Five Things This Writer Can't (Won't) Do

Terry L. Mitchell
Many authors, especially those who write for the Web, use various techniques and practices that help them get the maximum number of readers possible. While Iīve successfully used some of them myself, there are others that I just refuse to do. I have listed five of them below.

1) Write about the most popular subjects. Sorry, but I canīt write about stuff like hairstyles and crafts and I donīt do reviews, even though Iīve noticed that people who focus on such topics get tons more readers than I. The problem is that Iīm not interested in things like that – certainly not enough to write about them, no matter what the potential reward. I can only write about the stuff that interests me. If that means fewer readers and diminished chances to make money and gain notoriety, so be it. Iīll succeed on my own terms or I wonīt succeed at all.

2) Write on demand. I canīt do that any more than I can poop on demand. I apologize if thatīs a little too much information, but I couldnīt think of a better way to express myself on this issue. Iīve tried writing for sites that offer pay and/or extraordinarily high readership in exchange for writing about very narrow subjects of their or their clientsī choosing. In many cases, they want articles of 500 words or more. For some of that stuff, I can hardly think of one sentence.

3) Tailor articles and their titles toward popular keywords. I donīt think so. Pardon the expression, but I have no desire to become a keyword whore. I donīt feel comfortable twisting my words like that in order to create contrived articles. It seems like such an unnatural way to write. I have to write the way I think and I donīt always think in terms of keywords. Anyway, if I tried to cram an article with keywords, I would almost certainly put in too many, which would result in the search engines flagging my articles as spam.


4) Network. Iīve never been able to do the networking thing, whether on the Internet or in person. Sites like Facebook and Myspace are definitely not for me. I know that kind of thing helps build popularity for a writer and his or her work, but Iīve always been a nonconformist and a kind of lone wolf. It just seems to me that thereīs a little too much kissing up and brown-nosing involved in the whole process. I hate that kind of politics.

5) Promote. Excuse me, but Iīm a writer, not a promoter. I barely have enough time for writing. My goal is to write the stuff and let someone else do the promotion. The way figure it, if my writing is good enough, I shouldnīt have trouble finding people who would gladly promote it for me. Therefore, Iīm going to spend my time being the best the writer I can possibly be, not trying to artificially inflate the numbers for mediocre work.
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Terry L. Mitchell

Terry L. Mitchell is a software engineer from Hopewell, Virginia. He's been in the software development and engineering line of work for over 27 years.



In addition to his day job, he is a freelance writer (his articles have appeared on hundreds of Websites) and an avid blogger. He is also an expert on all types of insurance and is the owner and operator of FoxRater, a site that allows U.S. citizens to find affordable insurance in their region of the country.