The skills needed to grow an audience, create career opportunities, help people, build a side hustle, and become a lifelong learner.
I never thought I’d write online and earn money independently from time.
Before March 2020, I hadn’t published anything on the internet. I thought you’d need to study journalism, have a writing degree, a big goal, or at least some relevant experience.
I had none of these.
But I was curious. And I started writing. I took courses, spent my money on writing coaches, read countless books, contacted fellow writers, and kept perfecting my process day by day.
Two years later, more than 2 million people have read my articles on learning and knowledge management, 27k people follow me on Medium, and more than 4k people subscribed to my weekly Learn Letter. More than 60 students took my cohort-based online course and rated it 9.1/10.
But apart from the numbers and building diverse income streams, I found writing to be a vehicle to explore my curiosity, clarify my thinking, and support other people. There’s nothing more rewarding than people telling me my writing has helped them.
As an education expert and ex-high-school teacher, I’m passionate about creating learner-centric material that provides learners with the clear, practical advice they need.
In this sense, I created this long-read article for people who are about to start their writing journey or who are midway through and looking for applicable tools and resources to improve their process. It contains the sub-skills needed to write non-fiction articles.
Whether you’re a curious mind wanting to explore online writing, a professional looking for exciting career opportunities, someone who hopes to share their experiences with the world, or a lifelong learner wishing to clarify their thinking, this article will give you all you need to accelerate your journey.
You’ll find here everything I wish I had when I lacked a process for online writing.
The article is structured in 10 sections containing the exact system I created for writing online. I designed this guide to help you in the best way possible, so each part has actionable steps you can follow.
Once you’ve read this article, you’ll have a well-suited theory and actionable tasks that will help you practice the ideas.
Likely, you won’t read this article in one go, but start with the section you’re most curious about, and come back to this piece when you’re ready to learn more.
Table of Contents 1. How to Stick Through Until You’ve Gone Viral 2. The Key to Audience Growth Many New Writers Miss out On 3. How to Always Live in an Abundance of Writing Ideas 4. Find Your Writing Niche for Growing an Audience 5. How to Write Headlines That Make People Click 6. This Introduction Technique Will Help You Hook People In 7. A Clear Editing Blueprint for Improving Your Writing in 5 Steps 8. How You Can Keep Writing No Matter What 9. The Only 9 Writing Tools I Use For Maximum Efficiency 10. All Free Resources in One Place
If you feel you want to go deeper to accelerate your online writing journey, join my 3-week cohort-based course that runs twice each year. You transform into a consistent writer and lifelong learner. You learn to express your thoughts online effectively, attract an audience, and use your ideas to help and inspire others.
The course is unique because you won’t only learn, but you’ll also apply your knowledge and leave the cohort with three high-quality articles. Because you can only improve your writing skills if you sit down and write.
1. How to Stick Through Until You’ve Gone Viral
Most people fail to attract an online audience because they quit too early.
They expect prompt results. But writing online is no sprint. You see the effects of your work only once you’ve passed the invisible virality threshold. And to pass it, you need to learn and improve while no one reacts or replies to your work.
The issue is that as you put more time and energy into writing, sticking through becomes harder and harder.
When I hit publish for the first time, I felt insecure but great. My friends cheered me and shared one of my first articles across their LinkedIn and Facebook accounts.
As with every new learning adventure, initial enthusiasm vanished fast and made space for reality. I became more aware of my unknown unknowns — the things I wasn’t even aware of in the first place but that I realized later are relevant for succeeding with writing online.
And as if this burden wasn’t enough, no one read my work.
What I call “writing in the void” (aka practising in public) is the hardest part of becoming an online writer. Until you’ve crossed the virality threshold, no external factors attest to your learning.
You don’t get thoughtful comments.
You don’t receive emails of gratitude.
You don’t see any financial rewards.
And that’s where most people give up.
If you want to experience the diverse benefits of writing, don’t be one of them. Instead, treat writing as a marathon.
