Posts Tagged ‘freelance writing’

Tips for Staying Cool Under Pressure

tips for staying coolWell, it’s been about a month since my last update, and I’ve decided to focus today on tips for staying cool under fire…this, after writing religiously every day for a couple of weeks. I confess, after writing my last entry about regulating tasks and maintaining a decent schedule - my tasks exploded and my schedule went to hell. This is called not practicing what you preach!

Because of the insanity of this past month, I’ve decided to put together a list of tips for staying cool under pressure - a new, streamlined approach to handling an overwhelming, almost impossible list of tasks and projects in a way that lets you complete them without sacrificing your livelihood or your family life. It really is possible - and I’ll show you how I’ve finally done it with my own schedule (it’s also the reason that I’m finally blogging here again).

Taking Stock of Projects and Status

So, you’ve got 5 or 6 clients and they all want a piece of you? The better you are as a writer, the more likely you’re going to find yourself in this situation. Once people recognize that you are able to produce quality content at a reasonable speed, you’re going to discover that opportunity knocks. The downside is that opportunity is going to knock from so many sides that you’re simply going to run out of hands to open those doors. You can’t do everything for everyone.

Once you’re at a successful point in your writing career where you have more opportunities than you know what to do with, it’s time to take a step back and reorganize.

From day one, you probably wrote for peanuts just to get your name out there and your writing recognized. After a while, you went from writing for practically free, to writing $10 to $20 articles. The next thing you know, you’re getting offers to write for professional blogs at $35 to $50 and up, as well as job opportunities for editing and management. This is what you’ve worked so hard for - but if you just keep taking more work, eventually you’re going to run out of time and burn out.
tips for staying cool

So, take a few moments to create a complete and detailed list of all of your current job responsibilities, as well as any upcoming opportunities that you’ve been offered - and make sure to associate an earning amount and “time to complete” for each task. This will help you gauge the true value of your work as well as priority.

Shift Priorities to Higher Paying Work

Here’s the scenario: You have two clients who both want you to write for them as much as possible. You are completely tapped out on time, but you have space to fit in about three more articles per week. One client pays $25 an article, and the other pays $45 per article. Which client should you offer to write more articles for? It certainly doesn’t seem like rocket science does it?

What complicates matters a little bit for writers is when you’ve been writing for a lower-playing client for a very long time, and then a higher paying client comes along and offers you work. Most writers take on the extra work, but maintain their previous workload with other clients.

However, if your new client is offering you even more articles (if you had that time to write them) at such a higher rate than your old client pays, wouldn’t it make sense to cut back on your writing for the old client? This seems intuitive in writing, but you’d be surprised how many writers I’ve met who simply can’t let go of any work, even if it means they’ll be able to replace it with work that pays more. It comes down to your ability to say no to people.

Tips for Staying Cool - Plan Out All Hours Available for Work

I’ve tried all sorts of approaches for scheduling and managing my work, from utilizing online calendar applications like Google Calendar (which I do still use), as well as Astrid for my mobile Droid. It seems that, inevitably, I always come back to using my trusty Excel spreadsheet.

This week I tried using a new color-coded schedule system in Excel, with a different color representing a different client, and assigned blocks of time for the tasks that I need to accomplish every week.

tips for staying cool

Originally, I had an Excel spreadsheet that just listed all of the tasks I needed to do without any color coding at all, but by coloring blocks of time, it better differentiates the limits of your blocks of time - and there’s no question where the task starts and stops. Most importantly, use large gray areas for periods of time when you simply do not do any writing work, whether that’s time off, time with family, or otherwise.

This approach insures that not only do you get your work done when you’re supposed to, but it also assigns blocks of time to not working, which is just as important to not getting burnt out.

Respect Your Schedule!

Rule #1 to making an efficient schedule work is this is more important than any other one of these tips for staying cool under stress - follow the schedule you’ve defined. Don’t overrun the block of time you’ve set up for work and then eat into your evening sleep, because the next morning you’ll never be able to get up and accomplish the block of time you’ve set aside there. Each overrun will intrude on the next until you’ve completely burnt out.

