Video: How to Become A Professional Writer

Click Here For Writing Jobs

Write articles for money and make extra cash or even a full-time income

Writing articles for money can be a quick and easy way to get started earning income online. Freelance writing, article marketing, blogging, and writing e-books are just a few ways that you can make money to write.
Freelance writing usually involves writing articles for people that need content for web pages or blogs. You can typically get paid from $3 to $10 per article depending on the word count and your writing skill.
Article marketing (aka bum marketing) typically involves promoting affiliate products by writing reviews or descriptive articles about them. You will include an affiliate link that will track any purchases made by your visitors. You will in turn make a commission from these sales.
Blogging can be used to make money in many different ways. I will go into more detail in the modules below.
Writing e-books can be very profitable with the proper research. Basically you will provide information that people are willing to pay for. You can promote the product yourself as well as have affiliates promote it for you for a commission.

These books are excellent resources that should be added to your library to help get you jump started into making money! I highly recommend these:

How to Write & Sell Simple Information for Fun and Profit: Your Guide to Writing and Publishing Books, E-Books, Articles, Special Reports, Audio Programs, DVDs, and Other How-To Content
Read more…

Blogging For Cash

Writing articles for money can bring you a decent income. But to get paid to write articles requires lots of work. If you really enjoy writing and can produce 8 to10 or more articles per day. Freelance writing may be right up your alley.

Another option to make money for your hard work is blogging. Thousands and thousands of people make a very good income by blogging about interesting things. It’s also not as complicated as you may think.

Regardless of the subject….Whether it is politics or how to knit a sweater for a chihuahua. If you can write about it, someone will be interested in reading it.

The great thing about blogging is that the articles you write will work for you to make money over and over again. Instead of writing an article and selling it for a one time payment you will earn from the article as long as it is posted.

You can use your blog to promote affiliate products or simply put ads on your blog that earn you money each time someone clicks the link. Because of this, blogging is a simple way to make residual income that pays you month after month with a lot less work than is required to be a freelance writer.

When done properly blogging is definitely a more profitable investment of your time than writing articles for money. It requires way less work in the long run without having to grind out article after article each day to ensure a steady income.

If you are interested in learning to make a living with this method. I suggest you check out this course to learn all the ins and outs of making a great living from blogging. It is well worth the price to get you started on the right path immediately instead of fumbling around for months or years trying to be successful on your own. Check it out and keep us informed on your success. Happy Blogging!

Become A Paid Writer – a Step-by-step Guide

In order to be successful in freelance writing, new writers should be aware of the many miscues and pitfalls that abound in becoming established and marketable.

Following these guidelines will greatly increase your success rate and help you to focus on transitioning writing as a hobby to writing as a job.

1. Write what you know:

This point cannot be emphasized enough…there are a few things any writer can bring to publishers, the marketplace and readers alike…and one of those things is credibility.

A publisher is not likely to respond to an article or book query on an esoteric subject like non-linear equations or string theory pitched by a performance artist. Look to your professional and personal life and experiences. Hobbies are also a great place from which to draw knowledge and experience to incorporate into your writing.

For instance, if you’re a mechanical engineer by trade, there are surplus of car enthusiast magazines, websites, and e-zines. Those are media you should be looking to. If you’re a stay-at-home mom or you race sail boats as a hobby, then look to publications that feature things so related.

2. Find your niche:

The last two examples aren’t enough to concentrate on, because like any other subject being a parent or sail boating is too broad – which means you’ll have to carve out a niche. This doesn’t mean you can’t or won’t be able to write over the broader subject, that will be intrinsic when writing over any subject, but to stand out and you’ll have to be a source of information or insight in a forte within that subject.

For instance, when I wrote Cyclopedia Music Theory  I began game planning the book, I looked at other theory books, not for their content, but what their content was missing. I found a couple of things: one was that musicology wasn’t addressed and another was illustrations weren’t always formatted from left to right and also, there wasn’t any explanation of different instruments or percussion theory. Consequently, I wrote the book with those things included.

3. Be consistent and persistent:

Stay with what you know but don’t be afraid to spread your wings. By this I mean once you’ve found your niche and have consistently written within it, beginning to branch out is not only natural and can indeed benefit your writing. There is a small caution here is not to overreach – should you branch out too far, you’ll begin to lose focus not only in your niche, but you’ll not be able to find a balance.

It is therefore critical that you be consistent not only in your niche writing, but writing altogether. Contributing a piece here and there randomly doesn’t set well with publishers and it won’t set well with whatever readership you garner.

If are writing and contributing regularly, moreover querying regularly, you’ll get a lot of rejections and in between, hear crickets. Publishers are flush with queries and that’s why they’re so selective. Even if your piece is turned down, don’t be afraid to rework it and resubmit it. It could be you didn’t hit the nail on the head or another writer was earlier to make the same point.

4. Prioritize:

I’ll use a personal example here: after I wake, get ready and have breakfast; after which, I check my email, take a glance at the days projects, then I do one or two household chores. I do this for good reason: one, chores need be done and two, after reading email and looking forward to the day, not sitting in front of the keyboard and engaging in something entirely different which allows me to brainstorm.

When I get to writing, I typically publish my Balance for Dads blog (which I wrote a day or so before), and then onto the writing gigs I’ve landed.

Next I try to spend my time productively, working on the task(s) at hand and move on. If I encounter a snag (e.g. website goes down or writer’s block), I’ll take a short break to do another chore or two and then refocus.

The next-to-last order of my “workday” is spent search for gigs and networking. And I close shop by writing a piece for my own blog to post the following day.

5. Build your value and reputation:

As a writer, your reputation is invaluable. And to raise your value, you should make your writing not only informative and interesting, but comprehensible. Don’t be pedantic…no matter the subject; keep your writing accessible to all readers.

It’s not advisable to waste your time working on projects that won’t be beneficial either to your value and reputation or financially.

Writing what you know and carving a niche aren’t to mean that you’re stuck on certain subjects forever. You can increase your value by expanding, but writers shouldn’t be chasing money by writing pieces they have no experience or interest in as it will show in their work.    Look here for writing jobs.