It took me one single article to reach 100,000 people and gain 500 subscribers. But there were 39 articles before where I didn’t get any reaction at all. If I had quit after article 39 (and about 300 hours of writing and learning), I would have never crossed the threshold.
If you stick to a consistent, deliberate writing practice (more on what it contains in the sections below), you can achieve the same.
Your single most important goal when starting to write online is to not expect anything in return until you’ve published 100 articles (thanks for this wise advice Sinem Günel).
What you can do now
Prepare yourself for long-term writing, with a realistic plan you can stick to even when you don’t see any traction.
Approach writing online as you would approach preparing for a marathon. Instead of having the goal of running for 42.195 kilometres, you want to set the goal of publishing 100 articles online.
When tracking your progress, don’t focus on any external metrics such as followers, claps, or subscribers. The only thing you should track is the time you’ve spent writing and the number of articles you’ve published.
To stick through until you’ve published 100 articles, plan backwards. Grab a sheet of paper or open your note-taking app and answer these questions:
- How many hours a week can you spend writing? (Hint: the ideal number is the one you can stick with)
- When are you actually going to sit down and write? How can you block out time for writing? What do you need to stop doing to have time for writing?
- How many hours do you need per article? (Hint: with practice, your writing time will decrease; my first articles took me about 12 hours per article, but I’m now at roughly 3 hours per article).
- When will you have published your first 100 articles?
2. The Key to Audience Growth Many New Writers Miss out On
Most writers don’t set up their email lists from day one because they think it’s unnecessary.
They believe nothing can be more important than writing and learning how to write better. An email list feels like a painful extra step.
Many people also feel as if they lack the tech knowledge to do it and don’t want to waste hours figuring out the setups. There are too many providers, and precious writing time can fly away trying to figure out how to set up an email list.
Yet, ignoring the importance of starting an email list from day one is a mistake you can never engineer backwards.
When your first article goes viral without a call to action, you’ve lost your first hundred-something subscribers who’d be genuinely interested in your work. You’ll grow slower, and you’ll be at the mercy of algorithms.
And even though I felt awkward asking my seven readers to subscribe to my non-existing newsletter, it was the best thing I could’ve done for my writing career.
Because the thing is, platforms change. Emails don’t.
If you one day want to sell any digital product, you need an email list. You won’t depend on an algorithm: your readers will see you even if your writing doesn’t appear in their feed.
What you can do now
The good news is that setting up your email list isn’t rocket science. You can do it in less than 30 minutes. Three steps are required: registering on Convertkit, choosing a landing page, and creating a Call-to-Action through which you ask your readers to subscribe to your list.
First, register on Convertkit.
Second, sign up free in the right corner of the website and create a free account. I recommend Convertkit over other email providers because the platform will cost you nothing for your first 1,000 subscribers, and it is optimized for online creators.
Third, pick a landing page. When you set up your landing page, keep in mind: the longer you try to create a well-designed landing page, the less time you’ve left for writing articles.
Especially in the beginning, the appearance of your landing page doesn’t matter much. It’s better done than perfect. Add a picture of yourself to make your page more personal, or a royalty-free image from Pexels, for example.
Then, add a Call-to-Action (CTA) underneath each of your articles
In the beginning, start with a generic CTA: It’s better to start with a good enough CTA than not at all, and you can easily adjust your CTA once you’ve figured out your niche and know what you want to do with your list.
Your first Call-to-Actions can sound like this:
- “Want to improve X? My newsletter will help you create the Y you need to move towards a Z future.”
- “Get access to exclusive X content. Subscribe to my free newsletter here.”
- “Want to stay in touch? Subscribe to my email list.”
If you don’t want to do this now, grab my free 5-day email course on setting up your email list in 20 minutes. Each day you’ll get straight-to-the-point help with exact steps and to-dos on why and how to set up your writing for audience growth.
3. How to Always Start From an Abundance of Ideas
Ideas are the most essential building blocks of articles because the writing can’t even start without having them.
