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My blog is new. I need 10 article posts for my blog. How much should I pay for it?

Last Updated: 23.06.2025 00:53

My blog is new. I need 10 article posts for my blog. How much should I pay for it?

Once you’ve done the above, copy and paste the above into a new static page (“About”), edit it here and there, and publish. Add a link into your blog menu for the About.

your general commenting policy

Twitter (now X ‘ecks’): xxx

Where can I find BPO projects?

Every day, around 7 million blog posts are published on the Internet. You’re fighting for attention and breathing space even with a voice.

Oh, well done, bruv. You’ve made the second biggest blogging mistake.

the blog’s main language

This Device Pulls Clean Drinking Water Out of the Air - VICE

If you succeed, you succeed. If you fail, you fail. It doesn’t matter either way because you still have to do some elementary things.

The first placeholder post is typically headlined “Hello, world!” with no content. Leave it alone. This is your blog’s birth certificate. It helps the search engines to ‘notice’ the launch of your blog.

Comments close on all posts after 28 days. Comments should be in English as far as possible, although all languages are welcomed. Comments once posted cannot be retracted or removed, so please comment at your own risk.

After delay, man accused of killing Jonathan Joss released from jail - San Antonio Express-News

Who you are — you don’t have to disclose your identity, but there must be a person even with a pseudonym (not anonymous) for attracting readers and subscribers

You can expect to pay up to US$7 a word with experienced writers or bloggers (with 10+ years’ experience) — same as magazine writing rates.

The second placeholder post is empty. Use it to introduce your blog and yourself.

What are the best mattress options for a comfortable night's sleep in Pompano Beach?

On the balance of all practical probabilities, it’s easier (and cheaper) to write your own stuff.

The biggest mistake any blogger could make is producing a blog that has no voice — no persona, no personality, no flavour and no perspective behind the words.

Open it for editing. Fill it with your own text on:—

How does the media determine which statements made by President Trump to fact-check and which ones to not fact-check?

Who your blog is aimed at, or who might be interested

This blog updates every Tuesday at 8 p.m. EST (midnight UTC, Wednesday).

It’s that straightforward.

Dotemu’s CEO on how it makes new games that feel retro - The Verge

THE 1ST PLACEHOLDER POST: ‘Hello, world!’

Open them and fill with pre-prepared copy.

Just carry on from where you are. Stay on target, Luke.

Will you Vote for Andrew Tate for UK PM?

If you’re running a hobby-horse blog, you generally don’t pay because then you’d be inviting people to guest-post out of interest.

Even news agencies like AP, Reuters, AFP, etc (with hundreds of reporters each worldwide) have their own overall ‘corporate’ and ‘news’ persona or voice.

YouTube: xxx

What are some alternatives to whey protein for post-workout nutrition?

The 4th, 5th and 6th placeholder posts

THE 2ND PLACEHOLDER POST

Your writing doesn’t have to be perfect for a blog. It only needs to be reasonably readable — and reasonably formatted (which you still have to do anyway even for a piece written by someone else).

Do guys ever want to suck a dick even though they are straight?

Whatever the editorial window or niche, your blog has a ‘voice.’ That voice is you.

Facebook: xxx

This is your first actual post — the first piece of ‘meat’ for your blog. Open it and fill it with pre-prepared copy.

Tyrese Haliburton reveals he has ‘24/7’ group chat with Cailtin Clark - New York Post

Addressing your question more directly:—

I welcome submissions of recipes, stories and photos. Please discuss with me. I am prepared to pay US$1 per word for unique, eye-catching pieces.

“Administrativa” like:—

Contact me

“What if I’ve already deleted those placeholder posts? What if I’ve posted a few posts already?”

Email: xxx

There’s no point in backtracking. Don’t bother to re-create those placeholder posts.

[photo or artwork of yourself doing something other than work]

If you’ve just launched your blog, it should already have 3–6 empty placeholder posts autogenerated by the platform or system.

John “Ramenista” Smith

You need to understand why you yourself should be doing the writing for your own blog — certainly for the first two years.

UH-OH…

The Ramen Freak is about all things ramen and noodles, Japanese or not. It focuses on traditional as well as “new wave” or “fusion” recipes and discusses protips for creating the “perfect” noodle dish for the noodle aficionado.

The About page will always be your blog’s most-viewed item and click magnet.

Example:—

(All images via my blog)

I am the author and owner of Ramen Freak. I work in Windows and Linux mobile computing for a boring, colorless, publicly listed corporation in East Coast USA. I live with Janet (my wife since 1985) and two whimsical cats the size of battle tanks in the lush concrete suburbs of Anytown, Anystate. My wife isn’t ‘big’ on noodles though. Oh well…

Your blog’s editorial window (“niche,” although that’s the wrong word) — what your blog is generally about or tends to focus on

English is the blog’s language, but other languages may appear occasionally (hopefully with an English translation).

The 3rd placeholder post

This is because you’re meant to fill them with pre-prepared copy (text and pictures).

Your contact details (email at a minimum)

how frequent the blog is updated (i.e. what is your posting day — every Tuesday at 8 p.m. is a good starting point)

This blog was born on Wednesday, September 18, 2024, at 7:21 p.m. EST (23:21 UTC).

You can contact me below (for blog and off-blog matters) or use the Contact Form (click here).

I hope you didn’t delete them.

the blog’s launch date and time

Never mind what the Internet is telling you. The starting rate is US$1 per word for a 300–500-word piece (with minimum 3 photos) that’s unique and exclusive to your blog — with a 30%–50% kill rate for submitted but cancelled acceptance.