Write for Us

If you’ve spent real time inside an IPTV reseller panel — not just browsed a demo, but actually logged in, created lines, dealt with a stream dropping at the worst possible moment — this page is for you.

We’re building a library of honest, experience-based guides written by working resellers. Not polished marketing copy. Not AI-generated feature lists. Real walkthroughs from people who know what it’s like to manage 40 customer lines on a Saturday night when a bouquet goes down.

This is the write for us page for Marto IPTV Reseller collaborators of Autven . We cover IPTV reseller panels, reseller dashboard workflows, credit management, stream troubleshooting and everything in between. If you know this space from the inside, read on.

What Kind of IPTV Reseller Panel Content We’re Looking For

We’re not looking for generic overviews anyone could write in an hour. The articles that perform best on this site — and the ones we actively want more of — are the ones that come from someone who’s been through the process first-hand.

Good examples of what that looks like:

  • You set up your first IPTV reseller panel, made three mistakes before the first customer line worked, and you can walk someone else through avoiding those same mistakes
  • You manage reseller accounts across two or three different regions and you’ve noticed specific ISP throttling patterns that affect stream quality — and you know the DNS workaround that fixed it
  • You’ve tested four or five different IPTV player apps with your customers and you have actual opinions about which ones cause the fewest support headaches
  • You’ve been reselling for 18 months and you’ve developed a system for managing renewals, credit top-ups and customer communication that keeps your churn low

That’s the level of specificity we’re after. If you can write at that level — even roughly, even imperfectly — we want to hear from you.

Topics We Need IPTV Reseller Panel Writers to Cover Right Now

These are active gaps in our content. If any of these match your experience, you’re already most of the way to a publishable pitch:

Panel Setup & Configuration

  • First-time IPTV reseller panel setup — the full walkthrough including mistakes
  • How to configure DNS and ISP lock settings for specific regions
  • Setting connection limits and bouquet assignments without breaking existing customer lines
  • What the Activity Log actually tells you and how to use it for troubleshooting

Customer Management

  • How to manage 50+ IPTV customer lines without losing track of renewals
  • Handling customers who share their credentials beyond the connection limit
  • Building a renewal reminder system when the panel doesn’t do it automatically
  • What to tell a customer when their stream drops and you’re still diagnosing the cause

Regional & Market Topics

  • Setting up an IPTV reseller panel for UK customers — ISPs, channels, common issues
  • French market specifics — which bouquets matter, which ISPs throttle most aggressively
  • German IPTV reselling — what customers expect vs what panels typically deliver
  • Netherlands IPTV reseller setup — regional channel coverage and stream stability notes

Honest Reviews & Comparisons

  • IPTV reseller panel comparison — what the price difference between tiers actually means
  • Which IPTV player apps work reliably with Xtream Codes and which ones cause problems
  • M3U vs Xtream Codes — real-world differences for end customers across different devices
  • What 24-hour buyer protection actually covers and when it matters

Advanced Reseller Operations

  • Sub-reseller structures — how to set them up and what limitations to expect
  • Scaling from 20 lines to 100+ without your panel management falling apart
  • Credit management strategy — how to avoid running out mid-month or losing credits to expiry
  • Building a white-label IPTV service on top of a reseller panel — what works, what doesn’t

If you have a topic not on this list that comes directly from your own reselling experience — pitch it. The guides we didn’t think to ask for are often the ones that rank best.

What You Get as a Contributing Writer

This is the part worth paying attention to if you’re on the fence.

Free IPTV Reseller Panel Trial Access

You get a working reseller panel with credits loaded — activated before your first article goes live, not after. Use it to verify what you’re writing, test features you want to cover, or simply get hands-on with the dashboard before committing to a paid plan.  No purchase. Without expiry pressure.

Most contributors use this period to test specific features they’re writing about — the DNS settings panel, the sub-reseller creation flow, the Force Restart function. That firsthand access is also what makes the articles rank. Google’s systems can tell the difference between someone describing a dashboard from a screenshot and someone who actually used it.

Priority Customer Support Access

Contributing writers get direct WhatsApp access to our support team. Typical response time during UK and EU hours is under 15 minutes. If something isn’t working while you’re writing about it — a stream path that won’t behave, a bouquet assignment that isn’t saving correctly — you get it fixed fast, not queued behind standard support tickets.

This benefit stays active for as long as you remain a contributor. Write one article, the support access is yours. Write five, it stays. There’s no tier system — every contributor gets the same direct line.

Your Name and Author Profile on a Published Page

Every article is published with full author credit. Your name, a short bio, and a link back to whatever you want to point to — your own site, a social profile, a contact page. Resellers who’ve contributed consistently have built real visibility in the UK and European IPTV reseller community through articles published here.

This is not a byline buried at the bottom of a page. It’s a proper author profile that stays live as long as the article does.

No Contracts. No Exclusivity. No Catch.

Write one article or write ten. You keep the trial panel access and priority support for the duration of your contribution. There’s no minimum commitment, no exclusivity clause, and no requirement to promote the site on your own channels.

The only thing we ask is that what you write is based on real experience. That’s it.

Writing Guidelines for IPTV Reseller Panel Articles

Read this section before you pitch. It’ll save both of us time.

Length Articles should run between 1,200 and 2,500 words. Shorter is fine if the topic is tightly focused. Longer is fine if the topic genuinely needs it. Don’t pad to hit a word count — Google’s systems flag that, and so do readers.

