Posts Tagged ‘online writing’

Getting Paid for Online Writing - Fee or Royalty

paid for writingAt this point, if you doubt that it’s possible to earn income on the Internet, then you probably aren’t very familiar with the Internet. Whether you’re a writer, graphic designer, web designer, antique collector, teacher, photographer or anything else - it is certainly possible to earn significant income on the Internet.

In this post update, I’d like to cover a dilemma that many online writers face early on - the concept of writing for royalties.

Writing for Royalties

There are blogs and websites throughout the Internet that understand they need to pay writers in order to produce quality content that performs well in the search engines. Google is getting a lot better at identifying high-quality, relevant content, so only the best sites with the best information will end out on top.

This creates a high demand for good writers. If you’re a writer, that’s great! But understand that there are still websites out there that have not come to terms with the reality that good writing has very real value, and you get what you pay for.

Currently there are two popular payment scenarios for online writers - per article or royalties.
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Tips to Edit Your Articles for an Online Audience

closeupkeysWhen I started writing for an online audience, I soon learned one big rule – that writing for the internet is completely different to any other kind of writing.

As a former journalist working for newspapers, this was something that took some time getting used to. My former newspaper style wasn’t going to cut it with my online audience so I had no choice but to re-invent my whole style of writing.

Over the years as the editor of MakeUseOf.com, I have learnt the following :

- The attention span of an online audience is extremely short. Therefore you need to get to the point rather quickly, preferably within the first two paragraphs. If you don’t show people what the point of your article is by then, then you can forget it. They will already have moved onto other websites.

- Audiences like bullet lists! Instead of piling one big heap of text onto the page, split it up into nice short bulleted lists (like this one). Those short attention spans will love you for it as it allows readers to digest huge chunks of information quickly.

- Grammar bloopers & spelling mistakes will hurt your reputation! – you might not think it’s a big deal if you misplace an apostrophe or say “peice” instead of “piece”. But trust me, your audience will think it’s a big deal and they won’t hesitate to unleash their grammar police upon you in the comments. It doesn’t help your reputation either as you will come across as slapdash and careless. Buy a good style guide and refer to it often. Yahoo has a good one - http://styleguide.yahoo.com .

- Readers love articles with good pictures – the old adage of “a picture paints a thousand words” is especially true on the internet. A page full of text is not enticing to that short attention span. On the other hand, text with some interesting, attention-grabbing photos will make them want to stay on the page a few minutes longer. Remember to credit all photos to their proper owners.

Avoid Burnout as an Online Writer - Choose Jobs Wisely

Along with the plethora of new opportunities that are available throughout the Online Content industry, there is the issue of too much work and not enough time. If you’re anything like me and you hate passing up good income-generating opportunities, it can be hard to say no.

The Schedule of an Online Writer

Making an income from writing is unfortunately still scorned upon by older, traditional folks who believe that a job should be something that you “drive into” by 8am and then “drive home from” by 5pm, along with the rest of the rush hour crowd. This is the right thing to do.

Well, let me tell you something about the right thing…when you are capable of generating a high volume of quality writing, and you can get paid for that writing, you best believe that the income you can earn from your skills will be just as good as any 9-to-5 job that you’ll find with any corporation.



The issue is the stereotype of the Internet. Many people still believe that the Internet is only for playing games or wasting time. Yet, as they sit down for their morning coffee, they’ll read the news on their favorite news website, or the latest gossip on their favorite blogs and forums. I think there are a lot of people who think that the content they enjoy is free. Little do they realize that someone gets paid (and paid well, I might add) to research and write that content.

Too Many Opportunities

Most major websites out there now realize that if they want to offer better content than their competitors, then it will require investment into high quality writers. Only good writers can get the job done. So now, if you’re a writer fresh out of college, with an English degree in your back pocket (or just lots of writing skill), you are now a very rare and in-demand commodity. Online publishers need you! The race is on, and as countless websites start investing into hiring and paying high-quality writers, you will find yourself faced with making some very difficult decisions. Which opportunities do you take, and which do you turn down? And yes, you will need to turn down opportunities, or keeping up with everything will burn you out - and then you’ll be no good to anyone.

