What I Wish I Knew as a Young Writer: Real Talk for Aspiring Wordsmiths
If you’re a young writer staring at a blank page and wondering how to get your words out into the world, I’ve got you. With over a decade of blogging, publishing articles, and authoring books, I’ve lived through the rejection letters, the quiet launches, the unexpected wins, and the joy of finally finding my voice. And here's the truth: writing isn’t just about talent. It’s about persistence, strategy, and building real connections.
So let’s talk—not like a lecture, but like a chat over coffee—about what I’d do if I were just starting out as a young writer today.
Why Starting Young Is a Superpower
First off, let me tell you something important: being a young writer is an asset, not a liability. You’re probably closer to new trends, fresher in perspective, and still full of creative energy that hasn’t been dulled by decades of criticism or burnout. You might feel like no one’s listening yet, but this is your training ground. Every sentence you write sharpens your skills. Every rejection teaches you resilience. Don’t rush to be perfect—just focus on being consistent.
Step 1: Pick a Lane, But Keep It Flexible
As a young writer, you don’t need to know exactly what kind of writer you want to be. Fiction? Nonfiction? Essays? Blogging? YouTubing with scripts? Start by dabbling. But once something clicks—when writing a certain type of piece feels more exciting than exhausting—lean into it. Create a “lane” that helps you build a personal brand, but stay flexible. The creative world shifts constantly, and so can you.
Hot tip? Choose a niche that interests you and has an audience. It’s okay to write what you love, but don’t ignore what people are already searching for. That’s how you build traction faster.
Step 2: Build an Online Home for Your Work
I can't emphasize this enough: own your space online. Relying solely on social media to showcase your writing is risky. Platforms change. Algorithms bury your content. But your website? That's your digital home.
Get yourself a domain name—something simple, easy to remember, ideally your name. Set up a clean blog or portfolio using tools like WordPress, Squarespace, or Wix. If you're tight on funds, Substack is a free and trending platform for newsletters that double as blogs.
Use your site to share your work regularly—think essays, poetry, op-eds, or personal reflections. Think of it like your own magazine. This is what editors, agents, and collaborators will Google when they’re considering you. Make sure they like what they see.
Step 3: Use Social Media as a Publishing Tool, Not a Distraction
Yes, TikTok, Instagram, and X (formerly Twitter) can be time-sucking vortexes, but they can also be powerful platforms for writers—if you’re strategic.
Pick one or two platforms where your audience already hangs out. For Gen Z writers, TikTok and Instagram are hot. For essayists or opinion writers, X and Threads are more your vibe. Create short-form versions of your writing: tweetable insights, Instagram carousels with mini-essays, or a reel summarizing your latest blog post.
Don’t worry about going viral. Focus on being valuable. Post consistently, engage with your readers, and let people know there’s more where that came from (aka your blog or newsletter).
Getting your work out there isn’t just about waiting to be discovered. It’s about pitching.
A pitch is a short email you send to editors at magazines, blogs, or news outlets, where you explain your story idea and why you’re the right person to write it. It’s not scary—it’s a skill, and like any skill, you get better with practice.
Start small. Student magazines, Medium publications, newsletters that accept guest posts, niche blogs—these are great stepping stones. Research what they publish. Read their guidelines. Then pitch them something fresh, relevant, and aligned with their tone.
Eventually, you’ll graduate to bigger fish like BuzzFeed, Vox, The Atlantic, or The New York Times. And yes, young writers do get published there. I’ve seen it happen.
Step 5: Don’t Wait for Permission—Self-Publish
Traditional publishing is amazing, but it’s slow. Like, painfully slow. And full of gatekeepers. But the good news? We live in a golden age of self-publishing.
If you’ve written a novella, a collection of poems, or even just a handful of essays you’re proud of, don’t wait for an agent to validate your work. Package it. Publish it. Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing (KDP), Gumroad, and even Etsy are amazing for young writers selling digital content.
Design a beautiful cover using Canva. Offer it for $2.99. Promote it on your social channels. You’d be surprised how many people will pay to read something honest and raw, especially when it comes from someone authentic.
Step 6: Network Without Being Cringey
You don’t need to be the loudest person in the room, but you do need to show up. Comment on other writers' work. DM someone to tell them their piece moved you (don’t ask for favors—just offer appreciation). Join online writing communities on Discord, Reddit, or Slack. Go to local readings, even virtual ones.
And if you’re in high school or college? Use that to your advantage. Join student publications. Apply for internships. Your “student” status opens doors that won’t be open forever.
Networking isn’t about kissing up. It’s about forming real relationships with people who are into the same stuff you are. Those relationships will take you further than you can imagine.
Step 7: Master the Art of Rewriting
Writing is rewriting. Say it again with me. Writing is rewriting.
Your first draft is just the beginning. You don’t have to get it perfect—you just have to get it down. Then you shape it. Cut the fluff. Tighten the sentences. Make sure your ideas are clear, your voice is consistent, and your story flows.
If you want to seriously level up, read your work out loud. That’s where the weird sentences, awkward pacing, and overused words pop out.
Pro tip: Grammarly and Hemingway Editor are great tools, but don’t rely on them blindly. They’re assistants, not gods.
Step 8: Treat Writing Like a Job—Even Before It Pays
Want to be a writer? Act like one.
Set a schedule. Block out writing time like you would for a part-time job. Even if it’s just 30 minutes a day before school or work, consistency matters more than bursts of inspiration. Use a content calendar. Track your submissions. Build a portfolio.
If you treat your writing seriously, others will too.
Step 9: Rejection Isn’t Personal (Even When It Feels Like It Is)
You’re going to get rejected. A lot. Welcome to the club.
I’ve been turned down by editors who later hired me. I’ve had pieces sit unread for months, only to go viral when I reposted them a year later. The publishing world is subjective and messy. Sometimes your work is brilliant, but just not a fit. Other times, it needs more polishing.
Don’t let one “no” stop you. Let it redirect you.
Step 10: Your Voice Is Your Superpower
This might be the most important thing I say in this entire piece: your voice matters.
Not everyone needs to write like Hemingway or Zadie Smith or Stephen King. You have something only you can say in the way only you can say it. The world doesn’t need more generic content. It needs stories that sound like you.
Lean into your quirks. Use your background, your slang, your weird humor, your cultural references. That’s what makes your writing come alive.
Final Thoughts: You’re Already Ahead
If you’re reading this, thinking about writing, dreaming of getting your work out there—guess what? You’re already ahead of 90% of people who say they want to write but never sit down and do it.
Writing is a lifelong relationship. Some days you’ll love it. Some days you’ll want to ghost it. But if you stick with it, it will reward you in ways you can’t imagine yet.
You’ve got this. Write your truth, build your platform, connect with people who care—and trust me, your words will find their way into the world.
And when they do? It'll feel like magic.