555

It’s a no-brainer that writers need a presence on the web these days. Even the best-selling authors have a place to showcase their work. Myspace and Facebook are two excellent sites for developing writers to make it easy for people to access a writer’s work, but when it comes to writing on the web, should a writer go with a blog or a website?
Blog. If you go with static content, you can still use a blog, but the most beneficial thing about this tool is the ease of updating the content. With a few clicks, updating your blog with new original content is straightforward. The more you edit and develop original ideas, the easier it is to get placement in search engines, have people find and read your work, come to like how you write, and develop a relationship with you as a reader.

If you’ve read anything I write for this site, you know I can’t let an article go without some advice. There are two types of writer’s blogs on the web right now. The first is the mind spilling “This is what I think and did today blog.” This blog covers all topics and has no specific theme, rhyme, or reason other than to be about the author. It works fine if you are already famous.
If you want good search engine placement, you want to always write on 1 (yes, just 1) subject. I know that’s hard to do, but 20 articles on a blog about science fiction writing will USUALLY bring you better placement than 100 generic posts mixed in with 20 sci-fi articles. These search engines are sophisticated, but they have a 1 track mind. Find what people are asking for, and that is it. Do not speculate about what you think they want, but give them precisely what they ask for.

My suggestion (and again, I always have 1 I know) is that you create a blog that centers on your genre of writing. If you write Science Fiction, write about Sci-Fi, watch Sci-Fi on tv, your Sci-Fi friends, your trip to the Sci-Fi world where you bought a Sci-Fi mug with some Sci-Fi shaving cream and Sci-Fi hair rollers, and Sci-Fi slippers. You get my point. The most important thing you can do is have a site where people can find you and your work when looking for YOU.

The second (and almost as important) thing you can do for yourself as a writer is to develop a site where people find you and your writing. It isn’t easy, and you’ll only do it if you stay on topic. Also, grab all the links from others who like your writing. It helps if they are on the same issue too.
Now, I know that writers like to write (well, some do). They tend to want freedom and not be tied to one subject. It’s understandable. Okay, so I have two websites. One where you are the writer who writes a journal/diary and tries to take the internet by storm by being witty and funny and, of course, well-written, and have the other website be about you as a writer and your work.

If you think of the web as a big brain, and you are the waiter trying to feed the big brain, you wouldn’t show the big brain pictures of your cutie cat named Fluffy to make the big brain hungry. No, you would repeatedly show it a picture of a cheeseburger until it couldn’t resist it anymore.
I know what you say: “But other people are making a living off their blogs, and they talk about all kinds of stuff.” Yep. It is the point I’m making. Those people are bloggers, not writers, pushing a specific product. They are just pushing themselves and their blog. Many times they don’t have any other effect. You do. You have a book or some other publication. You can be a blogger and a writer, but to be both on the same site usually makes a mess

Filed Under: Articles On Writing, Promoting Your Writing

Why do Self-Published Authors Need a Website?

May 5, 2014 by admin Leave a Comment

Why do Self-Published Authors Need a Website?

Getting your book published with a large publishing house is becoming more and more difficult. Book stores are closing, and less and less money is being made by big publishing houses. Some publishers even want to see that authors have build a writing platform online before they will consider publishing your book. They want to know that you are promotion savvy.

Even if you are not trying to publish your work with a publisher, it’s hard to sell your book without a website. Readers have become plugged-in to the amount and quality of books being published. When the self-publishing boom first started people were being taken by short pamphlet size booklets being sold as books. Now many readers want to know something about the author before they buy. They want to see that you are a professional.

When trying to be in Rome, do what the Romans are doing. Right now major authors all have websites. type in the name of a movie star like Tom Cruise or George Clooney and you won’t get back a personalized website, but if you type in the name of an author like Stephen King or James Patterson their personal websites are the first result you get back. This is because authors are selling something to the public, movie stars are not.

If you want to be professional, mimic the best practices of the most famous authors, you need a website. You also need a website for your platform. You need a place where your readers can get to know you before they buy your book. Your website should be the central location for your Twitter, Facebook, Linkin, and all other social media. A free website looks bad. Don’t do this, it’s not professional. You’re not going to gain any trust from readers by having a free website or a tumblr.

Go professional, do what the best writers do, the most famous, build a relationship with your readers and gain their trust, get a professional website.

It’s not hard and not very expensive. There are a lot of places that offer sites. I like Hostmonster. We have worked with them for a long time. They have one click install like installing wordpress for free, they have templates you can use. It’s very easy, and it will only cost you about $4.95 per month. Many professionals use Hostmonster, and they will take care of your domain registration for you. Hostmonster is an affiliate of ours, and we have hosted sites with them for years. BUT do your homework. You do not have to take my word on this, go out and find a good company you like. Read reviews, find what’s best for you. We like and work with Hostmonster because they are easy, low cost, and we know them, but you should do your research.