When I started, I feared I’d soon run out of ideas.
I feared sitting in front of a blank page. I worried about writing “too early” about my best ideas and running out of topics afterwards. I doubted I had anything worthy to say.
The thing is, writing isn’t about sitting down in front of a blank page and waiting for the best idea to come.
Most people think they don’t have ideas when in reality, the problem is they don’t train their minds to pay attention to their ideas and then don’t collect their ideas.
If you judge your ideas and don’t capture them with an open mind, they’ll be gone. And without having ideas, it’s impossible to write.
The good news is you don’t have to wait to have more ideas.
Creativity is practice. The more you create, the more creative you’ll become. If you train your brain to develop ideas, they will, at one point, just flow into your life.
What you can do now
In the beginning, you need conscious practice. Ask yourself a couple of times a day what do I want to write about?
Put a sticker in your bathroom, on your fridge, or your phone screensaver. Even if your mind doesn’t have answers in the first place, trust the process.
If you ask yourself these questions five days in a row, you’ll have plenty of ideas to pick from.
There are a couple of things you can do to facilitate this process.
Pay attention to your surroundings, read books, pay attention to your mind, and talk with people.
Most importantly, when a new idea comes into your mind, don’t judge that early idea. You only know if they’re good once you’ve written about them.
If you label your early ideas as “bad ideas,” you tell your brain that it’s wrong to develop new ideas. That way, you hinder your ideation process and make it harder for your brain to come up with a new idea next time. Thus, to generate more ideas, treat your new ideas very gently.
Once the idea is there, note it down, no matter what. You make sure to never again run out of ideas by taking the process into your own hands. That is, having a safe space where you capture and store your ideas.
I’ve experimented with a lot of idea-capturing tools. I used Trello, Notion, an excel sheet, and Milanote. Lately, I’ve discovered and settled for xTiles because the platform combines all features I was looking for.
Here’s what it looks like:
The lesson is — it’s not about the tool but about your process.
Commit to capturing your first five article ideas in the tool. Some helpful prompts to come up with writing ideas: I used to be Y, this is how I turned into Z (e.g., I Used To Have Social Anxiety. These 4 Mental Shifts Made Me More Confident), What you can learn from Z will change Y (e.g., 3 Resources about Learning that Will Change How You Look at Education), or questions and topics you’re curious about and want to learn more.
The next section will guide you on how to pick the ideas worth writing about.
4. Find Your Writing Niche for Growing an Audience
“How do I find my niche?” is a question I get asked a lot. Many writers think they should have a focus area when they start writing.
And while this gives you some form of security, it’s the wrong thing to do. When you niche down too early, you miss out on growth opportunities. Because you have no data on what resonates with your audience. And you can’t know which topics you love writing about.
When I started, I wrote about anything from relationships, SEO, and intuitive eating. My assumption was I’ll end up writing about love and psychology.
Soon I realized while I love talking about these topics in my podcast and with friends, I don’t like writing about them. Only 20 stories in, when looking at the data, I realized the stories on learning and books perform best AND that they were the ones I loved writing.
Don’t try to niche down when writing your first 30 or 40 articles. Embrace the opportunity only beginning writers have — writing about anything you’re curious about.
Niching down will happen with time if you write about topics that make you curious and monitor the stories that engage your audience.
What you can do now
Open your idea tool (check the previous section if you don’t know what that is) and add five broad themes that you would like to explore (e.g., computer science, biographies, history entrepreneurship).
Then, look at these themes and a couple of specific article ideas by asking yourself for each of them:
- What could be a specific topic I’m curious to explore?
- What’s a topic I have strong emotions or opinions about?
- What’s a question inside this theme that I have found an answer to?
When writing your next articles, commit to picking ideas from different topics. Use the Meta log (more in section 10) to track whether you actually enjoy writing about it.
Once you have published at least 20 articles, look at the data. Sort your articles by clicking on your preferred metrics, for example, views. You will see how many people clicked on the article.
