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Archive for December, 2008

Why Elance is an Industry Necessity (Despite those Fees)

December 31st, 2008

Every now and then someone asks me where I find my work. I usually tell them “Elance” even though I actually get about 75% of my own work from repeat clients at this point. But my partner gets most of his work through Elance and if I’m out of work for any reason I start bidding too. 

So, what is it about Elance that makes me willing to pay $40 a month and almost 10% in project transaction fees (that’s more than sales tax almost everywhere)? It’s a necessatiy. No matter how you look at it, if you’re a freelance writer who makes their money on the Internet, you need this website to survive. You might go three or four weeks without using it at a time, but when you need it, you really need it. 

The nature of writing freelance (or programming, designing, or translating for Elance’s many other users) is that you never know for sure that the next month is going to bring in enough work to pay your bills. You could line up more work for the next six weeks than you’ve ever seen in your life and you could still end up broke a month or two later. It’s just how the job works – you never really get to relax. So, having a profile on a website where you’re trusted, respected, and have plenty of experience is an absolute must. Think of it like your safety net – you hope you never need it, but you damn well better make sure it’s there.

And while there are other websites out there that offer services very similar to what Elance provides, none of them do it quite so well. In any given week, the Writing and Translation section alone will have more than 8,000 unique jobs. That’s a huge volume of content. If you have a good profile and bid realistically, you can usually expect to land around 15% of your bids – you’re going to get work. If you just sit back and wait for repeat clients, craigslist ads, and poorly posted projects to get back to you from the other websites, you might be so lucky to get enough work to pay your bills.

It’s expensive, it’s a bit confusing (they redesign that site every other month it seems) and it can be incredibly frustrating to outlast the underbids from overseas or the project listers who think Elance is a place to get where they can get $1 articles, but the site will keep you afloat when you need it. If nothing else, it’s just nice to have a security blanket of sorts to keep you semi-comfortable with your work because there’s nothing more frustrating than constantly having to worry if you’ll be able to pay your bills or not.

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Freelance Sites , , , ,

Writing Because You Love To vs. Writing Because You Have To

December 30th, 2008

I have wanted to be a writer for a while now. Not “since I was a little kid” while, but a good long time nonetheless. Of course, when I had these visions of literary wonder, I was going to be sitting around a massive house with a few hundred words a day to write for a major magazine, newspaper, or novel. Of course, it’s not the same thing as what I’m actually doing – that is being a pen for hire, the guy who does all the dirty work for websites across the globe. 

I’m not complaining about my job of course – being a freelance writer is probably the best job I’ve ever had or will ever have and I don’t plan on stopping any time soon. That said, there ends up being a huge difference between writing because you love it and writing because you have to do it to pay your rent and keep the Simpsons DVDs up to date. 

When I wrote in college, I wrote because I loved it. That’s about all you get out of it when you’re paying thousands of dollars for someone to “teach” you how to produce a short story. Right now, I write because it pays the bills – all sorts of bills by the way; more than I ever thought would be possible. This isn’t a new realization by any means. I have seen the effects of work in action many times before. When I was a kid, there was nothing I wanted more than to ride the lawnmower around the yard – I’ll bet you can guess how that turned out. 

And in the last two years or so, I’ve had plenty of jobs that I thought would be a lot of fun, but the longer I worked on them, the less fun they became. Writing guides for video games? That should be awesome right? Turns out that when you start looking at everything in a game as a sequence in a technical manual, it’s pretty dull. Eating out and writing reviews? Well, it could be fun if A) the food was good everytime or B) you didn’t have to think of new and exciting ways to describe the word “spicy”. 

Again, I’m not complaining. My job is great and if you’re getting into freelance writing, I can guarantee that you’ll be happy with your new lifestyle. But, if you’re getting into it for the love of writing, you’re going to be pretty crestfallen pretty quickly. 

My advice – get a really relaxing, mindless hobby. It helps to balance out how much you use your brain when writing all day and allows you to clear the slate so you can work on private projects – things like short stories or that great american novel. I like to read cheesy fantasy novels and play guitar hero. My brain gets to shut down for an hour or two and I don’t feel like writing more is only another chore when it is really something I dream about doing most every day. 

You’re going to have enough trouble already separating your personal life from your work if you start working freelance – create barriers and good ways to wind down and you can avoid feeling like the writing you do for the love of writing is the same as all that other stuff you scribble out to pay your gas bill.

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Freelance Lifestyle , , , ,

December 23rd, 2008

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Freelancing