What makes a schedule work is when you respect it and follow it. Trust that you’ve analyzed your demands properly and that you’ve assigned the right priorities. After that, stop worrying about what you’ve got due next - just focus on that task at hand and get it done in the time that you’ve assigned (or earlier). Make sure to assign enough time to the tasks (don’t short-change yourself), and you’ll find that not only are you less burnt out, but when you are not working and taking time to relax, you’ll worry much less.

Definition for Technical Writing

If you’re interested in a career in writing, then a good definition for technical writing may come in handy, because for the right person it can be a very lucrative career. Technical writing is exactly what it sounds like - it’s a form of writing where you take information or concepts that are technical in nature, and you put them into coherent written form.
definition for technical writing

The end product could be a manual, a technical paper or proposal, reports, newsletters and even web pages. The true value of a technical writer is in their ability to convey either simple or complicated technological ideas in a way that’s targeted toward a specific audience. This is important considering that the audience could either be a layperson reading a product manual, or a fellow scientist conducting a peer review of a scientific finding.

A Definition for Technical Writing as a Career

A technical writer usually focuses on a topic or niche that revolves around a particular skill that they may have. This means that technical writers aren’t usually effective covering a broad range of topics. This means that if you want to be a technical writer, you need to have a good grasp on your own skills, training and expertise. Your background training and experience will define the fields that you should focus on as a technical writer.

Every field has an entire library of terminology and lingo, which is why the core definition for technical writing is that it’s a form of writing centered upon a specific skill set or career - such as lawyers, psychologists, computer experts or any other profession that requires specialized knowledge. It’s also important to remember that technical writing isn’t always even your standard form of writing. Sometimes you’ll find yourself creating forms, detailing step-by-step instructions with diagrams and schematics, or developing multimedia presentations and similar content. For larger projects such as these, you’d likely be involved in a team that includes graphic design artists and computer programmers, especially if a website is involved.

Translating and Conveying Technology and Specialized Knowledge

A truly skilled technical writer has the ability to take concepts that are conveyed to them from one highly specialized group, process that information and then convey it to a second group or individual in a way, and using terminology, that they can understand. Sometimes this might involve incorporating detailed information from programmers or engineers into a summary report or a project status report that executives and managers can understand and process. In order to do this, you need to understand what terminology they can understand, and how to translate the terminology that they can’t understand into something that makes sense for them. Technical writing is very much like acting as a translator of sorts.

This is also why technical writers are necessary within almost every discipline. Most scientists and experts have little ability to convert their highly specialized language into concepts that a lay person can understand. A technical writer is necessary, because the person has just enough knowledge about the specialized field to understand the scientist or specialist in their lingo. However, the technical writer can do what the specialist can’t - and that is to convey that highly technical information in a language and in a way that others who are not specialists can understand, and with appropriate grammar, punctuation and spelling. Unfortunately many technically trained individuals, like engineers, are very poor writers.

If you’re considering entering the field of technical writing, understand that it can be a grueling career at times. However, the fact that you are making good use of your training and specialty, in combination with your excellent writing ability will result in a writing career that you will find very fulfilling and rewarding.

Free Writing Classes

One of the best ways to improve your writing skills is by taking free writing classes that help with many of the fundamentals of writing. It isn’t absolutely necessary to have every grammatical rule memorized, but in order to write well you do need to understand the basic rules of well-structured writing.
free writing classes

Not long ago, I provided a list of the best free online writing courses. One of those websites, The Owl at Purdue, is my absolute favorite. So, I wanted to take a moment to provide a tour of this wonderful free resource, and recommend that if you like what you see, take some time to work through these free writing classes. You’ll discover that your writing will improve significantly.

