It's a cool website for making websites. Especially if you don't have much web design experience. It came out of Y-Combinator a couple years ago, and it seems like a pretty good idea.
It depends on what your long term goals are. Are you looking to use it as a digital business card or are you interested in eventually opening up your own studio and starting a full-on business? For the former, something simple like Strikingly might be a good option (they have a free version). Beware that anything like that or Wix are notoriously incapable of integrating outside apps, etc and will be really frustrating if you want to ramp up your business, run ads, etc, in the future. If you are somewhat technologically and creatively competent, I would recommend Wordpress and a premium theme from Themeforest which will give you the most flexibility while being semi-beginner friendly. A theme should set you back $40-50 and then hosting and a domain should be another $20 per year or so.
I had a look at Squarespace, seems like a great tool for building more complex sites, but maybe overkill for a 1-page site?
For one page sites, I've used Strikingly before. Pretty basic way to setup a site with a form for capturing data. Pro plan lets you add custom domains for like $10/mo
Personally, for $10/mo I'd just buy my own hosting and point the domain there, but strikingly is good for that "lean" idea of doing little effort to produce something, and good for those that aren't familiar with setting up their own domains.
Have you checked out strikingly?
What about Wix? Or krop? cargocollective?
I've had some good success on pinterest as well, though my username there is adportfolio
Do you have a website/portfolio with info about you and a few samples of your writing? If not, it's easy to get one up. https://www.strikingly.com/ makes it really easy to create a nice one-page site.
Once you have that up, I recommend pitching individual clients, as well as publications. http://blogwriterswanted.com is updated daily with new blogging jobs, and http://allindiewriters.com/writers-markets/ is a great source for finding both online and offline publications to pitch.
Depends what you need.
I use https://www.strikingly.com/ for books I use a sales funnel to sell since I don't have to do anything to maintain the site once it is setup (except pay the monthly subscription anyway).
For sites that need a blog, gallery or some other widget I use Wordpress. The best theme I have ever seen for a book / author site is this one, https://themeforest.net/item/brown-responsive-wordpress-theme-for-ebook/7989334
We've used https://www.strikingly.com/ in the past for several landing/squeeze pages. They have recently blocked domain forwarding on the free plan if that matters. i believe it was $17 a month for up to 5 separate sites.
The link to your bog should work, but also make some time to create a real portfolio website in the near future.
If social media and online marketing is in your future, do yourself a favor now and create a personal website (ideally with a personal URL).
There are great sites that can help you do this with out any code:
Good Luck!
If you are looking for more of landing pages where there is not much complexity, take a look at https://www.strikingly.com. They have great new age themes.
If you are looking to take control of the website using loads of plugins and themes, I agree with Tango and use WordPress. You can run a business developing almost any type of website on WordPress and if you are not happy with it, download a new theme and it will change the entire look and behavior of the site.
Best call to action:
"Call now to schedule an appointment!" If you want someone to do something, ask!
Make sure this call to action appears on a landing page that contains relevant information to inform them & leads them along their journey. Include the information about how the payment works if it's highly relevant to a potential customer's decision to call or not.
Example of great landing page: https://www.strikingly.com/
•"Scroll down to learn more"
•Presenting them with what you want them to do (sign up/ create a login)
•Another prompt to login/ convert.
Your ad campaign should definitely be using call extentions
Your webpage could use dynamic keyword insertion with what Google has called "Website Call Conversions", if you're concerned about being able to track 100% where your phone calls are coming from (organic vs paid search)
If having your calls recorded is important to you, using a service like callrail.com might also be useful.
If people browsing on phones are more ideal targets to you - you can set up your campaign to have them more heavily targeted.
I have been looking at https://www.strikingly.com/ recently - maybe better than wordpress, depending on what you are trying to do.
Someone needs to make a "biz in a box" where it creates your social media pages in addition to home page, blog and landing pages. (That's a free startup idea)