Need a WordPress website this weekend? Start here...

How Julie Became a Published Writer (And you can, too)

(Reading time: 3 – 5 minutes)

Julie Angelos is an American living in Italy, a journalist, a writer, and a recently converted blogger. Julie stopped by Website In A Weekend a while back, told a story about a shark, and I immediately knew I had to recruit her as a guest author! Julie writes in an easy, yet intimate style. I hope you enjoy her writing as much as I do.


How I Became a Published Writer

-by Julie Angelos

If you would like to be a published writer you are going to need a passion for writing. I started writing as soon as I got a crayon in my hand. Then when I was 11 in 1975. I started keeping a small lock and key diary with a bright yellow and red Snoopy picture. I would write whatever came to a 11 year-old’s mind.

I have entries in my diary about what I would do for my birthday party, where my family went and who I liked and didn’t like at school. The one that makes me laugh is “My sister hit me.” Now, years later, I realize the importance of those four words. I had found in my diary a place for myself, a place for my own thoughts. More importantly, I have proof, 30 years later, that my sister hit me. ;)

As I got older, I started writing travel diaries. I have about 15 handwritten diaries in my garage that I wrote when I was between 19 and 30. Sometimes, I wanted burn them because I was afraid of what my children would think. But they probably won’t be so interested in mommy’s life until they have had a few of their own adventures. Anyway, I traveled around the world doing the cafe diary scene, before I decided to really give writing a try.

How to get published

The first time I was published as a writer was in high school. I was president of my high school so the job was sort of just assigned to me. One of my teachers came up to me and said “Julie, you are going to have to write a weekly article for the school newspaper.” It helped to have friends in high places.

A couple of weeks later, I saw my name in print for the first time with a headline saying ‘Howdy Cowboys’. What a laugh.

When I moved to Europe, I found an opportunity to write for the first English language magazine in our city. The publisher of that magazine became a good friend of mine. She had great taste and style, and the magazine was a big success.

From there, I just continued writing. I would write or suggest stories to my publisher and she usually printed them. Sometimes, my publisher friend would give me assignments, for example she’d say “Julie, there’s a new art opening on Friday, can you cover it?” And I would, gaining more experience.

And I continue to write for pleasure just as I continue to paint pictures of flowers, just as I love reading other people’s stories.

In the end, if you want to write, do it. Just take out a pen and write. Write from the heart and write as you speak.

There are many avenues to publication. The easiest way to get published is to publish yourself – just as I’m doing here. As you gain experience, opportunity may well find you, if you’re open to it.

What sort of things do you like to write about? Have you ever been published? Where?

Writing since she found a crayon in her hand, Julie is currently working as a Special Aids and English teacher at two Middle Schools in Italy. She has lived in Italy for more than 15 years, is married, has two young children and writes JBulie’s Blog.

9 Ways to Make Your Guest Post Editor Love You

(Reading time: 3 – 4 minutes)

Here’s some simple tips for getting your guest post published. For that matter, these tips will help get published on dead trees too.

I’ve never seen any of these tips published for guest posting on web sites. There are probably out there, I just haven’t found them.

What I have found is 100s of articles on “How to Pitch and Write a Guest Post.” Most of them are pretty good. You should do your own search and save a half dozen of the best to StumbleUpon or Delicious (friend me on StumbleUpon if you like, username dmdoolin, serious users only).

Instead, here’s what to do after your pitch is accepted:


Make the editor love you; create a submission package.

It’s pretty easy. Just make a zip archive of everything that the editor needs for guest posting. Or might need. Or will make his or her life easier in all ways, or cure the shingles, or promote whirled peas, etc. Here’s a list of what makes me feel happy:

  1. Brief bio, somewhere between 160-220 words. Basically one short to medium length paragraph is perfect.
  2. Bio pic or head shot: Provide at least a thumbnail. If you want to provide other sizes, that’s fine, but the thumbnail is mandatory.
  3. Use blog post template if necessary. If the editor “suggests” a template, he or she is just being nice. What “suggests” usually means is “mandatory.”
  4. Copyright release detailing rights. Typically, the guest post author grants the host non-exclusive rights for publication under certain conditions. This is a large, complex and very murky area of law, and I am not a lawyer. Typically, copyright doesn’t matter until a dollar changes hands, then all of sudden everything gets really excited, and the sharks, smelling blood in the water, start to circle. I’ll have A LOT more information on how Website In A Weekend will handle copyright. I will say as a guest author, it should be a pretty good deal overall: backlinks, promotion, etc.
  5. Post tags (WIAW will assign category). Feel free to add 7-10 tag suggestions for the editor’s convenience.
  6. SEO title, description and keywords. Frankly, these meta items are a pain in the butt to write. Help the editor out by writing them yourself.
  7. The article in HTML format. I was wondering what I was missing from the list… but yeah, you need to provide the article as well. Seems obvious, right?
  8. “Original images” for locally hosting. Provide the original images used in the article, so that they can be hosted on the same site as the article. This saves an unbelievable amount of time.
  9. Any other notes necessary. If there is something the editor needs not on this list, stick that into the zip file as well.

These tips are very similar to how you used to have to prepare a paper for academic publication. Nowadays, no need for 5 copies double-spaced with original figures on a certain size of paper. But, the strategic principle is the same: make it easy for the editor, the editor will make it easier for you!

If you have a guest post in queue, no worries, I’ll be emailing you for missing pieces as necessary.

Next post on this general topic will be copyright release. I’ve got a good notion of what’s fair and what ain’t, and I’ll be explaining why my opinion matters as well. Given the FTC’s new found interest in All Things Blog, I have no problem holding the difficult discussions in public. Look for it next week or the week after.

Did I miss anything? Let me know…