Category: WebsitesCategory: Websites

  • Published On: June 10, 2025Categories: Social Media, Websites

    Photographer Marcel Borgstijn is another photographer leaving Instagram:

    “A nipple in a fine art photograph violates community standards, but watching someone’s final moments apparently doesn’t. These aren’t community standards; they’re corporate calculations designed to appease advertisers and political actors while maximizing engagement through shock content.”

    That’s been happening, but now there’s a new straw that broke the camels back: “Meta found a new way to violate your privacy.”

    While we can wait for congress to enact laws to protect consumers (hah!), or wait for a new centralized kingdom of power to rise up and take their place, Marcel has a much better idea, which is “building our own spaces and inviting people to visit on our terms.”

    Yes, he admits “it requires more work,” but goes on to say “when you control the platform, you control the experience.”

    It all comes down to control. If you build your brand, your business, your entire livlihood on a platform you don’t control, you risk losing everything for almost any reason.

    If you pay your web hosting bill, and keep your domain name current, your website will outlast all of the creepy social media platforms.

  • Published On: June 3, 2025Categories: Email Marketing, Social Media, Websites

    Taylor Swift controls all her music, and she even controlled the news, driving zillions of people away from social media to her website with a post saying “Letter on my site.”

    No, you’re probably not as big as Taylor Swift. But will you get to her level faster playing the same social media lottery with everyone else?

    What if you spent hours every day practicing? Honing your skills? Connecting not with legions of people but a few good ones?

    Sure, social media can help you find an audience. But a website with a newsletter sign up form can help you keep one.

     

  • Published On: May 30, 2025Categories: Websites, Work, Writing

    Lex Roman talks about wanting to write more, and how you can’t exactly always do that with a newsletter. Something written generally… gets sent out, and you don’t want to send multiple emails per day (or per week, maybe) to your readers.

    Plus, it gives your work a home. Your newsletter generally isn’t your permanent address, it’s the delivery truck that transports your readers to the places you want to take them.

    (link via Alex Dobrenko)

  • Published On: May 28, 2025Categories: Life, Websites, Writing

    From Dan Blank, in “10 things I wish every writer knew about marketing.”

    “What if instead of redesigning your website, you reached out to one person each day for three months? Where your goal was a meaningful conversation, a generous act, or a thoughtful reply.

    I have seen writers not only learn so much in this process, but create wonderful connections and opportunities. Besides, wouldn’t it be nice to spend your days talking with people who love to read?”

    I say do a little of both, but with a twist.

    Let’s stop redesigning our websites, or rather, let’s just strip them to the bones and get back to the writing. I’ve had enough of the Squarespacification of what a website should be.

    The blog format has endured because it works. One of the most popular websites in the world uses the blog format. Just a photo, followed by a block of text. Then another photo, with a block of text.

    It’s called Instagram. Look it up.

    Magazines, newspaper articles… photo, then text. Photo, then text.

    THEN… then share some of those posts with people from time to time. That doesn’t mean blast it to “everyone” on social media. Instead, send one link to a person from time to time.

    “Here, I wrote this is a bit ago and was thinking of you…”
    “Hey, remember that time we did this thing?”
    “I know you’ve been struggling with X, and I just wrote something about that.”

    Our website is the library in our cozy cottage in the woods – not everyone visits, but for the right people it’ll feel like home.

  • Published On: May 20, 2025Categories: Marketing, Websites

    One of the biggest things I push is to backup your work on your own site, which means if you write on Substack, your work should be duplicated on your own site, which led to this question:

    Q. Hi, I read something yesterday about search engines getting confused if you have the same article in two places. I’ve been copying my substack pieces across to an old blog but now am wondering… what do you think?

    A. SEO advice is avoid duplicate content, as it upsets the algorithm. But I don’t work for the algorithm, I work for me, and serve my readers / subscribers first. If it means less random traffic from search engines im fine with that. My hope is that work is good enough that some of readers might tell a friend about it, which I find much more valuable.