how to save good writing

Okay, so maybe that title is a bit melodramatic. But like I said in my last post, I believe that good writing is in danger–if not of disappearing, then at least of being eclipsed by all the not-so-great content out there.

In the last week there’s been a flurry of posts by mom bloggers about writing vs marketing. Lindsay Ferrier wrote on her blog as well as in her newspaper column about navigating the sometimes-uncomfortable line between blogging and marketing. Mom-101 reminds us that unless we provide great content, whatever marketing house of cards we create is at risk of falling down. Kim at Hormone-Colored Days wrote a post further summing up the “bloggers on blogging” discussion (with links!) And BusyMom suggests we all accept that we disagree, do our own thing and get back to writing, already.

Once upon a time I would have agreed wholeheartedly with BusyMom’s “write and let write” philosophy. The first time I went to BlogHer I couldn’t understand what all the fuss was about in the “should mom bloggers market themselves” panels. Advertise, don’t advertise, review products or don’t, who cares? I remember thinking. If writing is good, I’ll read it. If it’s not, I won’t.

But I sense a certain danger now, because daily it becomes harder and harder to sift through it all and find the good stuff. Print publications are slashing budgets, cutting content and disappearing altogether, and they’ve long been the bread and butter for serious writers. If fewer good writers are able to find paying outlets that allow them to pursue their craft while still paying the mortgage, it may mean good writers (yes–even some of those bloggers we love so much! What, do you think they’re all sitting on fat trust funds?) dropping off the radar more and more, being replaced by product shilling and other dubious “content”.

I still think people should be able to do whatever they want to do. And that means that bloggers can write whatever they want, and I can choose to read or not read. But as writers and readers, I think we need to work hard to make sure the good stuff is still out there and just as visible as the not-so-good.

But how? I came up with a short list of ways we can support writers and good writing.

1) Read good writing, and read it in a variety of outlets. Duh, right? But let me go on. At Lindsay’s blog, a commenter complained that as soon as some bloggers begin writing for paid outlets, the content on their own blogs suffers and more and more it’s about linking out to other, paid ventures. As somebody who does this for a living, my initial reaction was “well, duh”. Here’s the thing, folks: many writers are either earning, or working toward earning, a living from their work and if the writing is good, they should. That’s how our society rewards what it values. That’s how writers manage to make the time to think, reflect, improve their craft, and write good content rather than spending their days slinging burgers to pay the mortgage.

The fact is, good writing IS often a commercial enterprise. People who have decided to do this as a career or even a serious hobby put a lot of time and effort into creating content worth reading, and they absolutely deserve (and need, unless they are independently wealthy) to be compensated for it.

In my opinion, linking out to her work on larger, paying sites is a good sign. It means that the writer can spend her time writing, and not worrying about boosting her SEO rankings or which advertising network will get her the best return. By allowing a larger company to worry about critically selecting her work, marketing her work, publishing her work, and paying her for her work, she can whittle down the number of hats she must wear, and eliminate much of the temptation to get involved in ethical quagmires like pay for post schemes. Plus, even the best writers can use a good editor from time to time. Let’s not fall into the trap of thinking that writing is more pure or honest or real just because it’s on a wordpress blog rather than in a magazine or big website. Good writing is good writing, and often it’s a team effort. Reward it with your click-throughs and reads and comments, regardless of where it’s showing up.

2) Support good writing with your dollars. Eee! With DOLLARS? But the internet is supposed to be FREE! Again consider my previous point: the exchange of money is how our society shows what it values. Major publishing corporations that have been long-hailed for their quality reporting are now gone or in trouble, in no small part because a) they never figured out how to make money on the Internet and b) along the way, they started giving everything away for free (which we’ve become accustomed to, to the point that we feel entitled). Think about it: that hard-hitting newspaper article that took three reporters to write, a travel budget to research, a legal team to defend in case of libel suits….why on earth are we entitled to read something that requires that kind of money and time to produce absolutely free? Heck, we’ve developed such an entitlement complex that we now feel resentful if we have to plug in an e-mail address and zip code in order to read an article that took thousands and thousands of dollars and many, many hours to produce. So instead, we read a blogger’s commentary on the article and often never click through to read the original work. Who loses? In the end, all of us. If it’s not making any money, that kind of research and writing may well cease to exist.