4 Signs of a Good Online Writing Opportunity

Some of the opportunities you come across will be one-time writing gigs where you produce a bulk-lot of 20 to 50 articles and get paid a moderate amount per article. Other times, you may be offered to submit single pieces to blogs or websites and, if accepted and published, you will get paid. Best of all, there will be opportunities where you are assigned a certain number of articles to write every month, and you get paid a fixed amount per article.

So how do you know which opportunities are good ones? Watch for the following signs.

  • Per article payment, not royalties - Many sites try to get content that’s essentially free by offering writers “royalty payments” from the ad revenue the article generates. For the most part the revenue will be a few cents a month, if that. Your efforts would be better invested elsewhere.
  • Fair rates - It may be tempting to throw together a 500 word article for someone for peanuts, just because you can do it quickly. However, how well will it reflect upon you when, down the road, someone discovers this poorly written article that you failed to revise because you were racing through it for a quick buck?
  • Respect - You may be paid well per article, and even promoted into a management/editor position for a blog or a website, but if you aren’t treated respectfully and with dignity by the website owners or upper managers, you’ll find that you’re forever feeling insulted and patronized. This is a common symptom where a new writer shows up within another community - you are treated as though you have less experience simply because you are a new member there, despite the fact that you may have more experience or better ideas than the people actually running the site. Either say no to those promotions, or learn to bite your tongue and simply do your job…conflict and misunderstandings are too easy when you work with people remotely.
  • Prompt Payments - If you do work for a webmaster and he or she is a week late sending your Paypal payment, the odds are good that the person will be habitually late, or may even fail to pay you. It’s difficult to collect such payments in small claims for an Internet job, especially if the client is overseas, so if you sense a problem early on, just walk away.

It may be difficult to say no to new writing opportunities, but if you choose your work wisely, you’ll end up building a very strong and solid foundation for a very lucrative and successful online writing career.

This is How Easy it is to Post from ScribeFire

I’m currently writing an article for MakeUseOf that shows how efficient (and awesome) the Firefox addon ScribeFire is. In this example, I’m demonstrating how easy it is to highlight text from an online article or news story, and then quickly “Blog this page” - ScribeFire opens up a new post entry for you and inserts the title and blockquote exactly how you defined it in the options template. It really doesn’t get a whole lot easier than this!

ScribeFire vs DeepestSender: One Blogging Addon to Rule Them All!

“The tabs on the right offer broad support for WordPress’ other post-writing features, including categories, tags, timestamp, trackbacks, and ping options. You can even scroll through older entires and make changes to them on the fly. Is there anything this addon can’t do?”

Scheduling Your Writing Without Driving Off The Road

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We’ve all been there; those months when you carefully plan out your writing and editing work, and then something unexpected strikes. When you plan out your trip with the assumption that you’ll have to drive 80 mph or faster to get to your destination, anything unexpected can lead to disaster.

I learned this lesson the hard way this month, and it’s going to require a couple of all-nighters and a lot of coffee to meet all of my obligations this month.

I know I can accomplish what I need to accomplish before the end of the month, because I’ve done it before. However, if I’d just planned a little better, I wouldn’t even be in this situation.

Plan Your Writing Work With a 30% Buffer

My typical mode of operation each month is to plan out enough writing work to account for about 90% of my available writing time. The problem with this approach is that it assumes every month will be a perfect month where you will always have the amount of time to work that you expect you’ll have.

What happens is that essentially ‘life’ happens. Family gets sick, major life events like funerals or weddings come up, or the worst thing that could happen to an online writer happens - you burn out.

The moment you burn out, work that used to take an hour takes several, and a sickening feeling comes over you as you realize what’s happening, and as you watch your precious work hours fade away.

Plan For a Hard Month and then Overachieve

Instead of accounting for 90% of your estimate work hours, cut back your planned work to only 70% of those hours. On a bad month, this allows for a stress free month even when the unexpected occurs, because you can give up 30% of your work hours and still accomplish what you need to accomplish.

Even better, on a good month, you’ll easily finish everything you planned, with lots of time left over to finish extra tasks - and come out shining like a hero.

Articles on Technology or Science

One of the problems with having such a broad range of interests is that there’s not enough time in the day to thoroughly explore and expand upon those interests. For example, over at TopSecretWriters, I write a fair number of articles on technology or science. Additionally, we cover a lot of scientific claims related to to Ufology and the Paranormal over at RealityUncovered.net.