Free Writing Classes from Purdue University

The first thing that you’ll notice when you visit The Owl at Purdue is the long list of available free classes that run down the right menu bar. The areas of writing that you can learn about with this site make it the premier website for learning how to write well. In fact, I would say that if you could only pick a single site to use that could teach you everything you need to know about good writing, this site would be it.

free writing classes

Some of the available subjects that you’ll find include Grammar and Mechanics, Research and Citation, and even The Writing Process - an excellent first stop for beginning writers. When you drop down any one of the menu items, you’ll discover a treasure trove of subjects that you can study.

free writing classes

When you choose a class that you want, you’ll notice that each subject is laid out using the same template, with an introduction and then a menu bar as shown here.

free writing classes

Menu options include getting help, downloading all materials in a multi-page printable format, obtaining permission to make copies of the coursework, an option to let Purdue know that you’re linking to the site (I’ve just done that!), the option to report an error with the courseware, and finally a button where you can provide feedback about the lesson.

free creative writing classes

As you work through each lesson, you’ll notice that the concepts are described and laid out in a manner that’s very simple to understand, and with graphical representations of each idea provided whenever it’s appropriate. There’s nothing dry or boring about these lessons - they’re well designed, well written, and well presented. You’ll also notice that at the bottom of every lesson page, there’s a complete listing of all pages that make up the lesson.

free creative writing classes

This navigational menu makes it very easy to go back to any concepts that you either forgot or you simply want to review one more time. You can jump back and forth through the lesson pages and work through it at your leisure, at your pace and whenever it’s convenient for you.

I’d like to offer kudos to the fantastic tutoring group over at Purdue for building this valuable online resource for all writers who are looking to improve their writing abilities. If you like this free tool, don’t forget to check out the Purdue “Grammar Gang” - a fun blog run by the tutoring team.

free creative writing classes

Whatever your reason for seeking out free writing classes - The Owl at Purdue is an excellent free resource and a great site to bookmark and return to whenever you need a refresher on grammar, correct writing structure and other writing guidelines.

Do you have any other free writing tools or resources that you use often to improve your writing? Share your own resources in the comments section below.

Lifehacker Highlights Wi-Fi Surveillance Article

Today, while I was going about my online business at work, one of my buddies approached me and congratulated me on my article that got highlighted on LifeHacker. I’ve been in such a fog lately, racing to finish so many articles by the end of the month, that I never stopped to take a look at the aftereffects of the articles I’ve already written this month. I remember a brief email from the editor over at MakeUseOf about something over at LifeHacker, but I think I was in the middle of a caffeine coma toward the tail end of another late-night writing binge, so it was a blur.

Turns out it’s true, over at LifeHacker they posted a highlight of the article I wrote for MakeUseOf on turning your PC into a Wi-Fi Home Surveillance system.

lifehacker1

To say I’m honored would be an understatement. LifeHacker is the premier spot on the Internet where all tech geeks hang out and get the latest news and their techno fix. To get featured on the site is a very cool experience.

In fact, the topic itself was a blast to write. Wi-Fi technology presents so many opportunities for people to get creative with gadgetry in a way that wasn’t even possible only a few years ago. Even the layout described in my article has a number of variations. With a bunch of wi-fi cameras (ideal ones that you can assign their own IP, without the need for a PC) - you can create:

  • A home surveillance system for when you’re away
  • A monitoring system for haunted hot-spots (if you’re into that kind of thing)
  • A perimeter around your property to monitor the schedules of your local wildlife
  • A camera at your driveway to trigger an alert on your computer when someone arrives

The possibilities really are endless. And dreaming about them certainly makes for easy writing.  A huge thanks to LifeHacker for highlighting the article, and as always a thank you to MakeUseOf for hiring me on in the first place!

Free Online Writing Courses

While the art of writing certainly requires a bit of talent, learning the techniques of good writing through free online writing courses can send your own writing quality into the stratosphere. When it comes to online writing, the truth is that good things come to those who write well. Once your articles reach wide distribution and your name gets out there as a recognizable source for excellent writing - your earning potential as a freelance online writer is limited only by how much time you have available to devote to your writing.
free online writing courses

Previously, I’ve written quite a bit about free online resources and tools for online writers, and I’ve also provide a little bit of insight into the path that you can follow to become a freelance writer. However, in order to lay down a solid foundation as a writer, you really need to take a few writing classes - so I’ve decided to put together a useful list of the top 10 sites that offer free online writing courses in order to provide you with a page that you can bookmark and return to often whenever you’d like to take another free writing course.