After you’ve published more than 20 articles and filtered by the view, check whether there is an intersection between your top-performing pieces and the ones you love writing about. No? Continue writing and check again after 20 more articles. Yes? You’ve found your niche!
5. How to Write Headlines That Make People Click
If your headline isn’t good enough, no one will read your articles. Your content can be perfect. But you drive the audience into your writing through the title.
The title is the very first thing a reader sees, and online platforms have an infinite amount of content. Thus, if your headline doesn’t stand out from the crowd, online readers will scroll further and pick a title that awakens their curiosity.
As a result, even if you invested hours of work into perfecting your article, you won’t have many readers with a meh headline. No matter how great your content is, you won’t be able to drive an audience into your writing. No one will read your work if your headline isn’t interesting enough.
Your title can literally make or break the success of an article.
Almost no one read my articles in early 2020. It’s no wonder as my headlines were as boring as “The digital gap is increasing — we need to act now!” and “Out of your head and into your body in less than 5 minutes”.
Researching and implementing some headline components in my titles helped me reach more than 2 million readers in less than two years.
If you ever want to be a successful writer, you need to start working on your titles. Because if no one clicks on your heading, you’ll always have zero readers.
The good news is headline writing is a skill you can master.
Once you understand the components of successful headlines, you can create your own engaging titles.
But consistently writing headlines that make people click is more complex than you might think. It requires continuous practice and re-learning.
Six core components will help you craft titles that make people click. If you internalize them and deliberately practice headline writing (more on that in the section below), you’ll be able to create your own highly engaging headlines.
The first component is the reader’s benefit. Great headlines focus on the reader and deliver value either directly or indirectly. It is clear that the writer didn’t write the content to herself, it’s not a journal but something useful for the people. For example, If You Want to Be Rich, Spend Your Time Buying Assets, or The Feynman Technique Can Help You Remember Everything You Read.
The second component is breadth. Choosing a topic that’s appealing to a large audience is usually present in popular headings. While I love writing about education and learning, I also accept that an analysis of Estonia’s education system likely won’t go viral. Whereas the title 9 Micro-Habits That Will Completely Change Your Life in a Year speaks to a very broad audience.
Thirdly, people like sharing things on the internet that either make them look smart or helpful. An article with the title The 7 Emails You Should Send Every Week to Get Ahead in Your Career has a great chance to be widely shared on LinkedIn.
The fourth component is novelty. Don’t try to recycle the old but well-performing headlines because people will realize it. What worked well in the past won’t go viral today. Unless you bring some novelty to the discussion and show your spiky point of view — a view that is slightly controversial and with which some people would disagree. An example of this is Self-improvement has made me worse,
Next, when I did my headline research, I realized headlines that contain proof are likely to perform well. The proof can come from famous people, such as Elon Musk’s 2 Rules For Learning Anything Faster. Or you can also add self-proof as I did with the article This is How I Made My First $30,000 From Writing Online.
Lastly, countless viral articles provoke emotions. They’re either controversial or use powerful words, such as the ones in the gif below. An example of an emotion-provoking headline is Today I Learned Something About My Boyfriend That No Girl Should Ever Have to Discover.
What you can do now
Now, knowing the components of well-performing headlines isn’t enough. It’s like reading a book and believing you’re well-prepared for the exam.
To craft headlines that make people click, you need to practice. Headline writing is a skill you can master, but you’ll need to spend time crafting multiple headline variations.
So these are the exact steps you need to craft a high-performing headline.
First, collect the headlines you click on in your idea board (more on that in section 3). They will serve as inspiration to you.
Second, before starting to write an article, ask yourself, “what’s in it for the reader” and “which 2–3 headline components would fit the topic of my article?”
For each article, you write, try to craft ten headline variations as I did in the picture below. Don’t worry about perfecting the title yet; this time, just write what comes into your mind.
Once you’re ready with the headline variations, pick the one you’d click, or ask your friends or writer buddies to choose for you.