More recently, I wrote an article titled Top 5 Websites To Research Weird Science Claims over at MakeUseOf. When it comes to looking for accurate and sane articles on technology or science, especially in the realm of fringe scientific claims - the websites mentioned in that article are the absolute first places anyone should go.

articles on technology or science

The label “skeptic” has always had very negative connotations. It has been a field dominated by atheists and outright non-believers. However, the term no longer applies to only stringent non-believers. A new “type” of skeptic is emerging - the “open-minded” skeptic.

Articles on Technology or Science for Open Minded Skeptics

For a true skeptic, a glass is neither half empty or half full. The first question is whether the glass is truly even there to begin with. Skeptics question everything. And in the case of open-minded skeptics where they are willing to entertain the weird and wild areas of paranormal claims - questioning everything becomes absolutely critical.

In yet another of my blogs (which I have very little time to keep up with - but I try!) called Invisible Articles, I try to focus on many of the hauntings, possessions and ghost activity reported from around the world in a critical minded and “skeptical” way. Again, writing articles on technology or science in the paranormal field is not easy.

Self Proclaimed Skeptics

Unfortunately, many outright believers have taken to calling themselves skeptics. The label is fast becoming a positive thing within the paranormal - and people who are not at all critical thinkers or even sane are calling themselves skeptical.

I once interviewed a psychic who claimed her powers were very powerful, but that she was also a skeptic and pursued all of her predictions in a manner where she could verify them in a “scientific way.”

I didn’t ask her to elaborate what her definition of a scientific way was, because she’d already failed the litmus test of being a skeptic. She’d already drawn the conclusion that her experiences could be explained by her own psychic powers, before exploring all of the other possibilities.

Toward the end of the interview, I performed a test. I asked her to tell me about a major event in my life that had just occurred. There was a recent death in my family - a significant event that a true psychic could easily pick up on. Unfortunately she described a positive celebration - I could tell she was guessing a wedding or a birthday of some sort, proving to me that she wasn’t at all psychic (and I’ve yet to meet a true psychic yet - for that matter).

How to Write Articles on Technology or Science

If you are considering exploring the areas of science such as those that are covered by the websites I wrote about at MakeUseOf, I highly recommend a careful series of study sessions first. Take the time to read articles at each of the websites I mentioned in that article. Take time to understand the process of opening your mind to new possibilities without opening your mind to being scammed.

The careful, deliberate and analytical process exemplified by the websites that I highlighted in the MakeUseOf article are exactly what the paranormal field needs if any answers are ever going to be uncovered. If you have an interest in the Paranormal, I highly recommend doing your own research in the field with the scientific approach of the “open-minded” skeptic.

Managing All of Your Online Activities

I received a really interesting Tweet a couple of days ago, where a reader asked me how I manage all of my online activities. I immediately understood his question, because to the outsider looking in, I’m currently all over the web.

There are a lot of online writers out there who are just like me - with their hands and their words in everything. Submitting writing and content for clients and at websites throughout the Internet. In my case, I do paranormal research and writing with RealityUncovered, I explore conspiracy theories at TopSecretWriters, I write countless informational articles for LoveToKnow.com, technology articles for MakeUseOf.com, educational articles for Educational-Freeware.com, and I’ve published numerous articles for Associated Content, Helium and even eHow.
vintage typewriter

As I said to my friend and RU colleague Steve recently - it’s like I’m a grenade victim and I have bits and pieces of me that have exploded all over the Internet.

Managing Your Online Activities in a Sane Way

The first thing I should point out is that I don’t do all of these things all at once, or all of the time. Building a powerful online presence and a solid reputation as a professional writer takes a long time, and a lot of building blocks. All of these pieces throughout the Internet are simply stepping stones toward a larger and greater future. Some of them will become cornerstones of that future, while others will not.

The benefit of distributing almost 50 articles every month, to a variety of online destinations with your name credited to each one of them, is that you control your online identity. Even if anyone attempted to write something negative about you, you’ve overwhelmed the Internet with so much of your own work, that anything anyone else writes will never see the light of day - it’s a perfect online insurance policy. Plus - whose going to take you on when they see that you are such a prolific writer, willing to take on any topic and any issue?

Tools You Can Use to Organize

The key to managing all of this is organization. While Twitter and Facebook can certainly turn into a time-drainer, they can also provide a perfect platform to distribute new material of yours to your fans. And yes, you will soon have fans because people have preferences - and your writing will appeal to a specific crowd.