Top 10 Free Online Writing Courses

Much of the Internet is over-run with useless sites that don’t really offer anything much of value, but instead try to draw in search engine results with spammed keywords and meaningless text (often written with the most atrocious grammar you’ll ever read). In order to cut through all of that nonsense, I’ve collected the finest sites offering a wide range of writing courses that cover all aspects of good writing.

  • Learning Space - This UK based online courseware site easily takes the top spot on the list of the best free online writing courses due to the sheer volume of available free courses. The Arts and History section has the most available lessons, but you can find excellent writing courses throughout other disciplines as well.
  • MIT Open Courseware - Can’t get into MIT? That doesn’t mean you can’t take writing classes from one of the country’s Premier technical colleges. Select the Writing and Humanistic Studies Department and you’re whisked away to a list of dozens of classes. Just choose your class and download the full course - it’s as simple as that!
  • Utah University - This University also offers open courseware that includes a few valuable English classes. Remember, these are full University courses that you can download for absolutely free.
  • NewsU - I’ll be honest, I’m a journalist at heart. I love hunting down the truth behind a story. News University does charge for some courses, but there are enough free, high-quality courses here to put this site toward the top of the list. If you’re a budding freelance journalist, don’t pass this one by.
  • Utah State - Utah State University also has a wide range of excellent courses for writing across all departments, but obviously the English Department is the best place to start.
  • Western Governors University - This site lists a great collection of classes under “Liberal Arts.”
  • Purdue - This top University offers some of the best open courseware of any other site available on the web. You’ll find fantastic courses like “Proofreading Your Writing” and “The Writing Process.”
  • Steven Barnes - This well known author and screenwriter offers prospective writers a complete writing course for absolutely free.
  • The Writer’s Channel - If you enjoy watching video more than reading, this series of video and audio writing courses are right up your alley.
  • Ezine University - This site offers an eclectic mix of online courses, many of which are focused on the art of writing for various purposes.

Learn the Techniques and Practice

When it comes to writing, about half of the effort to become a better writer is learning how to write as though you’re having a conversation with the reader, or how to use different methods to persuade, sell or draw an emotional reaction from your reader. Once you learn these techniques, the other half of the effort is to put what you learn into practice by writing as often and as much as you have time for. Make it a hobby that you do with every spare moment that you have available, and in a very short time you’ll find that not only have your writing skills improved, but you’re writing will also be well in demand.

Good luck with your studies, and make sure you share your success stories in the comments section below!

Articles, Articles Everywhere - The Life of an Online Writer

You know, it’s one thing to maintain a forty hour a week job to begin with, and it’s certainly another thing to do freelance writing work as a full time job, but have you ever wondered what it’s like to do both?

journalist

The Life of a Workaholic - Must…Take….A Break…

This all started when I got involved with eBay in order to earn some extra cash. In my usual all-or-nothing approach, I ended up as an eBay PowerSeller in less than a year. I wrote about that a bit in one of this month’s articles at MakeUseOf. There’s plenty of money to be made on eBay, the only problem is that 75 percent of it involves doing work outside the home. You can forget about having a life on “shipping day,” a tortuous day where you spend 4 or 5 hours rapidly packing up oddly shaped items in cardboard and bubble wrap. The next day you arrive at the post office carrying a mountain of packages (as other customers eye you up and down with disgust for taking so much time), and then you pray to the United States Postal Service gods to *please* not break anything, because dealing with USPS insurance claims is like expecting your health insurance premiums to go down next year…it ain’t gonna happen.

The Life of a Workaholic - Must…Take….A Break…

This month, I decided to share a bit of the madness. Here are a few of the projects that I somehow managed to complete this month.

