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    <title>independent publishing on Publishing House</title>
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    <description>Recent content in independent publishing on Publishing House</description>
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      <title>Building Readership for Serious Writing Without Selling Out the Work</title>
      <link>https://publishinghouse.org/building-readership-for-serious-writing-without-selling-out-the-work/</link>
      <pubDate>Wed, 06 May 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
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      <description>The standard advice for writers trying to build an audience online involves a set of recommendations that are individually defensible and collectively corrosive: post consistently, engage with your community, make your work accessible, optimize your headlines, study what performs. Follow all of it and you will likely grow a following. You will also have spent significant creative energy on activities that pull in the opposite direction from serious writing, and your work will probably show the strain.</description>
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      <title>Self-Publishing in 2026: What the Landscape Actually Looks Like</title>
      <link>https://publishinghouse.org/self-publishing-in-2026-what-the-landscape-actually-looks-like/</link>
      <pubDate>Wed, 06 May 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://publishinghouse.org/self-publishing-in-2026-what-the-landscape-actually-looks-like/</guid>
      <description>Self-publishing is the majority of publishing now, by volume. The number of titles published annually through Amazon KDP, IngramSpark, and similar platforms exceeds traditional publishing output by orders of magnitude. This fact is cited both as evidence of a democratized creative culture and as evidence of a flooded market in which discoverability has become the central problem. Both readings are accurate. Neither tells you what to do.
The distribution question has been largely solved.</description>
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      <title>The Case for Owning Your Blog in 2026</title>
      <link>https://publishinghouse.org/the-case-for-owning-your-blog-in-2026/</link>
      <pubDate>Wed, 06 May 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://publishinghouse.org/the-case-for-owning-your-blog-in-2026/</guid>
      <description>Most writers who start blogs on hosted platforms eventually encounter the same problem. The platform changes its algorithm, adjusts its monetization terms, deprecates a feature they depended on, or simply makes decisions that prioritize its own interests over theirs. This is not a failure of any particular platform. It is the structural logic of platforms whose revenue does not depend on the writers they host. When your blog lives on someone else&amp;rsquo;s infrastructure, the decisions that affect it most are made by people whose incentives are not aligned with yours.</description>
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