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How To Write a Guest Post

Table Of Contents

Writing a guest post that gets accepted and earns a high-quality link requires significantly more preparation than most people invest. The article needs to match the publisher’s editorial style, provide genuine value to their specific audience, place your link naturally in the body content, and be written to a standard that the editor will want to publish without major revisions. This guide walks through every stage of the writing process: how to research the publisher before you write a word, how to structure the article for acceptance, how to place your links effectively, how to write the author bio, and the quality standards that separate articles that get published quickly from those that require back-and-forth revisions or get declined entirely.

⚡ Quick Summary
  • Never write a guest post before pitching. Confirm the topic is accepted first to avoid wasted work
  • Spend 20 to 30 minutes reading the publisher’s existing content before writing a single word of your own
  • Your link should appear in the body content as a contextual in-text link, not just in the author bio
  • Match the publisher’s style, tone, depth, and word count. An article that feels out of place gets edited or declined
  • Give the editor everything they need before they ask: article file, bio, headshot, social links, featured image
  • Promote the published post on your own channels. It signals to editors that you take your contributions seriously

Step 1: Research the Publisher Before Writing Anything

The most common mistake writers make with guest posts is starting to write before doing any publisher research. An article written blind to the target publication ends up either too generic to be compelling or too mismatched in style and depth to be publishable without heavy editing. Both outcomes slow down the process and reduce your acceptance rate.

Spend 20 to 30 minutes on the publisher’s site before writing a word. Here is what to look for:

Tone and formality
Are articles conversational or formal? Do they use first person? Do they address the reader directly? Do they use humour? Match this in your article or it will feel out of place.
Average word count
Check 5 to 10 recent posts and note the average length. Submitting a 600-word article to a site that typically publishes 2,000-word guides will feel thin. Going significantly over may not match editorial expectations either.
Heading structure
Do they use numbered headings or descriptive H2s? Short headings or full-sentence questions? How many subheadings per article? Mirror this in your structure so your article looks like it belongs.
Use of data and examples
How many data points do articles typically include? Are examples practical and specific or are they generalised? This tells you the evidence standard you need to meet for the article to feel credible to their audience.
Content gaps
What topics have they not covered yet? Pitching (and writing) about a gap in their existing content is far more compelling than offering another take on a topic they have already covered twice this year.
Outbound link patterns
How many outbound links do their articles typically include? Where do they appear (in-body or author bio)? This tells you what link placement to aim for and what the editor will accept without pushback.

This research phase makes the writing faster, not slower. When you know exactly what format, tone, depth, and structure the publisher uses, the article practically writes itself around that template. It also dramatically increases your acceptance rate because the editor receives something that already feels like it belongs on their site. For the full process from discovery through pitch through writing, see our guest posting complete guide.

Step 2: Pitch and Confirm the Topic Before Writing

Never write the full article before the topic is confirmed. A completed article written on spec represents a significant time investment that may be wasted if the editor declines the topic or asks you to pivot substantially. Pitch the topic first with a concise summary. Write once you have a clear acceptance signal.

The most effective pitch format for most publications: one short email, reference a specific article they published, propose 2 to 3 specific topic options with one-sentence explanations of why each serves their audience, and include 2 to 3 links to previous published work. Keep the pitch under 150 words. For the full outreach process and email templates, see our link building outreach guide.

Once a topic is accepted, read the publisher’s editorial guidelines if they have them. Many sites have specific requirements for word count, formatting, link types, image formats, and submission method. Missing these requirements after a topic is accepted is one of the most common reasons articles get kicked back for revisions. Finding the guidelines page is usually as straightforward as searching the site for “write for us” or “contributor guidelines.” For the sites to target and how to find them, see our how to find guest posting sites guide.

