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Are You A WordHustler?
By Senior Editor – Kris Smith (@croncast)
If you are, then WordHustler is for you! If you don’t know what a word hustler is, then listen up!
Similar to pixel pushers and glyph tossing typophiles a word hustler is trying to make it in this world with the written word. And that is where WordHustler comes in.
WordHustler was started by two word hustlers writers, John L. Singleton and Anne Walls, out of their frustration for the costs and time of submitting their works in an analog world. In short, the hustle took to much time away from being able to write.
Sure, there are always elements of every hustle, job or hobby that are tedious and simply part of the process. When someone chooses to be a writer they’re not making that decision based on the amount of time they’re going to spend at OfficeMax buying envelopes and the right paper. The choice is made because they love hardship have a voice that needs to be heard.
With this in mind the founders of WordHustler brought the hustle into the digital age by creating a hybrid CMS that doesn’t display a writer’s work online but submits it to traditional publishers.
WordHustler is one of those impressive web services that is focused on serving a niche market and was developed by people in that niche. By solving their own problems first they were able to take the code and create a service for anyone like them.
No more printing, stamping, less formatting and no more paper cuts as WordHustler automates this process for their users. There’s also no more searching for contests or publishers that might want to review your work. It is all here inside WordHustler.
Beyond the obvious benefits to writers in easing their submission pains there is the additional benefit of a powerful, easy to use interface. WordHustler has one of the best search landing pages I have ever seen. It elegantly integrates a standard search box, results, rankings, standard filtering and my favorite, elements of advanced search visually.
What I mean by ‘advanced search visually’ is the ability to begin filtering content at an advanced level without presenting it that way. Typically this is done through an ‘advanced’ search form with 10+ text input boxes with labels like ‘all these words,some of these words, or none of these words.’
WordHustler presents filtering tools like an AJAX slider to limit the amount of description to display and words, ‘tags’ to filter results on the page. At this time tools like this are often used in backend administration interfaces or like this one, only available on this site. Developers and designers would do well to look at this model and tinker with it to create solutions for users to filter at an advanced level with beginner skills.
The service has a very reasonable price tag for users when compared to the cost of going analog and creating the number of submissions that WordHustler will allow for writers. It is extremely reasonable when compared to the price of building ones own platform to do the same. That is, if you are the enterprising type.
Now that you know about WordHustler and have decided that you are a word hustler or maybe want to submit that long stowed screenplay you wrote right after college, you have no excuse not to give it a try.
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, Anne Walls
, CMS for writers
, John L. Singleton
, pixel pusher
, submission process
, Word Hustler
, WordHustler
, wordhustler.com
, writer submissions
, writing contests 

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