Elitism, as long as it's earned, and not inherited, is a *good* thing,
not a bad thing.

Kurt

On Tue, Dec 29, 2015 at 1:17 PM, Michael B. Smith <[email protected]> wrote:
> I replied to you directly, but my personal opinion is that you should
> approach MVPs for this.
>
>
>
> I have a reason for this – there are two blog writers I know about who
> produce at three posts a week who are VERY inaccurate in their posts. They
> are published in ezines that are common in the industry. It makes me ill to
> think about the number of people they have led astray over the years.
>
>
>
> That may sound elitist and I apologize for that – but generally the MVPs are
> pretty solid. There are certainly other folks who are very good. Investigate
> what they’ve done, regardless of who you pick, before signing them on. J
>
>
>
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
> On Behalf Of Jesse Rink
> Sent: Monday, December 28, 2015 12:11 PM
> To: ntsysadm
> Subject: [NTSysADM] Technical blogs
>
>
>
> Since the list traffic is light this week, I was wondering if someone can
> help steer me in the right direction, or if anyone on the list is
> interested...
>
>
>
> I need 1 or 2 people that are interested in writing IT related blogs for a
> website.   Would pay on a per-submission basis and would need a 2-4 blogs
> per month on average.  Blog articles would need to be 300-600 characters in
> length, and shouldn't take you more than 1-2 hours for a person to write-up.
> Blogs should be IT based, and preferably (but not necessarily) with a focus
> on one of the following topics:  servers, networking, firewalls, security,
> wireless, active directory, backups, virtualization, general IT rants/raves,
> etc.
>
>
>
> Since the person writing the blogs doesn't need to be local, I'm not sure if
> anyone is aware of any "blog-freelance-for-hire" sort of websites I can look
> for potential writers?  Was thinking maybe about Spiceworks?
>
>
>
> Feel free to contact me/respond OFF list.  Thanks
>
> J
>
>
>
>


Reply via email to