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Home » Write for Us Laptops – Share Your Tech Expertise
Write for Us Laptops

Write for Us Laptops – Share Your Tech Expertise

Write for Us Laptops – Share Your Tech Expertise With Our Community

Hey, Welcome!…

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So you landed here. That’s cool.

Here’s what’s going on. We started Just Tech Blog because the tech world moves extremely fast, and most people are struggling to keep up. Laptops, gadgets, new tech—everyone’s got opinions, but very few people actually give you honest, helpful information. We wanted to build a place where people could get honest reviews, objective comparisons, and real advice about the latest laptops and gadgets without all the corporate nonsense.

Our readers? They’re looking for actual help. They want to know which new laptops are actually worth buying. They want to understand which specs actually matter and which are just marketing hype. They’re trying to determine whether they need the latest model or if an older model still meets their needs. They want honest takes from people who actually know tech.

If you know laptops, have tested and compared them, and understand what makes a good machine, we want you to write here. Whether you’re a tech reviewer, a gadget enthusiast, someone who builds or fixes computers, or you’ve just spent years learning about hardware and performance, there’s a place for you.

This isn’t about selling products or getting clicks. It’s about helping people make smart tech purchases.


Who Should Write for Us?

Real talk? We’re selective, but not in a snobby way. We just need people who actually know what they’re talking about.

If you fit any of these, we’re definitely interested:

  • Tech reviewers and gadget testers – People who actually use laptops and know the real-world performance

  • Hardware enthusiasts and tech nerds – You know specs, benchmarks, and what they actually mean

  • Computer engineers or IT professionals – You understand the technical side and can explain it

  • Laptop buyers with real experience – You’ve done the research and know what works

  • Tech writers and content creators – You know how to explain complex stuff in plain English

  • Gamers and content creators – Youseew what laptops actually need for real workloads

  • Tech support and repair people – You know which laptops hold up and which ones break

  • Anyone who’s seriously studied laptops and gadgets – and can back it up with real knowledge, not just opinions

Here’s the thing—you don’t need some fancy tech degree. Some of the best tech knowledge comes from people who’ve just spent years using, testing, and comparing equipment. What matters is that you actually know this stuff. Like, genuinely know it. We can tell when someone’s just copying specs from a website, and so can our readers.


Topics We’re Actually Looking For

Look, I could list forever, but here’s what we’re genuinely hungry for right now:

  • Best new laptops for different needs – Gaming, work, content creation, budget options

  • Laptop vs desktop comparisons – When you actually need a laptop and when you don’t

  • Gaming laptops that actually perform – What specs matter, which are overpriced

  • Budget laptops that don’t suck – Cheap doesn’t mean terrible

  • Laptop for content creators – Video editing, photo work, 3D rendering

  • MacBook alternatives – For people who want similar performance without the price tag

  • Business and productivity laptops – What professionals actually need

  • Best processors and GPUs explained – Intel, AMD, NVIDIA—what’s actually better

  • Laptop battery life – Real testing, not marketing claims

  • Cooling and thermal management – Why some laptops stay cool, and others overheat

  • Display quality and screen types – IPS vs OLED, refresh rates, color accuracy

  • Build quality and durability – Which laptops last and which ones break

  • Keyboard and trackpad comparison – Because you use these constantly

  • Laptop upgrades and repairs – RAM, SSD, what you can actually change

  • Refurbished vs new laptops – When it’s worth saving money

  • Upcoming laptop releases and rumors – What’s actually coming next

If you’ve got an angle that actually helps people buy the right laptop, pitch it. We’re not going to be difficult about it.


What We Actually Need From Your Article

Alright, so here’s what makes an article work for Just Tech Blog:

Length: Aim for somewhere around 1,500 to 2,500 words. Shorter reviews or quick comparisons? 1,000–1,200 is totally fine. Just don’t pad it with fluff to hit a word count. That’s annoying.

Talk like a real person: Write like you’re telling a friend about a laptop. Short sentences. Normal paragraphs. No corporate tech speak. If you use a technical term, explain what it actually means. Not everyone’s a hardware expert.

Keep it original: Your article must truly be your own. Avoid copying manufacturer specs, rewriting other reviews, or stealing content from tech sites. We want what’s in your mind—your perspective and your experience.

Back your claims up: If you’re saying a laptop is good or bad, show why. Use benchmarks, real-world testing, screenshots, and examples. Just be honest about how you came to your conclusions. Our readers appreciate transparency.

