We want to hear what you have to say. Below is a short informational post with the guidelines for submitting your guest post for a chance to be featured on our blog.
Our articles are geared towards event planners and promoters, looking for advice and tips for their upcoming events. We are a resource to small businesses, nonprofits, large corporations, educational programs, entrepreneurs, freelancers, artists, festivals, fairs and event promoters.
The goal is to answer all their questions and limit time wasted on researching.
To achieve this, we strive to provide articles that are instructional and informative, sometimes offering step-by-step instructions; this is what we look for in our guest posts.
Include real-life examples, evidential support, statistics and actionable tips. We want to be as helpful as possible; a one-stop-shop to answering all their questions.
On our form we allow a minimum of 700 words, but would prefer more (between 900 - 1,200). However, if the content is good, we will accept this minimum word count. Your article can only be for our use and not published anywhere else.
We check for plagiarism!
All of our articles and titles must be unique, while using primary keywords to receive a decent amount of traffic. Keywords and phrases to include depending on your topic:
Remember, write about what you know or specialize in. We want journalistic articles that can inform our readers on specific topics, the latest event news, and other categories mentioned above.
The more specific, the better!
We are looking for a format that is easy for readers to digest. That means no long paragraphs and drawn out sentences. Bullet points, action-steps, sub-headers for readers on the go or scanning the page.
If your article is a lifestyle piece, please break up your paragraphs with breaks and sub-headers.
If you want to include personal or company links, please only include a maximum of ONE link back to your own website in the article. This link must be used as a resourceful link throughout the article and not in a 'spammy' way - "buy our product now at MerchandiseHouse...".
Common reasons for rejection:
Too much fluff, not enough information
Not enough evidential support or data to back up your claims
We learned nothing new
The topic is too broad, overdone or not relatable
Plagiarism was detected
Too many grammar or spelling errors
Not journalistic enough
Lacking any informative information
Word length was too short or long