Mia Eaton addresses the two biggest questions writers have about websites, and the real answer is procrastination.

For many writers who don't already have an online home, the general feeling about blogs and websites is "
here be dragons." My goal as both techie and fellow writer is not to show you how to slay dragons, but to learn to ride them and harness their magic.
Writers in this camp usually know they want one, but are unsure of what the functional differences between websites and blogs are. At this point they've have spent a lot of time worrying about how much having a website might cost if they can't do it for free (more on that in future posts), how much they'll have to know (ditto), and what they'll have to
do with it once it's up and running (ditto).
The main thing to keep in mind is that a blog platform is just a system that allows anyone to publish (aka post) stuff online — stuff being text, images, and videos. Just because you may opt to use a blogging tool, it doesn't mean you have to blog with it, blogger style.
In the other big category, the writer/author currently has a website or blog, but it's not taking them on any wonderful rides through
The Neverending Story — specifically, it's not connecting their writing world to the real world and connecting readers to their writing.
Sometimes their website is old and hasn't been updated because the person who helped them for free/cheap is gone. Sometimes think they need to "redesign" it for various reasons usually related to their inability to get in there and tinker with it themselves. Some writers say they've been working on building a website for years, they have all the text and images picked out, and that their student, brother-in-law, or son is going to make it for them. This unfortunately, will keep them in this category indefinitely.
While all of above are real problems, these hurdles also fall into writers' favorite category of all: procrastination.
Thinking about your future website is like the fantasy of finding most perfect desk and chair, in the most perfect room, with the nicest paper and best pens. But all that's just distraction when instead you should be putting words down on paper, or banging away on your machine.
Last weekend fellow SheWriter
Kio Stark decided to launch a new blog about writing about ideas, called
Fact over Fiction. I've already enjoyed her short, vivid writing on
Municipal Archive but her new blog is something different. It includes, among her writings,
The Cult of Done Manifesto.
When I told her how inspiring I found her quickness to start
this new blog, she responded, "I had the same experience when I started
Municipal Archive. I thought of it, and just did it, and if I hadn't acted in the moment of momentum (never noticed those words are related!), I wouldn't have done it. It's some of the best writing I've done, and the novel I'm working on was inspired by it."
You can see why I think she's such a good example of getting over our natural writerly procrastination.
Here are some great free, quick-start blogging platforms available to you, just off the top of my head:
Tumblr,
Movable Type,
WordPress,
TypePad, and
Blogger.
Also, I can assure you that I've never met an author with a currently functioning blog who wanted my input so badly that they rode home with me on the subway just to pick my brain. Once you strap a saddle on this thing, your experience level goes from none to some, and your new-found control lends to a sense of opportunity. All of your questions and challenges from that point on will be infinitely more productive.
There's no mistake you can make, aside from not giving it a try.
Don't get bogged down by fussing about the countless design options or being "official." Do think about what gets you excited. You need to know how to do this before you attempt or commission anything fancier.
And know this getting started: it's not that hard to take all the posts from one blog system and import them into a different one. Technology is marvelous!
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