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Freelance Writer - Blogging for Clients


The Well-Fed Writer: Financial Self-Sufficiency As a Freelance Writer in Six Months or Less
Occasionally the freelance writer will have a client request (or a new offer), to work as a blogger. This is fairly easy work, but don't start out taking it lightly. In order for blogging to be an effective means of Internet Marketing (which is normally the motivation to bring on a professional writer), the blog needs consistent posts. This consistency is both in the writing style of the blog, as well as the timing of the new posts.

Blogs will need roughly two to four new posts every day, for the blog to make its head above the water of other similar blogs. The consistency will also include the use of the keywords and key phrases requested by the client. The freelance writer will find that the first few days are relatively easy to accomplish, and at $15 to $20 per post (on the average, some clients offer more, but not much), the pay rate isn't that bad. After the fourth day, the freelance writer begins to feel the true nature of a blog writer.

There are several variables to consider before committing to long term blog posting as a freelance writer:

1) Length of posts requested by the client
2) Number of Keyword Phrases
3) Number of posts per day
4) Blog Subject Scope

The most telling of these is the Blog Subject Scope. The narrower the scope, the more difficult it is to maintain a consistent posting level. This is probably obvious, once pointed out, but many new Freelance Writers fail to take this simple factor of blogging into account.

Taking the Blog Subject Scope into account the other three become more obvious as well. If the subject scope is narrow, such as 'only mortgage loan information', and the length of the posts are 500 - 700 words, with only 5 keyword phrases to focus on, with four posts a day, this assignment is going to become very difficult in less than two weeks. This is of course assuming the client wishes 'fresh and new' content posted every time.

Narrow subject matters are difficult at best. If the client strongly wishes for such a narrow scope, ask that the other factors be more relaxed.

There are several other tips-and-tricks which can help you out if you find that you have blundered into one of these narrow passages. I will be posting some of these ideas as the days pass; and also putting together class subjects in the Freelance Writing Learning Center as well. Of course, as always, these classes are free to go through, so delve in and keep making money.

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Freelance SEO Writer, Freelance Writer, SEO Topics, Web Content, Where's the Money

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Magic and Anime as Hot as Free Sex


Like many writers and web site developers, I use tools such as Google Trends to focus my vocabulary and article topics in the realm of hot trends and interests. There are numerous reasons for doing this, but the big one of course is money.

I pop in some keywords gleaned from sources like the keyword suggestion tool, and see the relation comparisons. Google Trends doesn't give a numeric value for the amount of searches for these keywords however, it just shows a comparison graph.

To get an idea of global high mark value, I typically will compare sets of words to the term "free sex". Despite how we may feel about this, sex sells, and on the Internet, sex is the high water mark. Just popping in sex however is a misleading value, because sex is all over the place in various meaning, so I use "free sex" or some other, more exacting phrase.

Rarely, if ever, does any phrase come close to the "free sex" mark, but today I'm writing and developing for my Scarn.com website, and found that Anime, and Magic are not only close to the "free sex" water mark, but in some time periods, actually rise above the interest line.

The term Anime Porn, which I first thought would account for the seemingly misleading high mark for Anime, actually registers much lower than the term Anime. You can mess around with the keywords yourself.

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Anime Music Videos, Glenn's Desk, Web Content, Where's the Money

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Billion Dollar Game of Hide and Seek



The Seekers

Let's pretend for a moment that there is no place to hide on the Internet. That no matter what you do, or who you are, your tracks always lead right back to you and your various ID's on the network. Whether these ID's are email boxes, IP addresses, street addresses or your company, there is no way for you to hide or alter the records of where you have been, or where this hour's personal interests may have taken you in today's travels.

Feel comfortable? Don't worry about it, most intelligent people would not feel comfortable with this state of affairs.

Having nothing to hide does not equate to casual consent for privacy invasion.

The Hiders

Now let's swing our mythical perspective pendulum to the other extreme of the spectrum. What if the opposite state of affairs existed? No matter what was attempted or how a server connection was configured, there was no way to track you at all? This would include your emails, your web site visits, your searches, your forum posts, even down to how many times you viewed the same web page.

Are you okay with this cyber environment?

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Glenn's Desk, Search Engines, Web Content, Where's the Money

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Time - A not so hidden cost to Web Marketing

This topic addresses directly the difference between marketing on the web, and marketing just about any place else.

Time is a variable web owners must take into account in the planning stages for marketing efforts more than any off-line enterprise. Some of the reasons are obvious, some are hidden.

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Web Content, Where's the Money

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