
What Is Freelance Blogging?
Date: Friday, April 06 @ 21:26:57 EDT Topic: Blogging
Author: Brian Konradt
Blogging (short for "web logging"), born from the Internet age, is one of the newer venues for freelance writing.
The Internet has generated a lot of news about the financial possibilities open to bloggers: an audience of potentially millions -- along with possible corporate sponsorship, a byline, and infinite creative control -- captures the imagination of many prospective bloggers, and makes blogging seem like an infinitely desirable, lucrative field.
The truth is it is much more difficult to become a successful freelance
blogger. A good knowledge of marketing, web design, and being consistent are
skills you need to make a living (or a comfortable extra income) from this new
form of media.
The reason for this is the low barrier of entry. Anyone with access to web space
can start a blog. Sites like Blogger, Livejournal and even MySpace offer free
web space to anyone willing to sign up. This has resulted in millions of blogs
in existence today, many of them literate, many of them wildly popular, and
nearly all of them free to read and browse.
That variety of free content makes it difficult to charge for access to your
writing, no matter how good it is. You could be the greatest expert on foreign
policy or nutrition known to man, and few people would be willing to pay $5 --
or $1, or one cent -- to read a blog post by you, the expert, when there are
thousands of semi-qualified (but bright and engaging) writers giving away
similar material.
So your main sources of revenue are going to come from advertising and from
whatever paid content you can fit into the site. Luckily, web advertising is
becoming less dicey than it was a year ago. Google's "AdSense" program is a good
baseline for a page, providing targeted advertising based on your content and
paying you, directly, per click-through (although the pay rate per click is
low.) You can supplement that amount with other forms of web advertising, from
the comparatively unobtrusive banner to pop-up animations that "float over" the
text.
This brings us to the "double-edged sword" problem in web advertising. The most
effective advertising is obtrusive advertising; that is, advertising that blocks
valuable content until the user clicks on it either to make it disappear or to
take you to a different website. However, obtrusive advertising also irritates
your readers, which can lead to a lower reputation for your blog overall. On the
Internet, reputation is the single best determinant of your web traffic. Using
obtrusive advertising can significantly lower your traffic and make your blog
that much less attractive to potential advertisers.
So you'll need to find a happy medium between heavy advertising (and light
traffic) and little to no advertising (and high traffic, but little revenue.)
Luckily, the instant responsiveness of the Internet, along with the commenting
features available on nearly all blogging software, make it easy to ask your
readers about exactly what level of advertising they'd be willing to accept.
Reader connectivity is one of the most important features of any good blog: not
only does it allow you to fine-tune your blog over time, eliminating features
that readers find irritating or off-putting, but it also allows you to develop
personal connections with your readers, the kind of connections that build loyal
audiences.
There are other ways to make money by blogging, such as the following:
1) It's possible to sidestep advertising altogether by making some of your
content unavailable, except to subscribers. For example, you might only keep
your most recent five or six blog entries unlocked, and require a monthly
subscription fee to read the rest of the archives;
2) Or you might keep your current posts and your entire regular archives active,
but produce some longer or specialized entries or other content and charge a set
fee for these;
3) You could even compile some of your best entries into a physical book, along
with some new content, and offer it for sale. Even if all the entries are
available online, you'd be surprised how many people are willing to pay to have
something they can hold in their hands;
4) Additionally, you could go the Salon.com route -- make all of your archives
available to anyone willing to watch a short full-screen advertisement -- or you
could rely on readers' willingness to support content that they find worthwhile
by asking for donations outright.
Many prominent blogs and online content providers have done this and found
themselves able to make rent and pay all of their bills every month on donations
alone.
No matter how much advertising or subscription services your blog has, it's all
worthless if people don't want to read you in the first place. And there are
three simple rules to make your blog popular:
1) Write on something you care about 2) Write consistently and thoughtfully on a
regular schedule (daily is best) 3) Read and comment on other blogs
People read blogs because they provide a source of information and analysis on
topics that traditional media sources only cover sketchily and hastily, or don't
cover at all. Don't try to figure out an ideal money-making blog topic and
proceed from there. People care about blogs because blogs are about personal,
in-depth viewpoints and thoughts.
If you can provide those to your audience regularly, and you can set up a
minimally-intrusive but still worthwhile revenue system through advertising or
subscriptions, there's no reason why you can't become a successful blogger.
Brian Konradt reports on freelance writing careers for WritingCareer.com. He is
the author of "Freelance Poker Writing: How to Make Money Writing for the Gaming
Industry."
Brian Konradt is a freelance
writer and founder of FreelanceWriting.com (http://www.freelancewriting.com),
a free web site to help writers master the business and creative sides of
freelance writing; he is also founder of BookCatcher.com (http://www.bookcatcher.com),
a free website to help authors promote their books.
Article Source:
http://www.bloggertalk.net
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