And something I’m very proud and happy to report, a few of the best interviews I’ve had the honor of doing so far.  Jim Harold of the Paranormal Podcast, an interview with popular science fiction novelist Kevin J. Anderson, and finally a very cool chat with Scott Swedorski - the VP of Product Development over at CoffeeCup (the creators of the famous free web design software).

All in all, it’s been a fun month. Don’t get me wrong, I wouldn’t trade in my day job as an Engineer - but I gotta tell you, this writing thing is a total blast.

How the Internet Changed Writing

Here I am, blogging from the comfort of a vehicle, traveling at 70 miles per hour on the interstate. A thought struck me as I watch other passengers texting, using mobile email, or with a laptop on their laps and tethered to their mobile phone - surfing Google just like they were sitting at home. We are living in reality conceived by the sci-fi authors of the past.

In fact, this new reality has changed how writers write. I recall reading ‘On Writing’ by Stephen King, where he describes his writing process of scribbling thoughts and ideas on a piece of paper whenever and wherever the moment struck. He would jot ideas on scraps of paper, napkins, or whatever else was available. Later, he would work on his masterpiece on an archaic typewriter, locked in the laundry room to escape the chaos of family life.

For better or worse, the Internet changed the landscape for new writers. Now, we prove ourselves in blogs rather than in small independent magazines. Today, the creative forces are digitized, published, distributed and syndicated in a few mouse clicks. In the writers’ modern world, when inspiration strikes, we pull out the Smartphone and instantly add those thoughts to our blogs.

Writers like King may lament these cultural and technological changes, but as the King’s mournful Gunslinger would say, the world has moved on.

Make Money Online With Freelance Writing

After a few weeks of earning money by writing for websites like Associated Content, Helium, and Ehow, you’ll get a taste for what it’s like to actually make money online with freelance writing. If you want to work from home, it doesn’t have to involve get-rich-quick schemes or selling cosmetics and bath soaps to your friends and family. If you are a natural born writer, you really can earn a very respectable income by earning money online. Read on to learn how to work from home doing what you already love to do, through online writing jobs.

How to Make Money Online With Freelance Writing Jobs.

There are thousands of ways that you can make money online, earning a lot of income from various online writing jobs. Most blogs and work at home websites will tell you that you need to create your own website or blog and work at building enough traffic to generate ad revenue. In time, they say, ad revenues will generate steady streams of income. While this is partially true, for both your own blogs as well as for content websites like Associated Content, the truth is that those sites will produce steady income later. What you are looking for are ways to start earning good money by working from home right now.

Make More Money by Working on Writing Projects

You’ve probably scoured the Internet for freelance writing sites where you could work for buyers who list writing projects on those sites. Many of the websites are either so poorly created that it’s horrendous to navigate and even figure out how to bid on a project, or the bids on projects are so low that you feel like it’s useless to even try. I’m here to tell you that the bids are misleading. You can win writing projects at these websites, and you can earn significant income from them. The secret is to bid correctly, present yourself extremely professionally, and then perform above and beyond the call of duty. Below, I’ve reviewed the three websites where I earned the most income from online writing jobs. Each has pros and cons, but by using all three, you could be just as successful (or more!)

Constant Content - A Freelance Job Posting Site

It always amazes me, whenever I visit this website, how such an oddly designed site could produce so much income for writers. Constant Content is somewhat difficult to navigate if you don’t really understand how it works.