Make it readable: Use headings so readers can skim. Start with something that hooks them. End with actual recommendations they can use. Don’t bury the good stuff in the middle.

Keywords should feel natural: Your main topic (new laptops or whatever angle you’re taking) should show up naturally in the intro, in a heading or two, and at the end. But like, don’t force it. If it feels weird, it IS funny.

Link to our other stuff: When it makes sense, link to other Just Tech Blog articles. Talking about gaming laptops? Maybe reference another gaming piece. Discussing specs? Link to something relevant. Helps readers find more content and helps us, too.

Give us your SEO title and description: Tell us what you’d call it in Google (under 60 characters) and write something short that would make someone click (under 155 characters).


How to Format Your Article

I know formatting sounds boring, but it actually makes a huge difference when people are reading on their phones or at their desk:

Headings: Use H2 and H3. That’s it. Don’t go deeper. People need clear markers to know what section they’re in.

Keep paragraphs short: 2–4 sentences max. Long paragraphs just don’t work anymore. People read on mobile, and long blocks of text kill the experience.

Use bullet lists for benefits, specs, or items. Numbers for step-by-step instructions. People love lists. They’re easy to scan.

Bold the essential parts: If there’s something people really need to remember or know, bold it. Just don’t overdo it.

Use actual screenshots and images: Got laptop photos? Comparison charts? Include them. Make it visual. People learn better with pictures.

Real examples help: Discuss specific laptops you’ve tested. Show what you actually found. Tell what worked and what didn’t. Way more interesting than just theory.

Include specs where relevant: Show processor, RAM, storage, and display specs in a way people can understand. Make it easy to compare.


The Link Rules (Keeping It Honest)

Here’s the deal with links:

Our articles: YES. Link to other Just Tech Blog posts when relevant. Helps readers explore more and helps us.

Legit tech and manufacturer sites: YES. Official specs, reviews, tech resources, trusted sources.

Your own products or affiliate links: NO. Don’t link to laptops you’re selling or affiliate programs you’re in. We know what you’re doing.

Promotional spam: NO. Random links to random tech sites you don’t actually recommend? Nope.

Your website in your bio: YES. One link. Keep it professional and relevant.

Simple rule: If this link helps the reader, include it. Is it just promotional or self-serving? Don’t do it.


Write Us Your Author Bio

At the end of your article, include a short author bio about yourself. Keep it real. 50–100 words. Tell us:

  • Your name and what you actually do in tech

  • Your experience or expertise with laptops and gadgets

  • What you’re known for or specialize in

  • Where can people find you online

Here’s an example:

Mike has been reviewing tech for about 8 years now. He’s tested hundreds of laptops and loves figuring out which ones are actually worth the money. He has worked in IT and understands the hardware side as well. He actually uses the gear he reviews, not just reads specs. You can find him on YouTube or his tech review site.


How to Actually Submit Your Article

You wrote something good. Now what?

Step 1: Email us your pitch first. Don’t send the whole article yet. Subject line: “Guest Article Pitch: [Your Headline Here].”

Tell us what the article’s about a few bullet points), why our readers would care, and why you’re qualified to write it. Keep it short—one paragraph max.

Step 2: Wait for our response. Usually takes like 5–7 business days. If we like your idea, we’ll say yes. If it’s not quite right, we’ll be honest.

Step 3: Write the full article. Follow what I mentioned above. Make it good. It honest. Make it actually helpful.

Step 4: Send it as a Google Doc or Word file. Include your SEO title, meta description, author bio, and notes about where internal links should go.

Step 5: We review it. Might be minor edits, might be bigger changes. We’ll let you know what’s happening and when it goes live. Then you can share it everywhere.

That’s it. Pretty straightforward.


Why We Actually Need You

Here’s the honest part. Just Tech Blog exists because people like you share what they actually know. Every article helps someone. It may help them finally understand which specs matter. Maybe it saves them from buying a laptop that would frustrate them. It may help them feel confident about a purchase they’re about to make.

Laptop information is everywhere, but much of it is outdated, biased, or just trying to sell you something. We’re trying to be different. Honest. Actually helpful. Actually practical.

If you care about helping people buy the right laptop and you’re an audience that will actually listen and take action, this is the place. I genuinely think what you know could change how someone approaches their next tech purchase.

Ready to write for us about new laptops? Send your pitch over. We’re actually excited to see what you’ve got.

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