Posts Tagged ‘Content Writing’

Content Providers and Attitudes: What Works for Clients?

Monday, April 13th, 2009

If you’re starting out as a content provider in a network like GAF or Elance, you probably want to get as many clients as you can, Finding the best clients to work for online is one of the toughest things I’ve had to deal with as a freelance content writer. It was only after I realized a crucial factor involved in freelancing that I really learned how to screen the clients I work for… freelancer and client attitudes and philosophies should match.

If you’re writing about a specific niche, you must use your client’s philosophies on the topic if you’re comfortable with them.

example1: weightloss

I, for one, am not a believer of fad diets, but a lot of people online are looking to promote fad diets. What do you do when a client is adamant that you write positively about yoyo diets and the “next best quick weightloss product ever”? I would decline the job offer, but it really depends on your level of comfort.

In the end, the client doesn’t give a rat’s a** about your personal views as long as you get the job done, but for you to get the job done (i.e. write hundreds of articles around the topic), you must operate on the same wavelength. Your goal must always be to cultivate a long-term relationship, and you can only do that if you can be completely professional about the topic on hand.

Clients will only hire you again if…

1. You can endlessly come up with good things to say about the product he or she is promoting
2. You can incorporate his or her ideas into your articles
3. You can get the job done quicker than others
4. You understand the subject and know how to sell the product from different perspectives

Can you be a “prima donna freelancer” and still get hired? Absolutely. You come up with your own rules and get the articles delivered quicker because your rules are met. Some clients will appreciate that attitude, and some won’t, but you will get a loyal following if you develop an identity and a mindset that your client will like.

5 Tips on How to Come Up with Blog Posts

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

You will not always have something to talk about in your niche blog. Even if it’s a personal blog, you will reach your saturation point. You will start asking “what else can I talk about”, “do I really want to talk about this” and “I’m not really earning so what’s the use of still writing on this blog?”.

If like me you over-analyse posts and issues, then you probably have had some trouble writing posts day after day, week after week. Some people say “just write”, but it’s not that simple. Here are some of the things that worked for me when I have writer’s block.

1. Use a Keyword in a Sentence

This is a little game I play when I really don’t have anything to write about. Go back to your blog’s roots and think of why you started it in the first place. What was your main toipic? What is your blog about? Get that keyword and write out titles on paper. Having a list of sentences with your keyword in them will recharge your brain. Soon, thoughts and ideas will start pouring.

“Use this word in a sentence” is also a game I play when thinking of new domains to buy.

2. Category Contest

Does it seem like you’re always talking about the same thing, and one category is outdoing the others in terms of post number? Why not increase the post count in the other categories so it’s all balanced? What I love most about wordpress was the fact that I can categorize posts, instead of just “tagging” (like in blogspot).

3. Google Trends

If you’re really opinionated, you can write out your opinion on every hot topic that’s being searched on Google Trends. This works for personal blogs, or blogs I fondly call FFA (free-for-all). You might see some blogs that don’t have a set niche, but upon closer inspection, there IS a niche: the blogger’s opinions.

These blogs also have the potential to earn a lot by joining review me or SR. Just find a category that you like and take all blogging requests related to that category.

4. Google Alerts

Again, your main blog’s topic comes into play when you use google alerts to craft blogposts. Just set up a google alert on your gmail for a particular word or a set of related keywords and let the big G’s system send in news stories and blogposts related to your topic. You can spend 5 minutes browsing through these sites and selecting the most relevant ones. Your next blog posts can contain your “reaction” to these alerts.

5. PLR

a.k.a. Private Label Rights. These are ready-made posts you can use to update your niche blog. Competition for traffic and eyeballs is so intense right now that ghostwritten articles have become staples for website owners (I should know, I get hired to write on several blogs, and the requests are pouring).

What you need to know about PLR is that you have to edit it, or hire someone to edit it for you so that the article gets personalized and tailored to fit your blog. You also share the rights to the articles with  several other people (most PLR sites have thousands and thousands of members, like my favorite, All PLR), so rewriting is necessary.

Web Content Writing: Getting Started

Friday, August 15th, 2008

It’s been two months since I quit Inno and now I am flying without a safety net beneath me. Did that scare me? Only every 5 minutes, initially. Then I realized that I have been focusing on the “no safety net” part of that statement, and failed to focus on the more relevant part… “flying”.

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