Guest Property Law Blogging
Thanks for your interest in writing a guest post or becoming a guest property law blogger for PropertyBlawg. This year, PropertyBlawg is changing its approach to publishing legal content – we are accepting only the best contributions. Please contact us here to find out how you can get published with us today.
If you want to share high quality legal intelligence, including useful property and conveyancing knowledge and news, to wide audiences, here are some of the key things you should consider before submitting your post(s) for review by our moderators.
Content Marketing for Property & Conveyancing Lawyers – Author Guidelines
Why Blog Here?
There are many reasons why you would want to publish a guest property law blog post on PropertyBlawg:-
- Reach over 11,000 of our followers on Twitter (follow @PropertyBlawg and @WardBlawg) and a wide professional audience on other social networks including LinkedIn and Facebook and Google+.
- Get promoted by an established property legal blogging website.
- Share useful legal information to a large and varied legal, business and consumer-based community with an interest in property law and real estate across the U, United States and beyond.
- Get full credit when your blog post is published.
Editorial Guidelines for Law Blog Submissions
- Blog posts should provide useful, high quality legal and practice information. There is no set list of topics for posts we share on PropertyBlawg, but usually blawgs will include intelligence and news related to conveyancing, buying and selling a house, real estate/property law, land law, neighbour disputes, leasing, remortgaging, online conveyancing, boundary disputes, ownership and possession of property, some construction law and mortgages issues. If your proposed legal blog is out with these topics we probably won’t consider your post for PropertyBlawg but would be happy to consider it for any of our other blawgs (list below). Our editors were formerly lawyers and can tell useful posts from the not-so-useful ones.
- Specify the governing law of your article where appropriate e.g. it may apply under Scots law or the laws of England & Wales. It may apply throughout the United States or only to certain States for instance.
- Blog posts can be of any length but should ideally be over 500 words.
- Original blog posts are preferred although we are also open to republishing content already published elsewhere if of value to our readership.
- Use subheadings where appropriate using the H1, H2 and H3 tagging functions.
- Blog posts are welcome from property lawyers/conveyancers, barristers, law firms with particular interest and expertise in property law, most often with estate agency practices, and also non-lawyers, particularly those looking to ask legal questions for our online property law community. Also check out our local conveyancing lawyers directory here (UK only)
- Respect the copyright in the work of others.
- Include video and images where relevant if you have the rights to use them. YouTube videos, for instance, can easily be embedded in posts to help improve your posts.
- Include links to authoritative sources to support your material.
- Include links to your own website or blog from within your post but avoid being too promotional.
- If posting affiliate links, please make readers aware that they are such.
- Include a short professional bio at the beginning or end of your posts.
- Share your submission with your contacts through your social networks.
What we do not publish
- We do not publish generic articles unrelated to property law and of no value to our readers.
- We do not publish articles already published elsewhere unless of value to our readers.
Other Guest Property Law Blogging Policy Information
- We reserve the right to reject any blog submitted on reasonable grounds e.g. the post was not on a relevant area of law.
- We reserve the right to make changes – Please do not be offended if we suggest amendments to your post. We will notify your of any major changes.
- We may add internal links where helpful for readers.
- Authors are permitted to republish their guest law blog posts elsewhere – if so a link to the original post is preferred.
Any queries?
If you have any queries please do not hesitate to contact us via the contact us form on this website.
We look forward to hearing from you.
{ 42 comments… read them below or add one }