Where to post your blog if you actually want to sell digital products


You wrote a blog post. It's smart, helpful, and packed with value.

Now what?

If your goal is to sell more digital products, publishing your post is just step one. What you do after you hit “publish” matters even more. The internet is loud—your content needs a plan to get seen by people who are ready to buy.

Here are five places you should be sharing your blog posts to boost visibility and drive real sales.

Your Email List (Yes, even if it's small)

This is your most warmed-up audience. They already know you, trust you, and signed up for more.

Share your blog post as a value-driven email:

  • Highlight one major takeaway

  • Tease the rest of the content

  • Link back to the full post

Then, subtly remind them of the digital product that relates to the blog topic. No hard sell needed—just a clean CTA (call-to-action) like:
“Want to go deeper? Grab the [product name] toolkit that goes with this post.”

Pro tip: Add a short “PS” link to the product at the bottom of the email too.

Pinterest (Not Dead. Just Misunderstood.)

Pinterest is still a goldmine for digital product sellers—especially for evergreen blog content.

Why it works:

  • Blog posts that solve specific problems (like “how to organize your week” or “printable budget templates”) do great on Pinterest

  • Your pins can drive traffic for months, not just days like Instagram or TikTok

Create 2–3 pin designs per blog post using Canva. Make sure each links back to your original post. Add keywords in your title and description, just like you would for SEO.

Pro tip: Tailor your pin designs to match your product’s vibe (aesthetic sells).

Facebook Groups (but don’t spam)

Find groups where your audience already hangs out. Think niche communities, not giant dumping grounds.

Look for:

  • Groups where sharing links is allowed (some even have promo days)

  • Threads where people are asking questions your blog post answers

  • Content sharing pods or entrepreneur circles

When you drop your link, frame it around helping, not selling. For example:

“Someone asked about organizing digital files—just wrote a post breaking down my system if it helps anyone!”

That earns trust. Trust leads to clicks. Clicks lead to sales.

LinkedIn (If You Sell to Professionals)

LinkedIn isn’t just for 9–5 resumes anymore. It’s a growing space for creators, solopreneurs, and digital product sellers targeting business-savvy buyers.

How to share your post:

  • Write a short “mini version” of your blog post as a native post (2–4 paragraphs)

  • At the end, drop the link with a call like: “Full breakdown here if you want the details.”

If your blog teaches anything related to productivity, leadership, career growth, systems, or monetization—you need to be on LinkedIn.

Quora or Reddit (the right threads = gold)

This one takes effort, but the payoff can be big.

Find questions people are asking that your blog post answers. Reply with real value, then link to your post only if it adds to the answer.

Examples:

  • On Reddit: Subreddits like r/Entrepreneur, r/Notion, r/FemaleEntrepreneurs, r/PrintOnDemand

  • On Quora: Search questions using your blog’s main keywords

Be helpful first, promotional second. That’s how you earn traffic and credibility.

Writing the blog is just 50% of the job. Distribution is the other half.

If you want your blog to sell digital products, don’t just post and ghost. Build a system. These five channels will help you get more eyes, clicks, and conversions without running ads or burning out.

Start with one or two. Stay consistent. Tweak based on what works. And always link back to a product that solves the next problem your reader will have.

You’ve already done the hard part—now make your content work for you.

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