To further boost your chosen headline, I recommend the free version of CoSchedule. Insert your title, and swap words until you reach a score that’s above 70. Repeat this practice for each article you write.
I know this process can be tiring. But it’s worth it. Keep Ayodeji Awosika’s wise words in mind:
“I’ve written more than 15,000 headlines since I’ve started writing. Only one per cent of them are really good. Those one per cent of headlines I’ve written created 100 percent of my viral successes. Every single morning, I write down 10 ideas for headlines. […] I promise, if you don’t learn how to write good headlines, you’ll never have a career as a blogger. Never. So do I.”
6. This Introduction Technique Will Make People Interested in Your Work
Countless writers start their articles as if they were writing their life stories. Lengthy anecdotes, unrelated information, and a lot of beautifully written fluff.
Online readers are barely interested in such introductions. They clicked the headline because they wished to have something out of the writing, such as advice, entertainment, or a piece of specific information.
Sloppy introductions can destroy the time investment you put into crafting your articles. You convince your readers to click on your story with your headline. But you hook them into the story with your introduction.
An efficient tool for writing engaging introductions is the PAS formula. The acronym stands for Problem, Agitation, and Solution. That’s how you structure your introduction.
In the problem part, you need to pick a painful issue and describe it in one sentence.
In the agitation, you make the problem more specific and more emotional, almost unbearable.
Lastly, in the solution, you offer a way out. You propose a solution.
Here’s an example from one of my articles:
What you can do now
To write a powerful PAS arrange your introduction into three parts.
In part one, ask yourself: what is the problem I’m trying to solve? Why is it painful for the reader? What is the pain about? You can start with prompts, such as:
- Have you ever wondered…?
- Do you ever…?
- Do you also?
- Most people face….problem.
In the second part, agitate on the problem. Ask yourself how you can be more specific. Is there a real-life situation that happened to you or to a friend that would fit the context and could help you make the problem more vivid? You can continue with sentences, such as:
- If you also feel like….it’s likely because…
- I/ My friend also…insert problem that happened frequently.
Lastly, offer a way out for your readers. Ask yourself: How can I describe the solution briefly? Tell why the article would immensely help the reader. You can close your introduction, for example, with:
- By….., you’ll….
- Discovering….helped me…. It’ll also help you with…
- These are….that you can easily apply in….to….
7. How You Can Make Your Articles 10x Better With This Clear Editing Blueprint
Have you ever invested too much time into editing your articles?
I know the feeling of desiring the perfect article. I feared of being judged by the online world.
The problem? With this mindset, an article will never be good enough.
Writing is creative work. You’re never done if you aim for perfection, as you will always find something to improve.
At the beginning of my writing journey, I spent 17 hours editing a single article. And the outcome was average. The article only had a few hundred views.
The problem with this mindset is that the time you spend editing is the time you don’t spend writing. I could have spent those 17 hours writing instead of perfecting one single article.
And in the online world, quantity matters. If you publish less, you have fewer chances of going viral. You can think of each article as a lottery ticket. Maybe it’ll take off and bring you exponential growth.
But if you spend hours perfecting your work, you won’t be able to publish more.
To avoid this, define an endpoint for your editing process. I now have a clear structure I follow to know when my article is good enough. I hit publish despite any insecurity, accepting my fear of being judged. Good is better than perfect, and I know the opportunity costs of not starting to write a new article.
What you can do now
Here are the steps I follow when editing my articles. Feel free to steal them, if you struggle to edit the paper in a way that makes you feel content with your work.
