Categories: About LiteracyBase

7 Great Things You Need to Know About LiteracyBase

Every writing site has its ins and its outs. The rules for posting differ – word count varies, for example, as does the tools provided for formatting and editing your text. What types of activity are compensated also vary. And of course, the places where your information on the site can be found are different too.

In my previous post I looked at things you can do to help boost your post earnings. In this post I’d like to talk about where to find your information on LiteracyBase, and how to do basic things like tagging friends so they’ll be able to see your messages to them.

 

How to Know if a Post Has Published

You can see the status of all your submitted post in the dashboard. Posts titles and images display on this page, along with the status of the post. When you forst submit, the status reads “Awaiting Moderation.” Once approved the blog is marked as live, and there is a link so you can see your post on the site.

To access the dashboard, go to “Blog” in the menu at the top of any page on the site. Select “Dashboard” to access the list of your posts and post statuses.

 

How to See All Your Posts Together

Would you like to see a list of all your published LiteracyBase posts? Go to “Blog > Dashboard,” then scroll down the page until you see “Author Info.” You will see your profile pic and display name. Click on that display name: it’s a link to your author page.

The author page URL will be structured like this: site URL/author/yourusername/

So if you ever need to get to the page quickly, go to the home page of the site and click in the address bar. Add “/author/” to the end of the link, and finish off with your username. This also works if you want to see what posts a friend has published on LiteracyBase. If you know her username, just add it to the author page link. You’ll be taken to her author page, where you can see all her published posts for the site. This is a great page to share on social media too!

 

How to Tag a Friend on Literacy Base

You can tags friends and fellow users on LiteracyBase. Tags will show up in status updates, forum comments, and in posts too. It’s especially important to tag other users if you are replying to them in the forums or in post comments, as it’s easy to miss notifications for that.

To tag another user on LiteracyBase, use the “AT” (@) symbol and then type in their username. You can see their username by hovering your mouse over their name anywhere that you see it linked on the site. The very last part of the URL you see in the bottom left of your browser when you mouseover is the person’s username. In my case, the correct way to tag me on LiteracyBase is “@Ruby3881.”

You’ll notice that very often the username is not the same as the display name. Sometimes even just adding a space to match the display name can mess up the tag. So always go with what the username says.

 

How to Find Your Referral Link

You can use your referral link to help a friend sign up for LiteracyBase. You can also share the link in your social networks, or add it to your posts with a call to action for readers to join the site. Even more importantly, you can take the referral code and append it to the URL for any page on the site.

Related Post

This means you can add it to your post links when you share them on Facebook, Twitter, or Google+. You can also do the same with your author page, or with a page from one of the forums or groups on the site.

You can find your referral link on your profile page. Just click your avatar or profile pic on any page of the site. This will take you to your main member page. In the menu just under your photo and latest status update you’ll see a link for “Profile.”

Under “Affiliate Program” find your “link.” This full URL can be given to anyone who wants to join the site. Or you can take the part that starts with the question mark (?) and add it to any other link for the site. If you add this bit that reads “?mref=yourusername” to links for your posts before you share them in your social networks, you’ll get referral bonuses when visitors come to read your posts.

 

How to See Your Visitor Referrals and Signups

Just under your referral link, you’ll see the tally for how many unique visitors you’ve referred to LiteracyBase, as well as how many new user signups came through your referral code.

LiteracyBase pays $0.0010 for every unique visitor. This is similar to other sites that pay for page views to a post, except you will be paid no matter what page the visitor lands on. You don’t have to be the author of the page: it could be the home page, one of your own posts, a forum page, or even a fellow writer’s post. Any link that has the referral code will earn money for you. The bulk of all the entries in my points history come from visitor referrals. They do really add up, and represent passive income for you.

 

How to Know How Much You Post was Paid

As I mentioned earlier in this article, every post gets paid a different amount upfront. Longer posts tend to be given a larger upfront payment. They will also tend to rank better with search engines, which means more traffic to the site. Longer posts are now the preference of all the SEO and blogging experts, so it’s great that LiteracyBase does compensate uses for writing these more substantial posts.

To see how much you were paid for a post, navigate to “Points History” from your member page. Then look through the entries in your history until you see one whose description is simply a number. That number is the word count for your post. If you aren’t sure you have the right post, check the date and time of the entry against the publication info for your post.

