Introduction: What Craftdas Blogging Is About
Craftdas blogging is built for creators who want to share value, build authority, and grow an audience inside one ecosystem. It’s not just “write anything and post.” On Craftdas, your articles should help someone learn, build, improve, or make better decisions as a creator. That’s the whole idea: content that moves creators forward.
So if you’re joining as a blogger, your mindset should be simple: teach, guide, document, or inspire. Whether you’re writing about design, photography, editing, content creation, or creator business, the goal is the same—make your post useful and clear.
What Makes Craftdas Different From Regular Blogging Platforms
Most blogging platforms are open fields: people post news, gossip, random opinions, and even copied content. Craftdas is different because it is creator-first. The blog space is meant to support what creators do across the platform—content, products, services, learning, and growth.
That’s why your niche matters. When your blog is focused, Craftdas can understand what you stand for, who to show your content to, and how to recommend your posts to the right people. A focused blogger grows faster than a “general writer.”
Craftdas Blogging Rules: Simple Breakdown
These are the rules you should always keep in mind before you publish:
- Stay creator-focused: Write for creators and people building skills.
- Be value-first: Tutorials, guides, breakdowns, helpful opinions, and real experiences.
- Be original: No copy-paste, no rewritten reposts from other sites.
- Avoid low-effort content: Don’t publish weak posts just to be active.
- No outbound links: Craftdas is internal-first, especially for affiliate content.
- Respect quality and clarity: Make it readable. Use headings. Keep it structured.
What Articles Are Allowed on Craftdas? (Approved Content Types)
If you’re wondering what kind of posts are “allowed,” think in categories. These are the types of articles that fit Craftdas perfectly:
1) Tutorials and How-To Guides
- “How to shoot clean indoor portraits with any phone”
- “How to design a clean flyer layout that converts”
- “How to plan a content calendar for 30 days”
2) Skill Breakdown and Learning Posts
- Explaining a concept step-by-step
- Sharing best practices and common mistakes
- Breaking down methods you use in real work
3) Tools, Workflows, and Productivity
- How you organize your creative work
- How you edit faster
- How you plan content, manage clients, or deliver projects
4) Case Studies and Real Experiences
- “How I got my first paid client”
- “What I learned after editing 50 videos”
- “How I improved my photography pricing”
5) Creator Business and Monetization Guides
- Pricing, packages, client communication
- Building a brand identity
- Creating digital products and selling them
6) Curated Creator Resources (Internal-Only)
You can still curate helpful resources, but it must be inside Craftdas (platform pages, features, tools, and internal references).
Best Niches to Focus on as a Craftdas Blogger
A niche is your “content lane.” You can mix two closely related niches, but don’t try to do everything. Here are the best niches that match Craftdas:
Creative Skills & Craft
Photography, videography, editing, design, writing, branding, motion design, UI/UX.
Example post ideas
- “How to shoot weddings and deliver fast”
- “Color grading basics for clean skin tones”
- “How to design a premium brand logo system”
Digital Tools & Workflows
Tool breakdowns, creative systems, templates, productivity, process.
Example post ideas
- “My editing workflow for faster delivery”
- “How to plan a project from idea to delivery”
- “How to build a consistent design system”
Content Creation & Growth
Blogging, YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, storytelling, content strategy.
Example post ideas
- “How to pick content pillars that grow fast”
- “How to write captions that convert”
- “How to create a weekly posting system”
Online Business & Monetization
Freelancing, pricing, client handling, digital products, offers, marketing.
Example post ideas
- “How to price your services without fear”
- “How to create packages that clients understand”
- “How to build trust before you sell”
Tech for Creators
Websites, no-code, automation, creator tech tools, platform usage guides.
Example post ideas
- “How creators can use simple systems to scale”
- “What creators should track to grow faster”
- “How to build a clean portfolio presence”
Case Studies & Creator Stories
Stories are allowed when they teach something. Craftdas loves “journey + lesson” posts.
Example post ideas
- “How I made my first ₦100k from my skill”
- “What I did wrong as a beginner creator”
- “Lessons from my first 10 clients”
Affiliate Rule: Craftdas-Only (No External Links, Ever)
This is locked and it’s a hard rule:
- Affiliate content must be Craftdas-only
- No external affiliate links
- No external links at all (small or big)
- You can only reference Craftdas pages, Craftdas features, and Craftdas resources.
This rule keeps the platform clean, safe, and focused on internal growth. So if you’re writing a guide or recommending something, recommend what exists inside Craftdas—tools, features, creator resources, programs, and internal pages.
What Is Not Allowed on Craftdas? (Disallowed Topics + Examples)
Craftdas isn’t the place for content that adds no creator value or breaks platform trust. Avoid:
- Gossip and rumors
- Celebrity drama
- Political propaganda
- Religious propaganda
- Hate or harassment
- Plagiarism / copied content
- Low-effort AI spam
- Random personal stories with no lesson
- Out-of-scope “news” that isn’t creator-related
If your post cannot clearly answer: “How does this help a creator?” then it doesn’t belong.
How to Pick Your Niche (Beginner-Friendly Method)
If you’re stuck, use this simple method:
Step 1: Choose what you can talk about for 60 days straight
Pick something you understand enough to teach consistently.
Step 2: Choose what people ask you for help with
If people already ask you “how do you do this?”—that’s your niche.
Step 3: Choose what can turn into income later
Your niche should connect to services, products, or authority.
Safe niche combos (good for growth)
- Photography + Creator business
- Video editing + Tools/workflows
- Graphic design + Content creation
- Freelancing + Monetization guides
- Blogging + Content strategy
Avoid mixing unrelated lanes like: photography + football news + relationship gist.
Content Quality Checklist Before You Publish
Before you publish any post, quickly check:
- Does this help a creator learn or act?
- Is the title clear and specific?
- Did I use headings and structure?
- Did I share real steps, not vibes?
- Is it original and not copied?
- Did I avoid external links completely?
- Is it easy to read on mobile?
If you can tick these, your content will perform better long-term.
How to Grow on Craftdas (Consistency, SEO, Series Strategy)
Growth is not magic. Craftdas rewards focus and consistency. Here’s a simple growth approach:
- Pick one niche and stick to it
- Create a series (3–7 posts on one topic)
- Use clear titles that match what people search
- Post consistently (even 2 times per week is strong)
- Write for humans first: simple, structured, valuable
A series strategy is powerful because it builds authority fast. For example:
- “Creator Pricing Series”
- “Photography for Beginners Series”
- “Content Growth Series”
- “Editing Workflow Series”
FAQ: Quick Answers New Craftdas Bloggers Ask
Can I write about anything at all?
No. Your posts must be creator-focused and valuable.
Can I share affiliate links?
No. Affiliate is Craftdas-only, and no external links are allowed.
Can I write personal stories?
Yes, but only when the story teaches something clear and useful.
Can I write about tools?
Yes, but keep it educational and internal-first. No outbound links.
Do I need one niche?
Yes. One niche grows faster. Two is okay if they match closely.
Conclusion + Next Step (What to Write First)
If you want to grow on Craftdas, don’t start by copying what everyone writes. Start by becoming useful in one niche. Write posts that solve problems, teach skills, and show clear steps. That’s how you build authority, gain readers, and unlock opportunities inside the platform.
Best first post to write:
“Here’s what I do + who I help + what you’ll learn from this blog.”