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work at home mom >
general wahm articles
Promote Freelance Business
Starting a freelance biz can be a struggle at times. If you are not
already promoting your business now is the time to start. Learn how to
promote your freelance biz with your own web site, and start securing
more work.
How To Create a Freelance Writer Web Site that Gets Read
To get writing work, you have to let people know you exist. Setting
up a Web site is the best way to start, no matter where you are. If
nothing else, it makes your work visible and accessible to a large
audience.
Today, every working writer absolutely must have a Web site. The reality
is editors expect you to have an online presence. Editors are your
customers, so you need to meet their needs to get published. With a web
site, you can prove your writing is good by putting your portfolio
online. Plus, because the site is accessible 24/7 in all time zones, it
can be promoting your work even when you're asleep.
People who work in publishing are extremely busy. Deadlines are a
constant pressure. They don't want to wait for a 500K file of your
latest article to download. Or worse, a poorly scanned version of a
press release you wrote. It's a lot easier for them if you give them a
list of links and let them read online at their convenience.
A Web site may seem like a daunting task. But a site doesn't have to be
complicated. Think about what your customer wants to know (i.e., those
editors you want to impress). Then make pages to answer their questions.
All writer Web sites should contain:
1. Concise information about your writing specialty. What do you do?
It's not a good idea to try and be everything to everybody. It's a
recipe for confusion, so pick a specialty and focus on it.
2. A list of writing credits. Now that a lot of magazines are online,
you can often link directly to your articles. At a minimum, you can
usually link to the main publisher or client home page.
3. Samples of your writing. Some editors want to see articles that
haven't been edited by a pro. Why? A really good editor can make bad
writing almost unrecognizably good. Editors know that someone else could
be cleaning up your writing. So it never hurts to show a few clips in an
unaltered state. This may sound like extra work. But it's really an
opportunity for you to write some original material that you can reuse
later.
4. Your complete contact information, pricing or payment policies, and
if you are collecting email addresses, your privacy policy.
Along these lines, many writers start an ezine or newsletter. Yes, it's
a commitment. But it's also the easiest way to start developing content
and promoting it directly to your niche writing markets. An ezine is
certainly one of the lowest cost ways to promote your writing talents.
However, starting an ezine is a bit of work, so first get your Web site
up and functioning. Then once that is working for you, decide on a focus
and a format for your ezine. Write a few articles ahead of time. Then
get an autoresponder or list mailing service set up, and being
promoting. Of course that's the bare minimum, but there are many
resources online on starting up ezines. As a writer, you're probably
also a researcher, so this is a great opportunity to learn.
One classic writer question is, "how can I get published if I don't have
any clips?" It's the chicken and egg problem recast for writers: you
can't get work without any clips, but you can't get clips if no one will
give you work.
Creating your own Web site content solves the problem. Write your own
articles and publish them yourself online in your ezine. If you're
concerned that these "self-published" clips won't be as impressive as
published clips, don't be. Remember what editors want: articles that are
original, easy to read, accurate, and on time. Your Web site proves that
you can at least deliver on the "original, easy to read, and accurate"
parts!
Susan Daffron is the President of Logical Expressions, Inc. (
http://www.logicalexpressions.com) and the author of books on pets,
web business, computing, and vegetarian cooking. Visit
http://www.publishize.com to
receive her complimentary Publishize podcast or newsletter. Newsletter
subscribers also receive a bonus report called "The Nine Lives of
Content: How to Turn Just One Idea Into Multiple Products That Promote
Your Expertise."
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