The most important thing here is to get a professional website! If you are selling a book, it is a must! You need a site. If your book is already for sale and you don’t have a website, get one as soon as you can. Check out Hostmonster  do your research, and get a site and start your writers platform.

***We have an affiliate relationship with Hostmonster. Although we do get payment for sign ups, we have worked with them for many years and we think their services are outstanding.

Filed Under: Promoting Your Writing, Self Publishing

Do Writers Need a Website?

December 7, 2013 by admin 13 Comments

Do Writers Need a Website?

This article was moved from our old html site. This article is republished here. 

Let’s get the hard part out of the way first. No writer coming up can survive on story alone today and even writing talent doesn’t guarantee you a spot on the stage. No one will pay you to write poetry, and it’s difficult to even give your fiction away for free and get anyone to pay attention to it. There are too many people out there looking for their quarter hour of fame and demanding to be heard which makes it extremely difficult to find the ones who do deserve the attention, the fame and the money that comes from excellent talent well applied.

So assuming that you’re not Stephen King’s son or daughter and that you don’t have inside biographical knowledge on the latest former teen idol train wreck; you’re going to have to start where all good writers do—in the streets begging for attention. The only difference between today and the past is that the boulevard has turned into the information superhighway, and if you don’t have your own website, you’ve lost the race before you even started.

Step 1: Going Past the Blog

I hate the word blog. It sounds so pretentious to me to say, “Read my blog;” It’s a website, end of story. But the fact is that the word blog has become a major part of our cultural lexicon, and you do yourself damage by refusing to embrace the format. That’s just what a blog is—a format of presenting content to your readers. For those that don’t know, a weblog (or blog for short) is a piece of software which coordinates and catalogues the publishing of your content into a nifty chronological listing which you can categorize by post and even tag so the search engines make it easier for information seekers to find your writing.

While the landing page of your weblog features your posts in a list format, each post is a page unto itself and allows for much easier referencing by search engines. What this means is that if you have a decent design for your site then publishing content becomes a no-brainer and in a short period of time, you can build a site with hundreds of pages of quality content that each becomes indexed and searchable by anyone with sense enough to type keywords into Google.

You can hire someone to do all the fancy stuff for you but only if you have what it takes to get people to sit down for 75 consecutive seconds to read what you’ve written. That’s the trick because today we want more information faster and without effort. People are reading less in one sitting because they don’t have to anymore. You as a writer must deal with this reality and either write in snippets digestible and interesting enough to keep people coming back, or you have to give them something worth sticking around for a few minutes when their fingers are screaming at them to click the mouse button and move on already.

Step 2: Get It Together

Now that you’ve made the decision to get a website, where should you start? Typepad or Blogger would be my suggestions unless you’ve got several hundred bones to lay down on a custom-made site design with preferred hosting. If so, I recommend using WordPress, but do some research and find out which option is best for you in the long run. I have changed blogging platforms three times now and each time has been a headache that was well worth it in the end (I use WordPress now on an independent server).

If you’re a web designer, I’d recommend holding off on your custom site design and pick one of the standard templates just so you can get yourself up and running. Start writing immediately because you’ve got a lot of catching up to do; there have been millions of blogs started and abandoned since I started using blogger over two years ago and millions more are coming. That’s a lot of bullcheet for people to wade through until they get to your stuff.

Step 3: Write Interesting and Write Right

Many writers online are all about the stream of consciousness diary style expression without edit or filter, but I am not. I believe that good writing may start there but that great writing comes from great editing and multiple revisions. If you care about your work and are passionate about getting others to read and respect your writing, meticulous editing will show proper grammar, sentence structure and capitalization. This attention to detail will show agents and publishers that you mean business and actually care about the product you’re putting out into the world. Your readers will appreciate you treating them like adults and putting capitals on proper nouns and the beginning of your sentences.

Step 4: Network with Your Blogroll, RSS and Your Time and Attention on Other Writers

A Blogroll is a section in the sidebar of your site where you list other sites that you read and provide links to those sites so your readers can click through. Whenever you mention or quote something that other writers have written, you can link to them using a trackback ping which is basically a shout out from your server to their server saying, “Hey, I mentioned what you wrote over here—come check out what I said.”

Also, get hip to Really Simple Syndication (RSS) which is a feed you subscribe to using an RSS Aggregator like Newsgator (which I use) or Bloglines—kind of like Tivo for your Internet. Subscribe to all your favorite blogs, news, link dumps (sites like Digg which link to multiple news stories or other content rich sites which will provide you with endless fodder to write about and give your interesting opinion on).

