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AI Series, Hashtags and Hyperlinks

AI, Transparency, and Your Digital Reputation: What Writers Need to Get Right Online

Let’s talk about what AI means not just for your writing but for your digital identity, your reputation, and your social footprint. This is the part many writers forget, and it’s where careers accidentally go sideways. Because the truth is simple: You can use AI ethically and openly — or you can use it quietly and hope no one notices. One strengthens your reputation. The other puts it at risk.

Silhouette of a human head filled with glowing digital icons and social media symbols representing online identity and digital authenticity.
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Authenticity Online: The Performance of Being “Real”

When we write online (blogs, captions, newsletters, bios, author pages), we’re not only communicating. We’re curating. And sometimes, we’re curating a character that’s supposedly us. For writers who aren’t online much, this matters too: Your relationship with “being seen” influences how freely you write behind closed doors. Authenticity online bleeds into authenticity on the page.

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Words That Work in 15 Seconds (and Beyond): Writing for TikTok, Reels & Threads

People scroll faster than ever — flicking past stories, ads, and ideas in less than the blink of a latte sip. But here’s the thing most creators forget: behind every viral clip is a sentence that stopped someone. A caption that made them laugh, nod, or think, “Wait, that’s me.” Short-form writing isn’t about squeezing words into 15 seconds — it’s about making those seconds count.

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How Social Media Is Reshaping Storytelling

Social media has changed how readers expect stories to look, sound, and move. Readers are used to stories that unfold in fragments, with cliff-hangers and side comments, and that invite them to participate. That doesn’t mean you have to turn your novel into a TikTok series—but it does mean recognising the attention economy your words are entering.

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What’s Happening to Grammar on the Internet?

What’s happening to grammar on the internet is what’s always happened to language: it’s shifting to fit the way we live and talk. The difference is that now, those shifts happen in public, in real time, with millions of people experimenting, borrowing, and remixing the rules.
So yes, grammar’s a little feral right now. But maybe that’s a good thing

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