« Avoid Writing Income Disasters with These Five Tips - Part One | Main | Get a blog job - discover how this week »

Avoid Writing Income Disasters with These Five Tips - Part Two

In the Cage

Image via Wikipedia

These days, writers can make an unlimited income. If you set your mind to it, you can make as much income as you choose. Many writers are earning six figures. You can too, as long as you avoid common writing income disasters.

In the first part of our article, we discussed three of the most common disasters:

1. Not asking for a retainer

If you don't ask for a retainer of at least 50 per cent, you have no way of knowing whether or not a client is genuine, or whether he's a scammer.

2. No writing services agreement

Without a writing services agreement, you're in a very bad place.

3. Procrastination

When it's time to write, write. The more you write, the more you earn.

You can read about the above three disasters in detail in Part One of this article.

Now let's focus on the other two most common disasters I see.

4. Writing for low pay

Assuming you have some writing credits (in other words, someone, somewhere, sometime has paid you for your writing), you can charge appropriately.

Writing for higher pay is actually easier than writing for low pay, and here's why: clients who pay you appropriately know their business and they know the value of writing. They're successful, so they want the best writers.

Many writers start their writing career on the out-sourcing sites. Now, while I have nothing against these sites, once you have a couple of writing credits it's time to get away from those sites, and FAST.

Why? Because of the "rush to the bottom" mentality that abounds on these sites. The writers on these sites use them inappropriately - they want to win projects by under-bidding each other. They've never learned any marketing skills.

Nobody wins when writers do this. Not the writers and definitely not the clients.

The writers don't win because they're forced into writing like battery hens are forced into laying eggs. They write so much the quality suffers. They have no time to get out of the writing ghetto and look for better writing jobs. They have no time for self-promotion, which would ensure that they get better writing jobs.

The clients don't win because sub-standard writing ensures that their projects are sub-standard.

Now let's look at the next writing disaster.

5. Forgetting to promote yourself

Writers need to learn self-promotion, and then they need to promote themselves.

Want to know the easiest way to spot a newbie writer? OK. Here it is: the newbie writer creates a name for their writing "business", like "The Write Standard", or "Writing Wonder Words" or "Just a Another Writer" or whatever... Please note that all these names are fictional, as far as I'm aware. I made them up; I certainly hope that no one's using them - if anyone is, I'm sorry, because I'm not referring to you specifically.

Big, big tip: a professional writer uses his or her own name ONLY. They realize that promoting anything is hard work, so they might as well turn their own name into a brand, rather than creating a ditzy name for their business.

Use your own name. It helps you to build your credits. Editors, publishers and clients will remember your name, so use it.

Please avoid all five writing disasters, now you know what they are. When you treat your writing with the respect it deserves, you will make an income beyond your dreams, and you'll richly deserve it too.

Recession-proof your freelance writing career

"Write More And Make More Money From Your Writing: Develop A Fast, Fun Productive Writing Process" gives you all the tools you need for a thriving writing career, no matter what the economic climate.

Three weeks after completing the class one student wrote:

"Thanks Angela, for all your help and advice in class. I'm quitting my job next week. I printed out my letter of resignation tonight after landing a contract writing job that will pay me more for three months part-time work than I earned in from my day job in the whole of 2007! You were right – the great gigs are out there, and now I've got the skills to land them. Your class opened my eyes. Bless you…"

"Write More And Make More Money From Your Writing: Develop A Fast, Fun Productive Writing Process" shows you how to thrive as a freelance writer. Would you like to write five times more than you're writing now, and sell to higher-paying markets? Take the class.


TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/163828/28868816

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Avoid Writing Income Disasters with These Five Tips - Part Two:

Comments

Post a comment

Comments are moderated, and will not appear on this weblog until the author has approved them.

This weblog only allows comments from registered users. To comment, please Sign In.

Angela's ebooks

Buy

  • Products

New from Angela

useful

  • BlogCatalog
  • Backpack
    Backpack: Get Organized and Collaborate
  • BlogBurst
  • seobook

May 2008

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31

Angela Booth

  • angela

Coaching and Classes

Networks

NEW

  • Novel Writing Made Easy
  • Technorati
  • ebook: Blogging For Dollars

     

     ebook Blogging For Dollars

     

     

  • NEW: Fab Freelance Writing Blog
    Fab Freelance Writing Blog
  • Top 70 Writing Tips To Help You To Write More
    Writing For The Web
  • Writing For The Web

     

    Writing For The Web

     

  • First Steps

    First Steps in Your Copywriting Career: cash in on the demand for business writers ebook 

Writing

  • Writing The Wave

Recent Comments