When you find a match, you’ll be able to see how much that post earned upfront. Remember that it will continue to earn passive income for you if you add your referral code to the link before you share it to your social networks!

LiteracyBase promises to reward you up to 10% commission on the site activity of anyone who signs up under your referral link. So once your friends or family members sign up, encourage them to be active!

 

How to See your Total Earnings

This is probably the easiest piece of information to find, as you will see your “Available Balance” at the top right of each page on the site. You can also view your total earnings on your profile page. Look for the “Coins” rubric under your affiliate program information.

You can request payment on LiteracyBase as soon as you have $10 available balance. When you are ready to redeem, you must make a request. Go to “Rewards > Redeem” to request your payment. Once your request is entered, it will be processed by the 10th day of the next month. So if you request payment any time between May 1-31, you’ll be paid by June 10th. If you can’t make your request until after the first of June, you will wait an extra month for payment.

 

Are you looking for a place to blog and get paid? Check out LiteracyBase!




  • Kyla Matton Osborne (Ruby3881)

    View Comments

      • @morgoodie After I published this I thought of a bunch more things I wanted to say, so I'll likely write more posts like this. I hope you find each one as helpful as this one :)

    • Thanks for this great information. I need to get more active on this site, just looking for extra time :(

      • @martha061 you are one busy lady! I do hope you'll find time to write more here, but I very much understand how tough it can be to find time for everything....

    • very useful information. I am sure all newbies will find this post more useful than the QA.

      I have share my posts url at share medias and gained lots of refer visitors daily.

      As for referral link, I did had 2 signups but no other earnings of 10% as stated. I could see 0.0001 cent only.

      That was a bit disappointed. I thought I could earn 10% from them but nope.

      However, I am happy that my blog post earning is getting better now.
      Yup, the content is the main reason for better pay.

      I gotta write more useful posts now.

      Thanks for sharing

    • @peachpurple In order for you to earn the 10% commission, the new member has to do something to earn here as well. I did get a notation in my points history for a commission when one of the people I referred posted a comment. But either there hasn't been much in the way of activity for those few people who used my referral link to sign up, or their contributions are still very small.

      I know many are busy on multiple sites, and there is now a backlog of posts to be published. So it may just take time before we start to see those commissions adding up.

    • I think you are the one who pointed out that the number of words of post just submitted and approved for going "live" is no longer displayed for the reason that it could be referred to as the basis of earning much. The algorithm which LB is using is unpredictable. Thus, the earning coins are also variable. By the way, it is "Waiting Approval" not "Waiting Moderation" for the unpublished blog post which has just been submitted.

      • @nakitakona13 This post was actually "awaiting approval" during the latest upgrade, and therefore does not reflect any changes that were made since then. As you well know, we are not able to edit our posts at this stage of the game.

        Thank you ever so much for pointing out the factual error. If ever I'm able to perform that edit I will fix it, hopefully to your satisfaction.

    • This is a very helpful post especially for the newbies as this will help them in better understanding of the site rather than like us who learned by hit & trial and by asking constant questions.
      @peachpurple I agree with you about the referrals. But as @Ruby3881 said that there might be little activity from our referrals which probably might be the reason that the points aren't reflecting in our points history. I think things will pick up once a few people cash out on this site and there are payment proofs. That will lure people to this site.

    • I will pass this information along to some writer friends and try to persuade them to join.

    • Good to know. I am still thinking whether to put in effort here. It is still a very new site, and I have not read of anyone getting paid yet.

      • @scheng1 I'm not sure about anybody who was here before the last month, but we have a few who might be eligible to cash out by month's end. And we can certainly see if @kaka135 gets paid, too.

    • I have to test out the part about getting visitor to any blog post or page. I have just posted the links with my referral code intact.
      If I can see earnings from the links, that will be good.

      • @scheng1 I'm hoping by now you've been getting some good revenue for visitor referral. I can sometimes get 100 referrals in a day, so it's worth doing! I share the links on Pinterest, Twitter, and sometimes G+ or Facebook. I also try to Stumble too.

    • What you have written it here was verified by me and they were worked well. It is very informative and it is very basic for the newcomer to know this info. They wouldn't find any problem anymore when a question may raise or may happen to ask it. This is a comprehensive presentation of Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) which a newly registered member may likely to ask.

      • If only the LB staff were to post such a FAQ! It would be most helpful, even if they just did a roundup of posts like this that give info on how to get the best from the site.

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