832527_lonely_road.jpg

Freelance writing means different things to different people, and there are certainly several different roads to freelancing. While you can specialize in one type, it might also make sense to try several kinds until you’re sure what works for you. Let’s explore some of the paths.

Commercial or Business Writing

This is the type of freelancing I’ve been focusing on for several years. I contact businesses and offer my services writing newsletters, press releases, ads, brochures, and other marketing materials.

Some argue that this is the most lucrative type of freelance writing, perhaps because companies often have the money to spend on one-time or even repeat marketing collateral. Also, the writing they’re buying functions to bring them more business, and, therefore, more money.

Newspaper Reporting

Newspaper freelancing is a field I’m planning to try very soon. Small and large newspapers can be found in every city and town, and they often rely on freelancers. Newspapers generally pay by the story.

I almost got a gig at a local paper, so I’m encouraged. All it took was an email to the publisher, along with some sample clips. The next step is to find a paper that currently needs another freelancer.

Magazine Writing

Magazine freelance writing is what many people think of first when I tell them I’m a freelance writer. I haven’t pursued this avenue yet, but articles that are accepted can pay pretty well.

The trick seems to be in finding the right magazines (there are a lot of smaller publications that are easier to break into), and then writing the right story. And it seems to be a “query and wait” business. I’m not that patient right now, so I’ll try it when I have more time and more money (so waiting won’t be so painful).

Online Article Writing

This type of writing includes blogging and writing copy for online magazines. This may be the easiest to break into, but potentially the least lucrative. A lot of online companies want to pay pennies for online writing, even though the act of writing takes just as much time and energy as print writing.

Be careful with this market. If you accept a low-paying offer, consider writing it super fast. In my opinion, those that offer pennies should get what they pay for. But that’s just me. Ideally, none of us will accept pitiful offers, but we all have to decide what works best for our situation.

Your Turn

What paths to writing have you tried? Do you have a preference, or do you try a healthy mix of several types?

 Subscribe to Crayon Writer