Write for Us: Guest Blog Submission Guidelines

Are you passionate about information security, cybersecurity, data protection, or digital privacy?

Do you have actionable insights to share with small and medium-sized businesses?

We’re always looking to feature fresh perspectives and practical guidance from experienced professionals in the field.

If you’d like to contribute as a guest blogger, please read the guidelines below before submitting your article for consideration.

Submission process

To submit your article, email us at:
publications@clearpathsecurity.co.uk

Please include:
– Your full article draft (as an attachment or in the body of the email)
– A named author with verifiable professional background and a LinkedIn/prior-work link

– We’ll review your submission and get back to you as soon as possible.
– If your article is accepted, we’ll schedule it for publication and confirm the date via email.
– All outbound links in guest contributions are rel="nofollow". We do not accept sponsored, SEO, or link-building submissions.

Article guidelines

To improve your chances of being published, please ensure your article meets the following criteria:

Topic Relevance
Your article should be directly related to information security, cybersecurity, data protection, or digital privacy. Content should be especially useful to small and medium-sized business (SMB) audiences.

Practical and Actionable
Focus on providing real-world value. Guidance, checklists, common pitfalls, solutions to specific challenges, or case study-style insights. We want our readers to walk away with something they can act on.

Word Count
Articles should be between 750 and 1,800 words.

Original and High-Quality Content
Submissions must be original and not previously published elsewhere. We do not accept content that appears to be auto-generated (e.g., low-effort LLM outputs). We’re looking for clear, human-written content that demonstrates depth, experience, and a genuine understanding of the topic.

Tone and Style
Use a professional yet accessible tone. Avoid jargon when possible, and explain technical concepts in a way that non-specialist business leaders and teams can understand.