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Sinéad Connolly✨'s avatar

A great read, thank you! It inspired me to write this note - would really appreciate any feedback!

When I was a child, I used to write stories

I journaled a lot and took so much joy in writing

Then I stopped

I stopped for many many years

I started writing newsletters in my role as CEO and publishing on LinkedIn

I loved writing and tried to prioritise it but the day to day was too busy

Since deciding to step back from my business late last year, I have started writing again

After reading others work on Substack for years, I decided to finally take the leap

I set up a newsletter and wrote to my audience of zero

After a few short months, I now write weekly, have grown an entirely organic audience and have reached so many people across the world

I feel like a writer!

As Florence Given wrote this week - ‘to be a writer, you just have to write. So go, write!

Restack for anyone who may need to feel like a writer today and let me know what was the catalyst for you in getting started on here?

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Rick McClelland's avatar

Curious if you have any advice for folks outside the type of pubs that would post this kind of content. For example, I'm in the Humor section of the site. So I go on and post short jokes a lot. None of that really fits into this formula BUT I see other humor writers doing similar and their stuff gets picked up way more.

Now obviously they have a lot more subscribers than I might, so they're working from a stronger base. And maybe that's all the difference is. But I'm trying to work out a way to get to that higher level with more humorous content vs. all of the "I can help you solve X pain point" kinds of posts. Because that's not really what I do regularly.

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