First, put the heading in the title case format with this free app by inserting your heading into the “Add your title in here” white space. When you scroll down, you can copy the result. (1 min)
Second, read the text out loud to recognize inconsistencies and check the flow. When you read out loud, you put yourself in the reader’s role, and that way, you can spot flaws in your writing. Delete everything that doesn’t add value to your article. (30 min)
Third, improve the section headings. Think of your section headings as they’d be mini titles of your article: they need to encourage your readers to keep reading. Thus, they should also follow the principles of great headlines — more on that in section four. (5 min)
Fourth, polish your word choice and cut the fluff. Great online writing is simple. You don’t need to use sophisticated words and lengthy sentences to convey deep messages. (5 min)
Fifth, check the grammar with the free version of Grammarly. You can write with flawless grammar even if you’re not a native speaker. Sign up, add the app to your browser as an extension, and enable the grammar check for the platform where you write. (5 min)
Sixth, format the text according to the requirements of the platform. Like most platforms, Medium also has formatting requirements. The most important ones in a nutshell: Put your heading and subheading in the right format. Add section headings. Add section breaks to divide your post into sub-paragraphs. If you quote someone, use the quotation format. Get my Free Medium Formatting Guideline for visual examples. (5 min)
8. How to keep writing no matter what
After a few months without much traction, writing can feel like an aimless, soul-draining activity you can’t get out of your head. A tempting black box that might one day bring you the desired outcome.
You’re barely getting any better, keep repeating the same mistakes, and can’t get enough motivation to write nearly every day. You don’t track how much time you invest in writing, and you’re also unaware of what you actually like writing about.
If you don’t find a solution and continue writing without reflecting, you will either give up writing at some point. Or your writing will always remain mediocre, and you will never reach a broad audience.
You can end up wasting the precious hours you’ve invested and say goodbye to your dreams of becoming a writer.
I’ve almost been there. I didn’t know how to track my writing progress in a meaningful way.
Building on my background in education, I came up with a tool. The goal? Keep getting better at writing while getting my motivation high. This tool can also help you build a consistent, deliberate writing practice.
I call it the writing meta log as it fosters your metacognition skill. In essence, this skill helps you understand the way you’re thinking, and it makes you aware of both your strengths and weaknesses. It helps you create the process that suits your unique needs and supports you in the long run.
This is my meta log from April 2020:
What you can do now
The framework of meta writing log looks like this. You can either create your own in a spreadsheet or get the template free here.
To make the best out of it, fill a line every time you finish your practice. Rely on these three principles to make the best out of the meta writing log:
- Write it for yourself. No one will read it.
- Use it every time you write: the longer you keep collecting data, the more useful it will be.
- Highlight your critical lessons, for example, by bolding them.
As an extra motivation, you can reward yourself for days you’ve filled this out straight. You can invite yourself for a coffee or treat yourself with something you enjoy. It can be a hot bath or a long walk in nature. It totally depends on your preferences.
If you use the metalog consistently, you’ll discover a pattern and see which topics flow well and which are the ones you don’t prefer that much. You’ll reflect after every writing session and through it, you’ll develop a writing process that serves you the best.
9. The Only 9 Tools I Use to Write Great Articles in Three Hours
Most people think they need expensive equipment and fancy tools to become professional writers. Yet, that’s not the case.
I only rely on nine tools, and most of them are for free. Here’s the list:
- The free version of BlockSite Extension disables websites at the time you want. I blocked LinkedIn, Gmail, Slack, and Facebook during my writing time (7AM–10AM).
- BeFocused is one of my favourite productivity tools. I use it as a game against myself. I work in 50-minute intervals. Before I start the timer, I set an intention (e.g. editing an article and hitting publish in 50-minutes). The next 50-minutes require full focus to beat the clock.
- I bought noise-cancelling headphones that help me quickly get into and remain in the flow state. This way, I’m not distracted by any sound and I even enjoy writing on a train.
- I collect and manage my ideas with xTiles. More detailed description of this is in section three.
- English is my second language, so I use Grammarly for (mostly) mistake-free writing. I got the paid version, but the free version also does a good job.
- Readwise and Roam help me optimize my writing process. Too complex to explain in a bullet, but I share it in my writing course.
- For correct title case creation, I use the free Title Case Converter.
- Power Thesaurus helps me expand my vocabulary and increase my word choice. It’s a fast, convenient and free online word bank. I use the free chrome extension to have in-text suggestions.
