Showing posts with label Writer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writer. Show all posts
Wednesday, September 30, 2015
How to Make Money Writing Online
Start a blog. Bloggers earn money writing online by creating relevant blog posts on a specific topic or niche. They insert advertising revenue and affiliate revenue links to products. When their readers click a link or buy a product, they earn revenue for the referral. Bloggers need a lot of good content and a growing audience to make significant amounts of money.
Sell your work. Many websites on the Internet are looking for content writers to write articles for them. These websites such as Textbroker, Writer's Access and eCopyWriters pay upfront for writers to generate website content based on a certain title and keywords. Other sites like Constant Content allow writers to upload their articles for their clients to buy.
Earn passive revenue. Upload distinctive articles and blog posts to content farm websites such as HubPages, Squidoo and Yahoo! Voices. These websites pay you based on the amount of page views your content generates, ad revenue or a combination of both.
Self-publish an e-book. Self-publishing using venues such as Amazon Kindle, Smashwords and Apple's iBooks allows authors to write their novels or books and sell them online. You set your own prices and do your own marketing for your work.
Bid on private contracts. Online marketplaces such as Guru, Elance and oDesk allow writers to bid on jobs. An employer needs something written. He creates a job on his marketplace of choice. Writers make bid proposals for how much money they charge and the duration of the job. When an employer awards a job, the writer completes the job and gets paid.
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Friday, September 18, 2015
How to Earn Money Writing Short Stories
Hone your writing skills and polish your stories as much as possible before you begin submitting to professional publications. Editors often disregard stories that show little concern for the mechanics of language.
Read widely in your chosen genre. This will give you an idea of the types of stories favored by the editors you are about to contact as well as what was recently published. Knowing this increases your chances of having a story selected for paid publication.
Research potential markets in a publication, such as 'The Writer's Market' or 'The Literary Marketplace.' Note each publication where your story might be appropriate, along with the pay rate for that publication. Follow up by checking the submission guidelines on each publication's website, which are updated more frequently than the market guides.
Look for anthology and short story collection markets as well as fiction magazines and nonfiction periodicals that accept some fiction. The more markets you can contact, the better your chances of getting paid for your story.
Prepare your submission package by following all guidelines exactly. If a market says it does not accept 'Simultaneous submissions,' you must wait to hear back from that market before submitting the same story to a different market. 'No multiple submissions' means you cannot submit more than one story to that market at a time. Once you hear back on your first story, you may send the next.
Submit to the highest-paying markets with the shortest response times first. Keep several stories out at a time to various markets to increase your chances of having a story purchased. Track your submissions carefully so you don't resubmit to the same market.
Fill in and return all contracts on time once your stories are purchased. The publishing industry is notoriously slow to pay writers, so don't give them any reason to be late with your check. Read your contract carefully to find when payment is due. Politely remind the editor about payment if your check is late.
Continue to write and submit short stories, keeping several in each stage at one time to gain the most opportunities for payment.
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Thursday, September 10, 2015
How to Get Paid for Stories Jokes (4 Steps)
Write down a list of material you have. Break the material up into categories. Jokes should be categorized by subject matter. Stories should by separated by genre and by subject matter. Selling our jokes and stories is about finding markets that accept the type of stuff you have to offer. You should know your material before you attempt to sell it.
Locate markets based on the type of work you have. There are plenty of greeting card market listings online, as well as greeting card websites that offer writer guidelines. These companies often purchase jokes for their greeting cards. Other markets for your work include novelty websites, which also have writer's guidelines on their websites if they accept freelance material. Not all companies do. If you're selling stories, the 'Writer's Market' is a book -- there's a membership website as well -- database of markets that purchase stories. The book gives contact information, tells you what to submit and how to format the submission and how much you will be paid. There are also a number of market listings online that can be used free of charge.
Write a market beside as many of your jokes and stories as you can. The markets and work you choose to pair up should come from reading market guidelines to determine the type of work a market accepts and placing that market with the best suited of your work. Pair up as many of your jokes and stories with a market as you can. The more work you have in circulation, the better your chance of getting published.
Submit the jokes and stories to the markets you select. Follow specific submission guidelines of each market. The markets give you guidelines because they want submissions delivered as instructed. Ignoring those guidelines can result in your work being ignored or tossed in the trash. With each submission, include a brief letter introducing yourself and indicating that you are submitting a joke or story for consideration. Make the note short and thank the addressee for taking the time to consider your work.
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