Step 3: Writing the Article

Structure that editors accept without revisions

A well-structured guest post article follows the same fundamental structure as any strong editorial piece, adapted to the specific publisher’s format requirements. The elements that matter most for quick acceptance:

1
Opening that earns the reader’s time. The first paragraph must establish why this article matters to this specific audience and what they will get from reading it. An opening that works: a specific problem statement the audience recognises, a counter-intuitive claim, or a relevant statistic that reframes how the reader thinks about the topic. An opening that does not work: starting with “In this article, I will…” or generic throat-clearing about the topic’s importance.
2
Headings that match the publisher’s pattern. Use the number, format, and style of headings you identified in your research phase. If the publisher uses question-format H2s, use questions. If they use short descriptive labels, match that. Headings that clash with the publisher’s established style signal immediately that the writer did not do their research.
3
Specific examples and data. Generalisations without evidence are the fastest way to have an article kicked back for revisions. Every major claim should be supported by either a specific data point, a real-world example, or a practical demonstration of the principle in action. Match the evidence density you observed in the publisher’s existing articles.
4
Conclusion with a clear takeaway. End with a concise summary of the main actionable point or a single concrete next step for the reader. Avoid conclusions that just restate what was already said without adding value. The conclusion is also where a natural CTA pointing back to your site can sit most comfortably.

Write at the right knowledge level for the audience

One of the most common reasons guest post articles get revised is a mismatch between the assumed knowledge level of the writer and the actual knowledge level of the publisher’s audience. A guest post for a beginner marketing blog should explain fundamentals that a guest post for an expert SEO publication would skip entirely. Read who the publisher’s actual audience is, not just what their domain is about, and calibrate your explanations accordingly. When in doubt, err toward clearer and more specific rather than assuming knowledge the reader may not have.

The link is the primary SEO goal of the guest post, but it needs to be placed in a way that feels natural to the reader and will be accepted by the editor without being removed. Here is how to maximise the value and acceptance rate of your links:

Best link practices
  • Place your primary link in the body content, not only in the author bio
  • Link to a page genuinely relevant to the surrounding sentence
  • Use natural anchor text that reads as part of the sentence (not forced keyword phrases)
  • Include one to two body links maximum plus the author bio link
  • Add internal links to other articles on the publisher’s site to show editorial awareness
Link practices that get removed
  • Forcing an exact-match keyword anchor into a sentence where it reads unnaturally
  • Linking to a page that is not contextually relevant to the surrounding paragraph
  • Including 4 or more outbound links to your own site in one article
  • Linking only to your homepage with a branded anchor on every guest post
  • Including promotional language in the link text or surrounding copy

A good test for any link placement: read the sentence without the link. Then read it with the link. If the link feels like it is adding reference value to the reader, it will pass editorial review. If it feels like it was forced in, it will be removed. Vary the pages you link to across your guest posting campaign. See our link building checklist for the full quality control framework to apply to every placement.

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Step 5: Writing an Author Bio That Converts Readers

The author bio is the one place in a guest post where you can write directly about yourself. Most publishers allow a bio of 50 to 100 words at the end of the article. This is a second SEO asset (a dofollow link in the bio) and a conversion opportunity for readers who enjoyed the article to follow you further.

A strong author bio includes: your name and role, a one-sentence credential statement that is relevant to the topic you just wrote about, and a link to a relevant page on your site (not necessarily your homepage). The link in the author bio should point to something genuinely useful to the reader who has just finished the article. A dedicated landing page, a free resource, or a related guide on your site all perform better than a generic homepage link for bio placements.

Keep the bio professional and in the third person unless the publisher’s style is explicitly first-person. Avoid promotional language about your products or services. The bio is an introduction, not a sales pitch.

Step 6: Submitting and What to Do After Publication

What to send with your submission

Give the editor everything they need before they have to ask. This is one of the most underrated ways to build goodwill with a publisher and increase the speed of publication. Include with your submission:

  • The article file (Google Doc with comment access is the easiest for most editors)
  • Your author bio in the agreed format
  • A headshot or profile image (minimum 400x400px)
  • A suggested featured image if the publisher uses them (or a note on what image you recommend)
  • Links to your social media profiles if they will appear in the author section
  • Any other elements the editorial guidelines specify

An editor who receives a complete, well-prepared submission from a guest author will publish faster and remember that author favourably for future pitches. An editor who has to chase down a headshot or bio two weeks after submission is less likely to invite you back. For the full list of dos and don’ts across the guest posting process, see our guest posting dos and don’ts guide.