Tone Write the way you’d explain something to another reseller. Direct, specific, slightly opinionated. If something in the panel is annoying to use, say so. If a feature saved you from a customer complaint, say that too. We’re not looking for balanced corporate tone — we’re looking for honest operator perspective.

Structure Use subheadings every 150–200 words. Keep paragraphs short — 2 to 4 lines maximum. If you’re listing steps or features, use bullet points. If you’re comparing options, use a simple side-by-side breakdown. Walls of text don’t rank and don’t get read.

Experience Signals — Non-Negotiable Every article must include at least one of the following:

  • A specific time estimate (“took about 12 seconds to load the first time”)
  • A real mistake and how you fixed it
  • A feature you tested and an honest verdict on whether it worked
  • A friction point — something that wasn’t obvious, took longer than expected, or required a workaround

These signals are what separate a rankable article from content that gets filtered out by Google’s helpful content systems. If your draft doesn’t have any of these, add them before submitting.

What We Don’t Accept

  • Generic overviews with no firsthand detail
  • Articles written entirely from other published sources
  • Content that reads like a product description
  • Keyword-stuffed writing where the primary phrase appears every other sentence
  • Anything that feels like it was written without opening the panel at least once

Real Setup Experience — What Writing for This Site Actually Involves

Before you pitch, here’s an honest picture of what the contribution process looks like.

You message us with your background and topic idea. We confirm within a few hours — usually the same day for messages received during UK hours. If the topic is a fit, we activate your free trial panel access immediately. You get login credentials for a working IPTV reseller panel with credits loaded and ready to use.

From there, you write from your own experience. If you want to verify something inside the panel before writing about it — test the DNS settings section, create a few lines, check the Activity Log — the trial access is there for exactly that purpose. Most contributors spend 30–45 minutes inside the dashboard before writing, even if they’re already experienced resellers. Things change between panel versions and it’s worth confirming current behaviour before publishing it.

First draft gets a light editorial pass from our side — mainly checking for factual accuracy and structure, not rewriting your voice. Turnaround on editorial feedback is typically 24–48 hours. After that, publication is usually within a week.

Once live, the article gets your author credit, your priority support access activates if it hasn’t already, and you’re in the contributor system from that point forward.

The whole process from first message to published article typically runs 5–10 days depending on how quickly the draft comes together.

What Most IPTV Reseller Panel Writers Get Wrong — And What Makes Articles Actually Rank

This section exists because the same mistakes come up repeatedly from first-time contributors. Worth knowing before you start.

Writing about features without describing the actual steps. “The panel has an advanced account management system” tells a reader nothing. “Go to the Lines tab, hit Create New Line, fill in the username and connection limit, and the system generates Xtream Codes credentials automatically — the whole thing takes under 60 seconds” tells them something they can actually use. The second version ranks. The first doesn’t.

Skipping the friction. Articles that describe everything working perfectly read as promotional and get treated as such. The ones that include a moment where something didn’t work — and what you did to fix it — read as genuine. That contrast is what E-E-A-T scoring rewards.

Avoiding opinions. “The reporting tab shows active lines and expiring accounts” is a description. “The reporting tab isn’t a deep analytics tool but it shows you exactly which bouquets are most used — I used that data to figure out that 70% of my customers only really needed the sports package, which changed how I priced renewals” is useful. One of those gets bookmarked. The other gets bounced.

Treating the primary keyword like a checkbox. Articles that front-load the target phrase in the first paragraph and then barely use it again don’t rank for that phrase. Articles that use it naturally throughout — in subheadings, in context, in the conclusion — do. Write about the subject, not around it.

Frequently Asked Questions About Writing for Us Page

Do I need to be an expert to contribute? No. You need to have real experience. A reseller who’s been running 15 lines for 8 months and can write honestly about what that’s like is more valuable to us than someone with theoretical knowledge of the industry. Experience matters more than credentials here.

How long does free IPTV reseller panel access last? Trial access is active from the point we confirm your topic through to publication and beyond — as long as you remain an active contributor. There’s no fixed expiry on the trial period for writers.

Can I write about a panel I’ve used elsewhere, not just martcarto? Yes, with context. Comparison articles and honest reviews of other panels are welcome, provided they’re based on real use and not assembled from other published reviews. If you’ve tested three panels and have genuine opinions on the differences, that’s exactly the kind of article we’d publish.

What happens if my article doesn’t get accepted? We’ll tell you specifically why and give you the option to revise. We don’t reject articles without explanation. The most common reason for rejection is lack of firsthand detail — which is fixable.

Do I need to include images? We handle image sourcing and placement editorially. You don’t need to submit screenshots — though if you have them from your own panel use, they strengthen the article significantly and we’d include them with your permission.

Can I pitch more than one topic at a time? Yes. If you have two or three topics you want to cover, pitch them all at once. We’ll confirm which ones are a fit and you can work through them at your own pace.

Is there a word count minimum? Soft minimum of 1,000 words for tightly focused topics. Most articles run 1,500–2,000 words naturally when the subject is covered properly. Don’t target a number — write until the topic is done.

How to Submit Your Pitch

Message us on WhatsApp or Telegram. Keep the pitch short — two or three sentences is enough:

  • What’s your reselling background (how long, what regions, rough scale)
  • What topic you want to cover
  • One specific thing from your own experience that the article would be based on

That’s all we need to confirm the topic and get your free trial panel access activated.

We respond to every pitch. If you message during UK or EU hours, expect a response the same day. Outside those hours, within 24 hours.

No forms and  waiting list. Message us, we confirm, you write, you get published  and the panel access and priority support are yours from day one.