After you’ve signed up as an author on Constant-Content, to find what jobs are currently available for Freelance writers, you need to scroll down the left side and click on “Requested Content” under the Author Login section. On the requested content page, you’ll find a list of writing projects posted from buyers. These buyers will range from print magazine publishers to website designers. What they all have in common is that they are simply looking for quality articles written by good writers. On the requested content table, you’ll find the requested titles, the date of the request, and even what range the buyer is willing to pay for the completed article. The way the process on Constant Content works is this:

  • First, write the article according to the guidelines set by the buyer in the request
  • Make sure to assign a price within the range the buyer requested
  • Submit your article. You’ll need to wait a few days for Constant-Content to approve it
  • Once approved, go back to the buyer’s listing and suggest your article to the buyer
  • The buyer will pay you through Constant-Content

In upcoming blog entries, I’ll take you through an actual real-world step-by-step process of submitting articles to buyers on Constant-Content and getting paid for them. This page is an example of what your profile will look like, and any articles you write that don’t sell remain for sale so that other visitors on the web can purchase your articles. Keep in mind that Constant-Content takes a whopping 30% commission for all of your article sales through their website. It’s highway robbery, but without them, you’re article wouldn’t be seen by quite as many potential buyers.

Scriptlance - A Freelance Job Bidding Site

Scriptlance is the one freelance website where I finally discovered that it really is possible to earn a substantial income from writing. This is the king of all freelance sites. It’s focus is website design, but for an online writer, such a website is a goldmine of opportunity to write online content for website designers. When you first sign up with an account, you’ll have a profile page like this.

This profile page is where you’ll monitor the status of all of the projects that you bid on, as well as all of your active projects that you’re working on. Your current balance is displayed, and as you complete projects successfully, your rating will eventually rise - winning you more and better paying jobs. Clicking on the “View Projects” link under Member Login on the left switches to the page listing the latest project postings.

This list is where you’ll spend much of your time, monitoring the latest posts for projects that you could potentially accomplish. Remember to keep an open mind - website designers need content covering a very wide variety of topics. If you’re willing to write about anything, the opportunities that come up are endless. When you see a project you like, post a bid amount that’s competitive but reasonable.

Find freelance programmers at ScriptLance.com - Search worldwide

In an upcoming post, I’ll take you through the process of bidding on, and winning, Scriptlance bids by writing winning private message board messages that win over the buyers. The secret of success at Scriptlance is perseverance. Never give up, even when you lose bids, just keep bidding and eventually you’ll have more work than you know what to do with.

Miscellaneous Sources of Freelance Writing Jobs

Other sources for writing work can be located all over the Internet, if you know where to look. It’s best to avoid the websites that are obviously a sales pitch for membership at some freelance listing site. You don’t need to invest money to obtain good freelance jobs, you just need to be diligent about searching for opportunities and applying wherever any arise. Free classified listings are filled with job opportunities from all sorts of folks who need articles for different purposes. By searching these sites, you’ll discover a few additional sources for some excellent freelance writing opportunities.

  • Craigslist - Search jobs for “articles” to find writing opportunities from buyers across the world.
  • USFreeads - Search through the “employment” and “business opportunities” sections for listings.
  • Yahoo! Classifieds and Google Classifieds (Base) also list great opportunities in the job categories.
  • LiveSimon - Another popular online classified site listing occasional writing opportunities.

There are thousands of free classified listing sites across the Internet with unlimited ways to make money online with freelance writing - the only real limit for earning income from home is how much time you have available to write. Keep searching for those jobs, and make sure to bookmark this blog (or subscribe) for the latest tips and news about the newest online writing opportunities within the writer’s market.

Please use the comments section to share some of your own freelance writing stories and some of your own successes or failures!

Work at Home With Legitimate Online Writing Jobs

One of the most common questions I’m asked whenever I tell people the sort of online writing work that I do is whether it’s really possible to earn money online through work at home. My answer is always the same, yes - it’s absolutely possible. But you won’t succeed by answering those too-good-to-be-true ads about earning $100,000 a year from home by letting your “computer do all of the work for you!” The magic bullet that I’ve found comes from using your god-given talent to earn a significant income for your family. There are four simple steps you can follow that will get you there. First you need to be honest with yourself about your abilities, then you need to decide that you’re going to work your tail off in order to succeed, and finally - you’re going to decide that quitting isn’t an option.


