About Us
Last updated: July 16, 2026
About Karmaly
Karmaly is an English-language publication for people who write, build, and grow blogs. We launched with a simple belief: blogging is not a monologue—it is a conversation between real people, real careers, and real communities. Whether you are a first-time blogger setting up your first WordPress site or a seasoned creator managing a multi-author publication, Karmaly exists to help you navigate the craft, the business, and the human side of blogging.
Who This Site Is For
Karmaly is written for bloggers at every stage—but we do not try to be everything to everyone. Our core audience includes:
- Independent creators who run personal blogs, niche newsletters, or passion projects and want to turn them into sustainable platforms.
- Career-focused writers who use blogging to build a professional portfolio, land freelance work, or transition into content roles.
- Community builders who see their blog as a hub for discussion, collaboration, and shared learning—not just a publishing channel.
- Returning bloggers who took a break and want to restart with fresh strategies, updated tools, and realistic expectations.
If you have ever asked yourself “How do I grow my blog without burning out?” or “What does a sustainable blogging career actually look like?”—you are exactly where you need to be.
Topics We Cover
Our editorial focus stays tightly on blogging as a practice and a profession. We publish practical guides, honest case studies, and thought pieces across these areas:
- Blog strategy & growth: content planning, SEO fundamentals, audience development, and analytics without the hype.
- Writing craft: storytelling techniques, editing workflows, finding your voice, and writing for readability and retention.
- Monetisation & careers: advertising, affiliate partnerships, sponsored content, product creation, and the realities of blogging income.
- Community & connection: building an email list, managing comments, collaborating with other bloggers, and handling feedback.
- Tools & workflows: content management systems, writing apps, scheduling tools, and automation—reviewed through the lens of real use, not affiliate commissions.
- Real-world application stories: we share how bloggers in different niches (from food to finance to parenting) apply the same principles in very different ways.
Editorial Standards
Karmaly is a content blog, not a news wire. We take the following commitments seriously:
- Verify facts before publishing. Every statistic, tool claim, or platform policy we reference is checked against primary sources or direct testing.
- Update when practices change. Blogging platforms, search algorithms, and legal requirements (privacy laws, tax rules) evolve. We review and revise articles at least once a year, and we date every piece clearly.
- Disclose relationships. If we link to a tool we use ourselves or that sponsors content, we say so. No hidden affiliate strings.
- No generic filler. We do not publish “10 tips” lists recycled from other sites. Every article is written by someone who has actually done the thing they are describing.
- Correct mistakes openly. If we get something wrong—a broken link, an outdated screenshot, a misinterpretation—we fix it and note the correction.
We also do not publish AI-generated content passed off as human writing. Our articles are researched, drafted, and edited by people who blog themselves.
How We Are Different
Many blogging resources treat the practice as either a get-rich-quick scheme or a purely technical exercise. Karmaly sits in the middle. We believe blogging is a long-term skill that combines writing, empathy, and a willingness to experiment. We do not pretend that one strategy works for every niche, and we do not promise overnight traffic. Instead, we focus on the application—how real bloggers adapt ideas to their own contexts, audiences, and constraints.
Contact
Email: [email protected]
Postal address: 9138 Oak Ave, Allentown, Pennsylvania 33907
We welcome story pitches, feedback, and questions from readers. If you have a correction or an update suggestion, please include the article title and a brief note.
Last updated: July 2026