KeySellers publishes practical, experience-led writing about software licensing, digital tools, security, and web infrastructure. If you know one of those areas well and can explain it in plain language, we would like to hear from you.
We are not looking for volume. We publish a small number of genuinely useful articles rather than a stream of filler.
What we publish
Articles that answer a real question someone typed into a search box, written by someone who has actually done the thing. Our categories:
- Software & Licensing — how licensing models work, what the terms mean in practice, what people get wrong
- Security — defending real systems, not theory
- Web Infrastructure — hosting, performance, caching, the plumbing
- AI Tools — using them well, choosing between them, what the paid tiers actually buy you
- Digital Business — selling and delivering digital products
- Consumer Tech — buying decisions, ownership, avoiding scams
What we look for
- First-hand experience. The best pieces we run come from someone describing what happened when they did it, what broke, and what they would do differently.
- Plain language. Short sentences. No jargon where a normal word exists.
- A specific angle. “How to secure WordPress” is not a pitch. “What I found after cleaning up a hacked site three times” is.
- Original work. Not published elsewhere, not spun from another article, not generated wholesale by an AI and lightly edited.
- Length that fits the subject. Usually 900 to 1,300 words for a focused piece, longer only if the topic earns it.
Links in editorial articles
You may include one link to your own site in your author bio. Links inside the body of an editorial article are added only where they genuinely help the reader, and that judgement is ours.
How to pitch
Send an email to hello@keysellers.com with:
- Subject line: Pitch — [your working title]
- Two or three sentences on what the article covers and who it is for
- Why you. What have you actually done in this area?
- One link to something you have written before, if you have one
Do not send a finished draft on the first email. Pitch first. If the angle works, we will ask for the piece.
What happens next
We read every pitch. We reply to the ones we want to pursue, usually within a week. If you have not heard back after two weeks, assume it was not a fit this time.
If we accept a piece, we will edit it. Sometimes lightly, sometimes not. We will not change your argument without asking, but we will cut, restructure, and tighten.
Questions? hello@keysellers.com