Posts tagged: research

Fee Simple: What Should You Charge?

If you are a freelance writer, then you know that the rates you charge your customers will go a long way toward determining whether you can make enough money to survive in this business or go out of business.

Yet, getting a good rate for your work can be difficult, especially in these challenging economic times where the competition for work is stiff and the opportunities limited, at least the good paying ones.

I don’t have a magic number when it comes to what you should charge as every project or assignment can be so very different. Back in the day when print writing ruled, you could charge $1 per word for a magazine feature article. What most people don’t tell you is that those jobs were given to writers whose bylines were well known to the publishing community.

Most of us wouldn’t be able to win these lucrative titles on a regular basis, but we might win one occasionally. The most likely scenario has us writing for those regional publications paying 25-30 cents per word, but even those opportunities seem fairly scarce lately.

So, how can you survive during these tough times? And, is it possible to charge enough to make a living without working 60 or 70 hours per week?

I can only offer advice based on what works for me. I realize my writing path isn’t the way you may want to go, but it should serve as a model from which you can build your portfolio:

Write For Yourself — I maintain several blogs, each of which focuses on areas highlighting my writing expertise. I write about the automotive industry, aviation, college/career, consumer issues and business primarily.  Though you don’t need to maintain multiple sites, having a place where you can demonstrate to clients your writing prowess is as important as maintaining a clip file. A blog can do that for you.

Score Big — Welcoming one or two high-paying clients beats having six or seven moderate paying clients. Then again, never have all of your eggs in one basket — eventually that basket may be turned over and with it will go your only source of income.  In any case a big client can be a tremendous motivator, just the psychological you need to advance your career.

Tier Your Clients — This point may sound contradictory to what I already said, but there isn’t anything wrong with having various tiers of clients. What I mean is this: go for a few big jobs, those paying at a minimum 25 cents per word, but preferably 50 cents or higher. If you could snag five or six of these each month, then you wouldn’t need to do anything else. Trouble is, you probably won’t therefore go after those people who pay by the article–$25 to $50 per pop–and make these gigs your primary sources of income. And, if you can stand them use some content mill work to fill the gaps. But don’t write content stuff if the pay is below $10 per article and you actually have to do some research!

These three approaches have worked for me. Admittedly, I’m not getting as many big gigs as I would like, but I do have two steady print journals who offer decent pay. Most of my work is from the middle of the road clients with, you guessed it, some content mill work thrown in.

See AlsoWill You Be Reaching Higher In 2010?

Photo Credit: excl-zoo

When Your Payday Arrives

I have been blogging for just over five years now and have written close to 9,000 articles over that time. Yes, that is a lot of writing, but many of those articles were of typical blog length, which means that they averaged about 400 words in length.

nailedWhen I write off of the top of my head, these kinds of articles can be completed in about 15 minutes, sometimes less. Then again, if I want to make sure that my grammar, sentence structure and even my topic makes sense then it would benefit me (and you) if I spent some extra time crafting an interesting if not compelling piece.

Six Blogs

At this moment I maintain six blogs which means that I supply the majority of articles for each. Three are updated daily, Monday through Friday, while the remaining three are updated here and there. I write for pay on two of the blogs and make some income, not much, on the remaining four.

I maintain four blogs because they involve topics I am very familiar with and passionate about. If I had no interest in these genres–automotive, writing, and Christian/inspirational—it would not be possible to maintain such a pace. Yes, I derive income from other sources, but that is not what I plan on sharing with you today.

Instead, I want to mention a bit of encouraging news for those of you who blog but do not see many results, at least recognition from beyond your peers. Peer recognition is important—I am sustained by people who know me more than those who pass by, but it is rewarding when something you wrote gets attention far beyond your normal circle of influencers.

Toyota Recall

Yesterday, I wrote an article about Toyota’s recent misfortune and published that article to my flagship The Auto Writer blog. The topic is tops in the news, but I also wanted to include a “can’t miss” headline, therefore I titled the article, “While Toyota Flounders, GM Delivers A Fresh Kick.”

No, I am not going to rehash what I wrote (please visit the article and take note of the doctored picture), but I will share with you that it got more than the usual retweets and it was picked up by TheStreet.com where it was included with three other articles about Toyota’s massive recall and gas pedal problem.

The Street is Jim “Mad Money” Cramer’s site and, although I did not get a page one listing, an excerpt of my article and a link back to it is included.

Extra Work

So what helped this article get noticed? Several things, but the headline and picture certainly helped. I also spent about 2 ½ hours researching and writing the article which, although not particularly long, gets to the point in a morbidly humorous fashion.

Humor, by the way, seems to always play out well if handled properly. I am not fond of mocking people or putting others down, instead there is a way to take a tough or peculiar situation and turn it around. I like to believe that I succeeded on all points, thus the beneficial pick up by a top notch site.

Your Payday

I have had other articles get noticed, including several which also brought me work or opened me to other opportunities. But getting noticed by a highly visible website is also very rewarding, something you can achieve too by working hard for your own special payday.