After your post goes live

Publication is not the end of your responsibilities as a guest author. The actions you take in the 24 to 48 hours after publication influence both the SEO value of the placement and your relationship with the publisher for future contributions:

Verify the live link
Check that your link is dofollow, pointing to the correct target page, with the correct anchor text. Errors happen during publishing. Address them early and politely.
Promote the article
Share the published article on your own social channels and newsletter. This demonstrates to the editor that you are a serious contributor and drives traffic to their site. It also increases the referral traffic value of your author bio link.
Add to your link tracker
Record the placement URL, linking page, anchor text, target page, and publication date. This record is essential for monitoring link health, auditing anchor text distribution, and producing reporting.

Pre-Submission Quality Checklist

Run through this checklist before submitting any guest post article. It covers the most common reasons articles get declined or require significant revision:

Check What to Verify
Topic confirmation Is this the topic the editor agreed to? Does the article deliver on the exact headline/topic pitched?
Style match Does the tone, formality, heading structure, and depth match what the publisher typically publishes?
Word count Is the word count within the publisher’s guidelines or consistent with their typical article length?
Link placement Is your primary link in the body content (not just the bio)? Does it read naturally? Is the anchor text appropriate?
Internal links to publisher Have you included 2 to 3 natural links to other articles on the publisher’s own site?
Originality Is this 100% original content not published elsewhere? Run a plagiarism check if using any sourced material.
Grammar and proofing Has the article been proofread? Typos in a guest post are harder to fix than on your own site.
Guidelines compliance Does the submission meet all editorial guidelines (formatting, image requirements, link limits, submission format)?
Complete submission Are you providing article, bio, headshot, and any other required assets in a single message?
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Frequently Asked Questions

How long should a guest post be? +
Match the word count to the publisher’s typical article length. Open 5 to 10 recent articles on the target site and note the average length. Most publications in the 1,000 to 2,500 word range are the sweet spot for editorial content that is comprehensive enough to rank but not so long it becomes hard to edit. If the publisher’s editorial guidelines specify a word count minimum or maximum, that is the definitive answer regardless of anything else. Submitting significantly under the typical length signals that you did not take the article seriously. Going significantly over without justification creates editing work for the publisher.
How many links can I include in a guest post? +
Most quality publishers accept one to two in-body links to external sites plus the author bio link. Some allow more if the links genuinely serve the reader. Some allow only the bio link with no external links in the body. Check the editorial guidelines first and, if unclear, look at existing guest posts on the site to see what previous contributors included. Including more links than the publisher allows is one of the fastest ways to have your article edited or declined. Always include a few internal links to the publisher’s own articles as well. This shows editorial awareness and is genuinely appreciated.
What should my author bio include? +
Keep the bio to 50 to 100 words. Include: your name, your role or relevant credential (matched to the topic you just wrote about), and a link to a relevant page on your site. The link should go somewhere useful to the reader who just finished the article, not necessarily your homepage. A relevant guide, a free resource, or a services page related to the topic all work better than a generic homepage link from a conversion perspective. Write in the third person unless the publication’s style is explicitly first person. Avoid overtly promotional language. The bio is an introduction, not an advertisement.
My guest post was edited and my link was removed. What should I do? +
Send a polite follow-up to the editor asking if the link removal was intentional. Often it is an editing oversight rather than a deliberate decision. If the editor confirms it was intentional, ask whether there is a format of link they would accept (author bio link, for example, if body links are not allowed). If the link was removed because the placement felt promotional or unnatural, accept the feedback and note for future pitches to that publisher what their link standards are. Avoid being confrontational. A good relationship with an editor is worth more than any single link.

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