It’s the same thing, albeit possibly on a smaller scale, with parenting articles and essays. It’s great that there’s so much fantastic free content out there, but trust me: as a writer who values what I do, it’s awfully hard to justify spending hours and hours writing “for free” when I have to help put food on the table, and many writers are in the same position I am. In order to support writers who take their craft seriously, we need to support publications and websites that consistently go above and beyond and–here’s the important part–pay their writers fairly for the hard work they put into producing said writing. Those publications need our financial support to continue being able to pay those writers and produce that content. Examples of good writing about motherhood include indie pubs like Brain, Child Magazine, but it can go beyond that, too. Magazines like Parenting and Parents, long denigrated for being “not real” enough, have gone out of their way in the past few years to include thoughtful, sometimes heart-wrenching essays (and blogs) about motherhood. They’re worth checking out next time you’re in the grocery store. I’d include Wondertime in my list, but alas–it’s ceasing publication. Many of those publications have a website component you can check out, and stand-alone sites like Babble.com and AlphaMom.com pay their writers and provide an audience so the writer doesn’t have to scramble for hits. The sites are supported by advertising, but writers don’t have to get involved in that end of it–again, they can just focus on the writing, and that’s why it’s good. Of course, not all blogs can afford to pay their writers (I write for one, and run another myself!) But the existence of sites that DO pay is what makes it possible for writers to keep writing for other outlets even when they DON’T. Click through, and read often.

3) Tweet less. Read and write more. GASP! Heresy! Hey, I love Twitter just as much as the next geek, but good writing does not, generally speaking, come in 140-character spurts. And lately I’ve felt like my twitter stream is little more than a collection of tweets and retweets about product giveaways. But it doesn’t have to be that way. Instead, we can use Twitter to find and promote the best writing out there, and then actually click through and read it. And we can take some of the time we might have been spending tweeting about holes in our socks and watching silly drama unfold around us and use it to scour the Internet for great writing…and maybe even produce some ourselves.

I’ve been guilty of not following all three of the above “rules” lately, but I’m going to make a concerted effort to try harder from now on, because it’s important to me. It’s worth the cost of a subscription to Brain, Child or the extra time it takes to click through and read a blogger’s work on a paying site.

Is it worth it to you? What are other ways we can support and promote good writing?

Matt Hanson March 1, 2009 10:00 am

Good writing. Keep up the good work. I just added your RSS feed my Google News Reader..

Matt Hanson

kelly March 1, 2009 12:57 pm

Great piece, Meagan. Much food for thought, particularly in regards to the entitlement complex. It applies to so many areas of life in our culture and I wonder what it will take to turn the tide.

Megan@SortaCrunchy March 1, 2009 13:26 pm

WHAT? Wondertime is going under, too? Oh my gosh, I have tears in my eyes - no exaggeration. Each edition was such a bright spot in my month. I am so bummed.

As to the rest of this article, great thoughts, Megan. I agree about the extreme importance of promoting really great content. Mothering is another great magazine filled with thoughtful and thought-provoking writing. We DO need to support good writing with our dollars, especially when the economy looks like this.

And I want to be more intentional with my Tweeting.

Brenda Nixon March 1, 2009 13:48 pm

Good points - thanks for sharing Meagan. I agree, people blog and I choose; read or not. It’s that simple.

To answer your final question; I encourage aspiring writers to attend writers conferences, join critique groups, read well-written books on the craft of writing. In short, invest in learning to write well.

Suburban Turmoil March 1, 2009 19:34 pm

*stands and applauds*

What you said.

To Think Is To Create March 2, 2009 14:21 pm

Love this! Love the encouraging tone, and all great reminders to me as a writer for pay and writer for pleasure. It’s so important to me to support women doing what they’re passionate about, that I really appreciate all the *positive* commentary in this post ;)

The Lawyer Mom March 2, 2009 15:52 pm

This is a thought-provoking post. I am so new to blogging that I don’t even know what an SEO is, only just found out what RSS means. But finally, I get why some monetizing, monopolizing mommies are validly criticized.

I’m only now realizing that junk blogs giving away diaper wipes are an epidemic. When I see one-sentence posts like “my child farted today,” followed by 89 comments, I am dumbfounded; naturally, I don’t go back. To be sure, readers can separate the wheat from the chaff. Having said that, though, you are quite right: time spent sorting through the bad stuff is time lost reading the good. Your suggestions on how to support good content are excellent. Thanks for this post.

Amy March 2, 2009 21:21 pm

What a great post and such wonderful reminders for good blogging. I really need to work on the tweeting…and I have to admit I know nothing about SEO except what it stands for :) I just keep trying to plug away and break new ground for myself where I can. With two busy kids and trying to manage the house, the blogging takes the back seat ;)

Meagan March 3, 2009 6:42 am

Megan, you’re right about Mothering–can’t believe I forgot to mention them!

Lawyer Mom, your quip about the “my child farted today” posts made me laugh right out loud. Too true.

