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A Developer's Guide to Blogging: A Comprehensive Guide to Earning Extra Income through Blogging

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This book takes you on a fun, hands-on and practical journey to do Blogging.

If you had asked me if I would ever make money from my blogging, I would have said no. I lack any special talent, gift, or even a writer to mentor me.

I’ve made more than $30,000 from writing in the last 365 days.

If I can make money from writing, you can too.

Writing technical blog posts can be challenging. As developers, we must make numerous decisions from seemingly infinite options.

This is not your typical reference book. Instead, I'd like to show you that you can write a good technical blog and earn money with just a little bit of knowledge. I only cover topics of which I have firsthand knowledge. The majority of the information I provide here is irrelevant to those who believe in magic.This is an opinionated book. I only cover topics on which I have extensive first-hand experience. Most of the information I provide here is a trial & error method.

You must understand your market value as a developer in order to target the highest range of money with your experience level.

Finding writing leads is stressful. There are dozens of applicants, and you're up against people with years of experience.

Most people don't get the answer to their cold DMs & Emails why because they just don't know how to simply send interesting Emails/DMs.Every chapter is written in a bite-sized manner and straight to the point, as I don’t want to waste your time (and most certainly mine) on content you don't need.

In the course of this book, we

Chapter 1: Why Write in Public and Start a Blog?Chapter 2: Why is a Good Enough Blog Better Than a Great Blog?Chapter 3: How to Crush the Cold Email or Cold DM GameChapter 4: How to Become a Standout WriterChapter 5: A Complete Guide to Starting a BlogChapter 6: Twitter For Technical WritersChapter 7: Technical Writing Opportunities in Software IndustryChapter 8: Why is Personal Branding Important in Blogging?Chapter 09: How to Get Feedback When You First Start BloggingChapter 10: Do You Need a Personal Website to Blog?Chapter 11: Technical Writing Resources.Chapter 12: Why is Networking Important in Blogging?Why you should buy this book?Trying to find a technical writing job in IT and want employers to contact you? and If you're tired of the never-ending search and believe your cold email/DM isn't getting seen, this book will teach you how to design a distinctive email/DM that will be viewed by the founders, community managers, and organisations you desire. I'll explain how I obtained corporate leads through cold emails/DMs.

I earn $600 to $1200 per article when writing tutorials — and with a few projects, that money adds up. But money isn't the only reason to write.

A portfolio of published writing can give you a leg up toward earning a raise, landing a new job, or a part-time role or reaching new clients.

Here’s a secret that many bloggers don’t want to share. you don’t have to focus on the most competitive keywords to get traffic.

177 pages, Kindle Edition

Published March 9, 2023

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About the author

Ankur Tyagi

4 books

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Profile Image for Michał Hawełka.
54 reviews1 follower
July 9, 2023
There's a lot of useful tips & tricks in this book, but the structure is so chaotic. And if we'd get rid of screenshots of author's tweets and his stats - then it would be half as long as it is now. And it's not long :D I probably could spend those 13$ better
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