Make Money as a Freelance Blog Writer

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Make Money as a Freelance Blog Writer. Over the years, I have done freelance writing for newspapers and magazines as a way to earn side income, adding to my full-time job. But this year, I have made a conscious movement to escape for blogs rather than print publications, to the point where I now make around $2,000 a month as a blog writer (not including my own blog earnings or my full-time salary).

Being a freelance blog writer isn't always easy at first, but I've found that it's much more fun and useful. It's worth the effort.

First, let's talk about how it feels to be a freelance blog writer. To write good posts, you have to do some research first, and increase writing time, and it can take between 90 minutes to 3 hours to write your best things. I can usually do research and write good posts in 90 minutes if I have given a little thought (I do my thinking while exercising, driving, bathing, etc.). So if you plan to do freelance work, make sure you have extra time. I write between 6-7 free posts a week (other than 7-10 I did for my own blog), so it's about 9-10 hours of work on top of your regular work.

But the cool thing about writing a freelance blog is that you can do it from anywhere, anytime. So you can write late at night, during your lunch hour, or in the morning. You can write while traveling, or write while sitting at a boring conference. There is freedom for that which is very interesting.

So how can you become a freelance blog writer? Here are some of the best tips:

Don't quit your job. Even if you want to become a full-time writer and finally quit your job, don't do it first. Test your water and sharpen your skills before you do something drastic. I recommend free blogging on the side for at least a few months (if you are already an experienced writer) and for 6 months or more if you are really new to the game. Do well what you do, develop relationships with paying blogs, and feel the workflow needed.

Create a blog. The first step to writing a freelance blog is to create your own blog. This will serve as a display of your writing, and a way for you to practice your skills. Writing a blog is not the same as writing to print - not really. Many of the same rules apply, but you should get a good feel for the media before you ask people to pay you for it. Don't just write something old on your blog - write high-quality articles that will be a good example for every prospective employer.
Get attention. No one will read your blog at first. Don't expect traffic to come soon. However, write great articles with good headlines, send some of them to social media like Digg and Netscape, and you might get a few hits. If you get some popular articles, you can get some ordinary readers. Once you get a few customers (a few hundred will be amazing), don't send your items to social media - let your readers do it for you. And they will, if the article is feasible. If it's not feasible, you don't want to send it. The influence of popular articles - or rather, some popular articles - is great, in terms of being a freelancer. This makes you noticed by other blogs, and they are your real market.

Guest blog. Another great way to pay attention. Write to larger bloggers and offer to post guest. Suggest good ideas for guest posts, which would be fine for bloggers. Include a link to some of your best posts as a writing sample. If you write to 10 good blogs (start first with a medium sized blog at first), you might get 1-2 say yes. If so, rejoice! Now write a great post for them, with a link back to your blog at the end. Do a few of them, and you will get a wider audience for your own blog, and even better, you will start to get more attention. And that's how you begin to label yourself a good writer.

Write to a good blog. After you develop a brand for yourself, and get yourself noticed, and develop good writing examples on your own blog and elsewhere, take risks and write to some larger blogs. Who has money, because the smaller ones (written by one person) cannot pay you. Send a polite email, ask if they have vacancies for freelance writers. Tell us a little about yourself (very briefly), include a link to your blog and some of your best articles. Offer to write just one article as an experiment. Write to 10 good blogs and see if you get any response.

Look at the freelance job board. For example, Freelance Switch and a number of other blog websites also have good job boards. Open your eyes, find the author's blog, especially in the niche you know. Don't hesitate to post yourself as a writer looking for work, with a link back to your blog. Apply for a lot of work, just to see what they offer.

Know your grades. Have a target rate per hour that you want to wear. And fill a little below that when you first start, just to get your feet on the door. After you write a little time (several weeks) at a lower rate, just take a job at a higher level after that.

Give the best. If you get a freelance writing show with a blog, or post a trial or two, make sure to send things that are very, very best. Only send posts that have the opportunity to do very well on Digg or Delicious. Ordinary posts do not help the blog that you write, and certainly not help you.

Meet your deadline. This is a clear one, but if you constantly miss deadlines, you will appear unprofessional. If I am an editor with the choice of hiring one good writer who meets deadlines and other good writers who miss them, guess who I will go with. And your reputation is all you have to do.

Know your topic. It's better to write about things you know. If you know nothing about a topic, you might look stupid. If you only know a little about a topic, research like crazy until you know a ton. Writing about a topic that you already know very well will save you a lot of time, and it will probably be a much better reading.

Professional details. As a professional blog writer, make sure to sue for a contract, and know other details of a job before you start: payment rates, when and how they will pay you, the desired post duration, what format should be submitted, whether images or other media are needed, the right deadline, how to send it, etc.
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