Work at Home by Completing Online Writing Jobs
The online world is going through an amazing transformation. When the Internet started getting popular, back in the 90’s, websites were fairly dull - with cookie cutter table-like formatting, with drab grey colors and horrendous writing. And work from home jobs using the internet was virtually unheard of. Here’s an example - my apologies to Wendyanne…I simply grabbed this because it was the first example I found.
Web pages were filled with dry text and endless lists, charts and tables. But as things got more interactive, and then Google came along, things got very interesting. Suddenly webmasters realized that they were competing with all of those other websites for visitors, and search engines ran the show. Keywords were king, and web designers started stuffing keywords into their content in order to catch the attention of the search engine crawlers.
Google Created Demand for Quality Content

Google was the first search engine to catch on to these web design tricks, called keyword spamming, and actually penalized websites for doing it - reducing their page ranking. Today, webmasters now find themselves in a situation where the only possible way they are going to be able to generate the traffic that they need is by producing high-quality and keyword optimized website content. By 2003 or 2004, this demand has created a unique niche market for writers. Never before have creative writers had the kind of work at home opportunity that the Internet now offers. Just consider the countless ways you can legitimately work at home by working on online writing jobs. What sort of jobs are available?
  • Niche market analysis reports
  • Creating content for webmasters who can’t write (which is most of them!)
  • Writing on sites that pay royalties per visitor
  • Writing sales copy for businesses
  • Creating easy single web page content for businesses
  • Writing newsletters
The list goes on - the only limit is your imagination and your ability to seek out the source of those opportunities. This is where I can help. Subscribe to this blog, and each week I’ll walk you through all of those work at home opportunities.
Earn Money Online Through Royalties

The first examples are those websites that offer royalties every month for the content that you produce. These are the lowest-paying work at home opportunities, because it takes a bit of time to produce enough articles to generate significant monthly income. Regardless, it is possible to start a few income streams. The following are the best sites that I’ve found, and they are all free.

Associated Content

Associated Content is, by far, the best content producing website on the Internet that accepts articles from its membership.
Read the articles at this link for some examples of the variety of content you can write about to collect revenue from your visitors. At first you’ll only earn a few cents per article, but if you stick with it, once you have a library of hundreds of articles, you will be earning a respectable revenue. And yes, AssociatedContent is excellent about making payments to your Paypal account.
Ehow

Ehow is probably one of the easiest websites to earn income from. This is because they pay royalties based on what the ads on your article pages earn, not just on visitor count. This is excellent news if you know how to write how-to articles that attract traffic for the highest-paying ads. The way to do this is to search for popular keywords and write toward those topics. For example, just from this list of Ehow articles, I earned almost nothing for “How to Devein a Lobstertail” (don’t ask me why I wrote it), yet I quickly earned over $12 the first month for “How to Pay Less for a New Car” - it’s what people are searching for, and it’s what advertisers pay the most for.

Helium

Helium is not the place I would recommend going if you hope to earn the big bucks. The revenue from articles, even if you’re an excellent writer, is chickenfeed. You can try to compete with other writers in the “marketplace,” where buyers select from a list of writers.
You write to their guidelines, as do 20 or 30 other writers, and the buyer chooses one winner who will get paid an average of $10 to $100 for their work. Unfortunately, regardless of how well you write, because there are so many writers competing, you are more likely to waste your time. However, Helium is a fun community to post your opinion on topics and at least earn a tiny sum for your efforts. It’s better than nothing! These articles are some examples of the sort of thing you’ll find at Helium.
The websites above are the top three, but there are countless others online. In upcoming posts, I’ll go over additional work at home online writing jobs that pay substantially more than these.

The Best Technical Writing Fields of 2008

Whenever an English major graduates, they often find themselves faced with finding a way to make income from a creative art - and this year a fair number of them are asking, “What are the best technical writing fields of 2008?”

Finding the Best Technical Writing Fields of 2008

According to a 2008 article on JobWeb.com
titled “Class of 2008 Steps Into Good Job Market,” the top ten degrees in demand don’t hint at what the best technical writing fields are. However if you review the list closely, you’ll recognize an important advantage to English graduates who excel in creative writing.

