If you’re interested in writing a guest post or contributing content to The Book Addict’s Guide to MBTI, I will gladly accept contributions from readers. Please take a moment to read the guidelines carefully. Also, for those who don’t quite trust themselves, I’d strongly advise you to familiarize yourself with my typing guide.
How this will work
1. Submit Your post!
The process is simple. You submit a piece of original material that fits with the guidelines specified below.
2. I’ll review your piece and if it meets my standards, I’ll edit it for accuracy.
One of the main aims of The Book Addict’s Guide to MBTI is to provide my readership with an accurate and unbiased perception of the Myers-Briggs Theory, so please do your best to be unbiased. However, don’t stress too much. We are all human, and that shouldn’t be embarrassing. I’m more interested in your ideas than your accuracy, so I’ll correct you if you wander.
That said, most of the wandering that I correct will mostly fall under the “personality theory” and psychology umbrellas. I don’t have the bandwidth to what every show or read every book, so I have to trust you to do your best in avoiding mischaracterisations. If not, your future readers on this site will likely point them out.
3. Publication
As a courtesy to my guest writers, I will interrupt the post schedule allow your submissions to be published sooner. Accepted posts will be edited and published within 1-3 weeks from submission.
However, requests and submissions come through much faster than I can review and post them. For that reason, it may be quite some time before you see your work posted. As I begin to catch up on the existing backlog of submissions, I will eventually announce a new schedule of publication.
Who gets Credit?
Credit goes to the initial author of each post. An accreditation similar to the following will appear in the header of your guest article upon publication:
John Smith: ENFP ~bigbluebox.wordpress.com
If you’d like to submit your work anonymously, simply include a P.S. in your submission.
If you’re not sure what to write or want to increase the likelihood of your post being accepted for publication:
Check out what content we’re aiming for, or prompts and contests.
READY TO SUBMIT?
Question: Can I write a post to compare/contrast Te doms and Fe doms? When I first learned about mbti, these could be surprisingly hard to type in more feeling ExTJs and more thinking ExFJs, especially if they had similar goals. I’d love to explore that thought.
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