Brenda, all very good advice for aspiring writers.

Everyone–thanks for the comments! This is such an important topic to me and I appreciate the conversation.

Melanie @ Mel, A Dramatic Mommy March 4, 2009 13:46 pm

Well thought out and well said Megan. It’s getting harder and harder for me to remember and follow all these rules because they change so often. There seems to be very fine line between an acceptable amount of promotion and marketing and the idea that a blogger has become a sell out. I am meeting with another mom in my city who made $1000 last month on her blog. Would I like to be able to do that? Hell yes! But how to do it an a way that keeps people engaged and coming back is the key. Sorry to hijack your comments! Maybe I need to post about this myself!

Candid Carrie March 4, 2009 16:06 pm

I clicked over via “The State of Mom Blogging.” You made many good points in a fast, fun read. I am a writer that would rather write than read. My style is humorous and retrospect. I was having oodles of fun entertaining myself and collecting a few readers along the way. A year ago I was asked to review some pencils (didn’t), bottled water (thought about it), eventually real I would use (and I did). I stayed true to my writing style and incorporated the product review along a relevant post. I wish I loved to read, I wish I loved to leave comments, I wish I loved other peoples children with their frosting covered faces and their sassy little antics but I get easily confused with children named Bean Pole, Jabber Jaws, and Speed Racer.

Anyway, thanks for having said what you said and I didn’t mean to ramble. May you find inner peace, the almighty dollar, and a side order of fame and fortune! It is well deserved.

Planet Mom March 4, 2009 17:05 pm

Well said. I, too, am wondering what the future may hold for worthy content–as well as what it may hold for those who strive to create such content. I’ve authored a newspaper column for the past six years now and I keep holding my breath and praying they will remain competitive with our local daily and the Almighty Internet. It’s frightening to say the least.

Thanks for your insightful and inspiring words. :-)

Meagan March 4, 2009 18:45 pm

Melanie–I am honestly hard-pressed to figure out how one can make $1000/month from a personal blog, unless they are doing sponsored posts (quite a few of them at that!) or have HUGE amounts of traffic. Frankly that’s why I don’t even try! I use my blog as a jumping-off point for other paid work, but I can’t imagine trying to make it my main source of income.

Carrie, it’s so cool that you are a success story for writing good, honest reviews and making that your niche.

Planet Mom–my nearly-five-year newspaper run just ended rather unceremoniously when the paper fired most of its staff, cut freelance content and started running stuff off the wire. For what is supposed to be a “local” paper! Just another example of the way writing is starting to be seen as a commodity, something anyone can produce and at a bargain. I am hopeful that we’ll be able to evolve along with this new medium but I do think it might take some time!

Angeline March 4, 2009 21:28 pm

Of course you know I’m a fan of your common sense writing style. I thank you for taking a shot at our “entitlement” syndrome. I have recently said to a group of professionals “We are in the age of ‘free’” and I’m glad to hear that others see it that way as well. Someone recently asked me to help protest against Facebook possibly deciding to become a fee-based website. I thought that was a perfect example of this culture of entitlement to “free”. The idea that anyone would try to prevent a for-profit business from charging for a service they provide is astonishing to me. (If I don’t want to pay for Facebook I can delete my profile and leave. It is not my “right” to use it for free until the day I die.) I would really like to see folks take your advice and remember that you shouldn’t take somethin’ for nothin’. And if you do, it is a privilege, not a right. Be grateful for free and show that gratitude by purchasing a subscription, or at least make the click-through. It is only good manners.

Mandy March 8, 2009 18:14 pm

This makes me want to stand up and jump up and down! I get it! I appreciate this article…and you now have a new subscriber.

La Mom March 10, 2009 13:41 pm

No offense to the bloggers out there who do product reviews & contests, but I’ve always wondered what the motivation was to peddle Eucerin facewash or stationary.

I want to learn something when I read a blog and not read some rambling post about how well this or that face soap removes makeup. I’m educated/sophisticated/experienced enough to be able to make that decision myself.

On that note, I am going to pay attention to the things you’ve noted above. Great advice! I’d like to think I provide good content (like you) and entertaining reading. My followers tell me I do . They love the expat dish direct from Paris!

frogmama March 11, 2009 17:14 pm

You’ve made some excellent points. As much as I try to stay faithful to the blogs I love, it’s immediately apparent when they’ve linked with advertisers and their once great content goes the way of “Check out the new packaging on Tide!” I understand why they do it, but it still feels disappointing.

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About Meagan

Author and mom of five, writing about motherhood & family life, mind-body health, Midwest lifestyle, travel and more.

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