Mastering the Art of Writing

The JobWeb.com article lists the usual top “in demand” degrees, including
almost all technical, computer, business, and finance. No surprise there. But what these lists don’t share is a unique new trend that should have creative writing enthusiasts smiling from ear-to-ear. And that is - most technically savvy individuals do not have a clue when it comes to writing. All of the things you’ve learned in the course of earning that English degree may seem useless when you’re undertaking the daunting task of finding a job that actually pays. However, you can earn a substantial living if you’ve mastered the written word.

Success in Freelance Writing

Conduct a search for “freelance jobs,” and you’re likely to get inundated with an endless array of shady looking “job search” sites where you’ll find
“projects” posted for bidding. These are usually run in an auction-style format where you need to bid on a project against an array of other writers. Some of these are legitimate, but others are worthless. Yes, it really is possible to make money by freelance writing, but where do you start? One of the biggest reasons I’ve started this blog is to help good writers learn how to do just that.

Making Money in the Best Technical Writing Fields

I started out as a freelance writer out of necessity. My family needed more money, but I didn’t want to work a second job at night and leave my family alone at home, so I started writing from home. I started out on many of those freelance auction sites, and then before long I’d impressed enough of the people I’d networked with, that the existing client base kept me working as much as I possible could. Before long, there was not even any need to look for a job - they just kept on coming!


Online Technical Writing Fields

The internet has introduced a whole new ballgame for English graduates. An entire world of a seemingly infinite number of websites has been born, and website content is now in demand. Webmasters outnumber good writers by such a large degree, that a huge majority of new websites sit dormant and empty as webmasters search for someone with the ability to produce high-quality, SEO optimized unique content.

This need has opened up an entire niche market for English majors that never existed before, and the sad part is, so many creative writers and technical writers who would excel in this field either do not know about it, or they are stuck in the “old-school” literary mentality where Internet writing is “beneath” them. Meanwhile - the rest of the smart writers are left to reap the financial rewards. How? It’s not that hard, and you don’t need to be a technical writing genius.

  • Freelance Websites - One good example of a high volume freelance site is Scriptlance. You’ll find yourself competing with writers from India who can hardly string together a coherent sentence, but once a few of the web designers realize the quality of your work (you’re allowed to provide samples), you’ll get hired quickly. But at first, you’ll need to keep your rates competitive - you can raise them later, once you’re established. This blog will host a review of the top Freelance Websites in coming weeks.
  • Advertisements - One of the last places most writers look for work are free online ad communities. Yes, while you may need to sift through countless ridiculous “work-at-home” ads - more and more you’ll discover webmasters, lawyers, and businesses seeking anyone who can write exceptionally well to develop content for their websites.
  • Get a Job - Sure, as an English major, you’re sick of hearing that phrase from family and friends. Maybe you’d like to focus on writing that first novel, instead. Well, you can still support your family by signing up to write for the many blogs and websites that pay writers an actual fixed “salary” for writing a certain number of articles or posts every month. Didn’t think such a job really existed? Well it does - and many pay fairly well.
  • Earn Royalties - There are countless websites that offer to pay writers royalties on the ad revenue their articles earn. Honestly, this is a way for websites to take advantage of writers. You could earn more by starting your own blog and posting your own articles. Except for one thing - they’ve got traffic that you ain’t got. So that means that while you’re not working on writing projects, you should be building an entire archive of “revenue-earning” articles at as many of these sites as you can find. These will be reviewed in future blog updates as well.

The Internet has Opened a Whole New World of Writing

Whether you’re a recent college English graduate, or you are a stay-at-home partent with exceptional writing skills, you can work from home and earn a fortune. Writing has been an undervalued skill for many years. But now - writers are going to take over the online world. Through patience, research, and hard work, you can build an amazing career within this unique and promising niche. Subscribe to this blog today, follow along every day, and get ready to kick-start your writing career.

Coming Next: The path to work from home and earn over $50,000 a year.

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