Post by Cultures You on Oct 22, 2023 7:09:45 GMT
It costs effort, but it is necessary to prevent a bad apple for example an author who copies or writes badly from ruining your work and your effort. Be authoritative and professional Never compromise. Always be willing to recant, correct and apologize, in order to offer correct information . Authoritativeness is earned not with pride and obstinacy, but with the ability to question oneself in order to always be at the reader's service. Never use the blog for personal purposes.
Do not give in to provocations, insults, desires for revenge. The blog must deal with the topic it has set itself, without excuses, digressions, justifications. Have you written one or more posts to say that someone copied your article or that someone photo editor else falsely accuses you of something? You were wrong . There is not a newspaper, a magazine, a publication, an authoritative blog that I know of that gives in to this temptation. If you do this you automatically get a stigma attached to yourself as an amateur.
Even if you are right. Be interesting Try to look at what you have just written from the outside. Would you recommend it to a friend? Would you like it on Facebook? Are you proud of it? Do you think it's really useful? These questions will make you immediately understand whether the post deserves to be published or not. It drives me crazy when my daughter makes a duck face, but if I thought I could monetize a blog with my daughter's grimaces I would be crazy: I put her photos on Facebook for her uncles and grandparents, and on the blog I write things that I hope may be of interest to a wider audience.
Do not give in to provocations, insults, desires for revenge. The blog must deal with the topic it has set itself, without excuses, digressions, justifications. Have you written one or more posts to say that someone copied your article or that someone photo editor else falsely accuses you of something? You were wrong . There is not a newspaper, a magazine, a publication, an authoritative blog that I know of that gives in to this temptation. If you do this you automatically get a stigma attached to yourself as an amateur.
Even if you are right. Be interesting Try to look at what you have just written from the outside. Would you recommend it to a friend? Would you like it on Facebook? Are you proud of it? Do you think it's really useful? These questions will make you immediately understand whether the post deserves to be published or not. It drives me crazy when my daughter makes a duck face, but if I thought I could monetize a blog with my daughter's grimaces I would be crazy: I put her photos on Facebook for her uncles and grandparents, and on the blog I write things that I hope may be of interest to a wider audience.