Don’t doubt it. But when that happens, you need an easy way to let those people know that you’ve just written something they may be interested in reading.

Another approach is something that I’ll be writing about soon at MakeUseOf, and that is this - one of the best ways that you can organize yourself online is by creating an author profile blog. I know, you’re thinking not another blog!? However, this one isn’t a blog that you’ll need to babysit. It’s one where you can embed all of the feeds from your online endeavours, and where you can offer an occasional update about your work and your current activities.

A personal bio blog can also help you organize all of the places that you’ve already been published, and it can land you some amazing opportunities for even better places to get published in the future.

So, here’s to staying busy and profitable in all of your online efforts!

SEO Fools and Idiotic Content Just For Search Engine Traffic

In the process of doing some search engine research tonight to come up with some new interesting topics for my blogs and clients, I decided that tonight I’m going to finally expose a level of idiocy that I’m constantly coming across on the Internet. Unfortunately, it’s one of the most annoying and irritating symptoms of how search engines work today. I call the phenomenon, “Promising Roses and Delivering Stink Bombs.”

trash content online

The first thing I’d like to say is that this particular post is not SEO optimized. I couldn’t be bothered because this behavior is just too urgent and needs to be exposed this very moment - no need to SEO optimize my vent, it will speak for itself.

SEO Fools Writing Useless Web Content Just for Search Engine Traffic

This is how it works. There are countless guys and girls out there who recognize that once you can identify certain keywords and them use them in a particular pattern, a particular number of times and using very particular rules - you can place your website and your article on the very first page of Google results. That’s the approach of the SEO expert and that’s how the system works, and it works well. But you know what else?

That’s pretty much where 90% of the SEO experts out there finish their efforts. When you arrive at their website, guess what you discover? Half the time it’s one paragraph jam-packed with gibberish - a collection of keyword phrases and a few lines or two of semi-coherent writing. The page is nothing more than an absolute, one-hundred percent, useless and idiotic waste of space. Therefore, I’ve decided in this particular post to run through a few high value SEO keywords to point out some of these brainless twits out there that take part in this kind of behavior.

Keyword Phrase: World Wide Web History

This is a huge, highly-searched keyword phrase. So, let’s take a look at the top Google results.


seo1

Now, listings one and two make perfect sense. Obviously Wikipedia and W3.org are excellent resources on the history of the world wide web, but let’s take a look at the third major listing on the first page of google - IdealFinder.com (no, I’m not going to link to it and make matters even worse.)

seo2

Aside from the page format and coloring that’s horrid enough to make your eyes bleed, take a look at the first paragraph:

World Wide Web (WWW), system of resources that enable computer users to view and interact with a variety of information, including magazine archives, public- and university-library resources, current world and business news, and software programs. The WWW can be accessed by a computer connected to an internet, an interconnection of computer networks or through the public Internet, the global consortium of interconnected computer networks.

Has this guy ever heard of grammar? How about writing a sentence that at least makes sense? “system of resources that enable computer users to view and interact with a variety of information” - what the hell does that even mean? I’ll bet this guy went out and paid a team of foreign guys sitting in a cube in some third-world countries a dollar an article for this garbage. And every day that passes, more and more of this horrendous excuse for content continues to pollute the Internet. Okay then, let’s continue on to the next site that follows this one on Google’s top 10 listing for this search term - Elsop.com. Let’s take a look.


seo3

Okay, this appears like a legit site that provides links covering the history of the world wide web, right? Good enough. The page itself doesn’t contain an article, but at least you can click on each link to read the information that you came looking for, right? Right??? “CLICK”….

seo4

Well that’s odd - broken link. Let’s go back and try another. “CLICK”…

seo5

No, it’s not a fluke. Almost all the links are broken, and there’s no decent content whatsoever to make a visit to this site at all worthwhile - yet there it sits as the 4th item on the first page of Google as though it has any value. As an SEO guy myself, I know the reasons why - but it’s unfortunate. Because, by making search listings so completely automated as Google has, it encourages the proliferation of complete trash on the Internet which exists only for the sole purpose of drawing in traffic, not to provide valuable and useful content for visitors.

Have you come across the many “traffic traps” that exist on the web, just like these? Share your own experiences and opinions in the comments section below.

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!

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