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Content Syndication Not Guest Blogging Is My New Distribution Strategy
My approach to distributing my writing has changed dramatically over the years. I used to be pretty pro guest blogging, and now not so much. Explaining my current syndication approach can help others better promote their writing. This is, however, not a technical guide.
Originally published at https://pushroi.com on December 12, 2022.
Iāve written for places where I was paid and many places that received content for free. In aggregate, those that paid took less work to get published and treated the writing and writer with more respect during the process.
Years of seeing articles Iāve written for free vanish from the internet, be reattributed to someone else, or end up on a website unrecognizable as the place I submitted to led to this approach change. Now I will write words in exchange for money or syndicate content Iāve written as widely as convenient. The exception to this is a high-profile OpEd in a well-known publication, and possibly due to existing relationships.
I donāt see a way around this. Even among well-financed and big-name players, publishing is chaotic. Publishers rebrand, change their CMS, close, pivot to a new model, and get acquired. Things get lost in the shuffle.
For a big legacy media example, I once had photo credits on the Dallas Morning News website. Years ago, when DMN spun out an entertainment publication, Guide Live, an entire section of Dallas Morning News redirected to the new siteās home page. The articles using my photos were not individually migrated and redirected; they vanished, and when Guide Live died and redirected back to the Dallas Morning News website, they never reappeared.
With smaller publications, itās way worse. Here are a few more examples.
Tech.Co got acquired, and the new owners deleted several articles without telling me. The reason for deletion was that those articles (most of them were, at the time two-year-old) news briefs werenāt driving traffic. The site also redirected my author archive page to the team page.
Business 2 Community, a site fueled by contributors for many years, seemingly exists to promote links to crypto and gambling now. The site also attributed all of its thousands of unpaid contributors to one of six bylines. My byline was restored after I complained on Twitter, reminding me, Business 2 Community made it impossible for contributors to correct so much as a typo (even if introduced by an editor) after publication, and you never could reach an editor by email.
Social Media Week got acquired by Ad Week. Each bylined individual article still exists, but (like with Tech.co) my author page showing the archive with everything I contributed doesnāt.
Social Media Today, Robin Carey, the founder / CEO, passed away unexpectedly. The site sold to Industry Dive, and the new owners ended the unpaid contributor model, leaving my bio forever linking to a failed startup website that someone else started using as a PBN.
Thrive Global, according to Arianna Huffington, was never a media company, but the company, for many years, had a strong media company apparatus. I contributed only one article back in 2019; that article has changed URLs at least four times since it was published, and not all of them have been properly redirected.
Those are a handful of larger sites that got free original writing from me. The list doesnāt include dozens of blogs that vanished, pivoted to company websites, broke embeds, or removed links and other functionality.
The benefits of guest posting are distribution, search engine optimization via a wider footprint of backlinks, and possibly building relationships. If a site turns spammy, removes all bio links, breaks its own links by changing URLs, or stops hosting the content, the SEO benefit fades to nothing.
For distribution, most of the sites people think of as traditional publications have a minimum number of readers for each article, measured in hundreds or thousands. A few places may have the floor in the low tens of thousands. Remember that for every viral article you see, there are a dozen news briefs you didnāt.
Syndicating widely instead of just sharing links creates the largest number of readers to the words I publish. Currently, the distribution floor of something I write is 1,200 reads between all the places I syndicate. Some sites routinely bring in a few hundred reads and some only a few dozen, but it means people are reading the thing Iāve written.
It no longer makes sense for me to write free original content for a site with a lower minimum distribution than I get from syndication and a risk that the article disappears, loses SEO value or becomes hard to find.
Everything has an end, but at least with writing, if that end is completely outside my control, Iād like to be paid. Otherwise, Iāll syndicate broadly to get the widest distribution possible. And the content will live on even after the death of any single site.
Photo by Glenn Carstens-Peters on Unsplash
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Roque rejects NUJP call to apologize for berating reporter
#PHnews: Roque rejects NUJP call to apologize for berating reporter
MANILA ā Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque rejected the call of the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) to apologize to a reporter for berating and cutting her off during a press conference for allegedly misquoting him on governmentās coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) testing efforts.
āI donāt owe anything to NUJP. Iāve done work for NUJP, they probably owe me, I donāt owe them,ā Roque said in an interview over ABS-CBN News Channel (ANC) on Wednesday.
The NUJP, in a statement, described Roqueās actions as āboorish and, as it turned out, misbegotten tiradeā.
"Officials who earn public ire for their pronouncements should not blame journalists who are merely doing their jobs," the NUJP said.
Roque, however, insisted that he was misquoted since CNN even ācorrectedā their story.
āCNN has since corrected the story so there was really a mistake. If thereās a mistake, if you acknowledge the mistake, I donāt even demand an apology. Just correct it because weāre all in the business of the truth, that to me is enough,ā Roque said.
Roque also said he has personally spoken with CNN reporter Trish Terada who explained that she did not write the article, but pointed out that as MalacaƱang reporter she should have corrected the story.
āIt turns out it was not Trish who wrote the article and I think personally Iāve sent a message to Trish but I also feel that as the MalacaƱang reporter, she should have corrected the story of her news outfit particularly because itās her beat,ā he said.
He said the real person behind the story should be identified since the article was published without a byline.
āWhoever wrote the article and there was no byline, thatās the problem. Why is it that some news agencies do not have bylines for their stories para (so) we know who wrote it,ā he said.
In a press conference aired over state-run PTV4 Tuesday, Roque singled out Terada for an online article headlined āUp to private sector to carry out mass testing, Roque says amid limited testing capacityā when other media outlets published similar stories.
Roque scolded her, saying that the article made it sound like the government had no mass testing program when it did have an āexpanded targeted testingā program since it was impossible to test the countryās entire population.
āI have to call you out. Kita mo naman ang naging resulta ng inyong reporting at ikaw lang ang nag-report na ganyan (You see the result of what your report, youāre the only one who reported it that way),ā he said.
CNN Philippines, in a statement, stood by its story but also found it āregrettableā that Terada was not given a chance to defend herself from public attacks that could harm her reputation as a journalist. (PNA)
***
References:
* Philippine News Agency. "Roque rejects NUJP call to apologize for berating reporter." Philippine News Agency. https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1103412 (accessed May 20, 2020 at 10:19PM UTC+14).
* Philippine News Agency. "Roque rejects NUJP call to apologize for berating reporter." Archive Today. https://archive.ph/?run=1&url=https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1103412 (archived).
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