Leave intelligent comments on other sites, adding to the conversation and always giving props in a respectful manner (trust me, it’s not worth it to get into vicious arguments online—you always lose even when you win) and people will click onto your site and some of them will even keep coming back. If you’re lucky, the bloggers (who should always be readers first) will link to you, put you on their blogroll and send others your way.

Step 5: Let Go of the Old Model of Publishing but Don’t Forget It Completely

I can remember senior year in my BFA Creative Writing program—everything was all about prepping and shipping out short stories and poems to obscure literary magazines in the hopes that some pretentious highbrow would descend from their hermetically sealed academic podium to bestow the grandest of honors upon us newbies—publishing us in a magazine that only a handful of people might read.

I am still amazed when I hear from good and intelligent writers that they are reticent to create a website and publish their work on it because many magazines refuse to publish something which has been published prior in any medium, especially online where anyone can access it for free. BS, I say! If your writing is good enough and hundreds or thousands of people come to your site to read your work, any magazine worth its sticker price should be happy to republish your work on their pages. If what you say is interesting enough to enough people, someone will be willing to pay you to polish it up, revise it and put it out there for their readers who will in turn become your readers. Writing is fast-becoming a meritocracy and we the writers of the new millennium will be the ones to profit from the evolution.

Step 6: Give Everything Away

There are so many benefits I could give you to writing online but I’ll mention one outright. Your writing will get better because your readers will tell you what they want to read. The ability for them to leave comments and have their comments read and commented on by other readers allows for a one-to-many conversation about your ideas and your writing that will shape the way you write to them and polish your work so that the act of writing engaging content will become easier and easier to you as time and talent aggregate.

So don’t hold anything back online—give it away and it will come back to you ten fold. If you provide an aesthetically pleasing online environment along with creative, interesting and original content; slowly but surely you will build up your reputation (not to mention your portfolio) online and you will gain the respect and attention of the right people. Keep hammering away and your tipping point will come and you’ll be able to look back and say that you built your writing career from nothing to an audience that you earned through raw talent honed laser sharp and perseverance as thick as the yearly reject pile at Simon and Schuster.

MintonJoshua Minton is the author of Flipping the Temple: Win the Information War Using the Internet to Achieve Fantastic Success as an Artist. You can keep up with him on award winning website, Boys Wear Pants, Men Wear Trousers where he is currently reposting his serial novel …And the Third Floor Magistrates Took the Rape

Filed Under: Articles On Writing, Promoting Your Writing

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Go to page 2
  • Go to page 3

Primary Sidebar

Buy Our Print Magazine


Buy the issue!

Below are the top 11 science fiction short stories everyone should read, but here are a few things to remember about this list before I get hate mail. First,

Search

Writing Prompt

science fiction writing prompt

50 Fantastic Science Fiction Writing Prompts Here are 50 fantastic writing prompts that will get you writing sci-fi. If you use one of prompts to write a story, we’d love to read it! Send it to us.  In a future society where humans have achieved immortality, a rebel group arises seeking the right to die. […]

Contests

 2023 50-Word Science Fiction Story Contest

Join our 2023 50-Word Science Fiction Story Get in Our Issues Contest!

2023 50 Word Horror Story We Miss Halloween Contest

  Welcome to our 2023 50 Word Horror Story We Miss Halloween Contest. Everyone wishes they had 2 Halloweens, but no one will listen. Being that I’m missing Halloween, I need horror stories and lots of them. So post your 50-word horror stories in the comments below. The winner gets free promos on our site, […]

Betcha’ Can’t Haiku 2023 Contest

Welcome to our Betcha’ Can’t Haiku 2023 Contest. We are looking for the best Haiku we have ever read! It can be on any topic or written in any style. We want to read your haikus. We are double-dog daring you to write a haiku, even write 5 haiku and leave them in the comments […]

Menu

  • Home
  • Publishing
    • Indy Book Publishers
    • Literary Magazines
  • Writing Lab
    • Articles On Writing
    • Writing Prompts
  • About Us
    • About Us
  • Submissions
  • Social
    • Activity
    • Profile
    • Notifications
    • Messages
    • Forums
    • Settings
    • Log Out
    • Log In
    • Register

Copyright © 2023 · Metro Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

We use cookies on our website to give you the most relevant experience by remembering your preferences and repeat visits. By clicking “Accept”, you consent to the use of ALL the cookies.
Do not sell my personal information.
Cookie settingsACCEPT
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are as essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
SAVE & ACCEPT