- CoSchedule turns good headlines into great ones. Check out section five for more details.
What you can do now
Check out the tools that you consider the most helpful for your current stage and start working with them.
But remember, the most important “tool” for your journey is your undisturbed writing time.
In Essence
Writing has changed my life.
It has created career opportunities I never dreamed of. I’ll be, for example, a speaker at the European Union Education Summit in Brussels this winter.
It’s my lifelong learning tool. I discover something new about myself or the world every time I write. It has advanced my industry knowledge, altered my physical and mental health levels, and improved my relationships.
Writing is one of the most rewarding habits you can build. And I know from experience writing online isn’t only for writers.
- It’s for anyone who wants to grow as an individual. You can clarify your thinking and become a lifelong learner through writing.
- It’s for anyone who wants to reach more people. Sharing your thoughts online enables you to reach an insane amount of people.
- It’s for anyone who wants to accelerate their professional life. With every new article you write, you show the online world the expertise you have in a given field. People who’re interested in your expertise will pay attention.
- It’s for anyone who wants to meet and exchange with like-minded people. In the internet era, you don’t have to stick to your local communities to build connections.
If you’re still here, you know all the components you need to kickstart your writing journey.
- Your mindset to fuel sustainable growth
- Your email list to build an audience
- Your ideation process to never run out of writing ideas
- Your headlines to drive people to your work
- Your introductions to hook your readers in
- Your editing process to avoid perfectionism
- Your tools to make technology work in your favor
- Your ability to reflect to see the bigger picture and improve deliberately
If you’re just starting, this article can be a lot to digest. But no worries. You don’t need to feel overwhelmed. You can revisit this article at any time and progress at your own pace.
Work on one section for at least a week. Then move on to the next one. If you’re at the very beginning of your journey, I suggest you start with creating your idea board and then learn to sit down and write regularly. Then, focus on headline practice, and set up an email list.
If you want to level up and commit, join the waitlist for the next WOA cohort (scholarships available). In the course, we will cover all of this in more depth. As an education expert, I’ll guide you through practical tasks, and you’ll leave the cohort with three high-quality articles reviewed by experienced editors and by me.
The course is for you if you’d like to learn from someone who doesn’t only have expertise in the field of the skill but also teaching. Because no matter how experienced someone is at cooking, writing, painting, or photography, their course will be useless if they don’t know how to teach.
Join the waitlist for the next Writing Online Accelerator cohort
Bonus: All my free resources in one place
I’m here to help you. So below, you find a list of all the free resources I’ve created for writing online.
If there’s something else that you’d love to be on this list, reply to one of my emails with what you want.
- 5-day writing course on how to attract an audience online
- Free Medium Formatting Guideline
- Inspiration board to collect the inspirational content you consume
- Writing Meta-Log template to reflect and track your writing process
If you’d like to read more on the topics of this article, check out the articles below:
- How You Can Write with the Right Mindset to Fuel Sustainable Growth
- The Simple Hack for Audience Growth Many New Writers Miss out On
- I Used to Run out of Writing Ideas. This Repeatable 3-Step Process Helped.
- How to Easily Find Your Writing Niche for Growing an Audience
- 6 Principles That Helped Me Write Effective Headlines
- How to Master the Most Important Yet Underrated Writing Skill
- This Introduction Technique Can Make People Read What You Write
- The 51-Minute Editing Framework to Feel Confident When Publishing Your Articles
- The Only 9 Tools I Use to Write Great Articles in Three Hours
- How the Meta Log Can Turn You Into a Better Writer
Other articles I’ve written on writing:
- This is How I Made My First $30,000 From Writing Online
- How to Create like Elizabeth Gilbert
- How a Leftover Graveyard Will Make You Edit Without Mercy
- Stephen King’s 8 Tips Can Improve Your Writing and Editing
- The Two Learning Curves First Time Writers Need to Master
A very special thanks to Eszter Brhlik for co-creating this article with me.