Sure, you want your blog to attract a huge audience and earn
bazillions while you sleep. Lots of people are blogging their hearts out
trying to achieve this dream.
But while you’re waiting to hit it big, you don’t have to starve.
There’s another way to earn from blogging. It doesn’t have the same
strike-it-rich potential, but it’ll pay your bills right now.
You can use your blogging skills and blog for pay, for publications and corporations.
No, not for $5 a post. Ignore those ads.
There are blogging gigs out there that pay a very good hourly wage.
Taking freelance paid-blogging jobs can let you earn while still leaving
time to work on your own site. As a bonus, you get more practice
writing blogs, which may improve your own blog’s chances of success.
Here’s how to find good-paying blogging clients and get them to hire you:
1. Make your blog posts awesome and engaging. Even
if there are only a few posts on there, make them great — concise and
focused on your niche. Think of your blog as a rolling audition for
paying gigs. In my experience, paying blog clients want to see three
things: that you know how to get comments, stick to a niche topic, and
use common blogging platforms such as WordPress and Blogger.
2. Select your targets. Consider where you might
likely blog for pay, based on your own interests and work experience.
For instance, I was once a legal secretary, so I’ve done some paid blogs
for lawyers. Develop a list of publications, companies, or Web portals
that might hire you and pay well. Don’t ignore trade publications, as
they are often good payers. Once you’ve got some possible prospects,
take a look at their websites to see if they lack a blog, or perhaps
have a blog that’s short on visitors and infrequently updated.
3. Research your targets. Next, do some sleuthing to
discover who might pay well. In general, I find more sophisticated
topics and target audiences command better pay and have less writer
competition. So blogging about parenting or your dog will not pay well,
but writing about acupuncture or business finance likely will. Next,
find out if the publication is growing or the company is well-funded.
Writers’ groups on LinkedIn are a great place to ask around about a
prospective employer. In general, bigger companies will offer better
pay.
4. Promote your blog posts in social media. Start spreading your content around. Connect with popular users of social media in the niche where you want to blog for pay.
5. Target prospects with your posts. When you have a
post that makes a good audition piece, send it to your prospects (or
top social-media influencers) with a note: “I thought you’d enjoy this
post.” You can use Twitter, LinkedIn, or just plain email — whatever you
think that prospect would respond to best. Even better: Write a post
for your blog specifically tailored to appeal to your prospects, then
send it to them.
6. Leave comments on key blogs. Another way to
connect with well-paying blogs is to leave articulate comments on that
blog. Become a regular participant and link to your own blog posts. You
may get read, discovered and offered a paying gig.
7. Call on prospects and ask for the job. If the
steps above haven’t gotten you asked to blog for pay, it’s time to get
proactive. You might call editors and marketing managers on the phone
and ask if they need a blogger, send postcards, or perhaps use InMail on LinkedIn
(that last boasts an impressive 30% response rate). Experiment and see
what works for you. In your pitch, be sure to mention specifics you
observed about their Web site, and offer suggestions for how you could
improve it with well-written, regular blog posts.
8. Gain visibility. Once you land a paid blogging
gig, be sure to get your byline as a live link to your blog, so
prospects can easily find you. As your paid blog gets rolling, begin the
above steps over again. Make the paid blog great and immediately begin
promoting it to better-paying prospects in that niche. Always be aware
of how much traffic your paid-blog sites receive, and look to move up to
busier — and better-paying — sites.
9. Your paying blog finds you clients. Once you are
blogging on a popular site, you often will be approached by other
companies in that niche with job offers. At this point, paid blogging
markets itself, and you have your pick of additional gigs. I’ve found
that one of my paid blogs
brings a steady stream of paid-blogging offers. As a bonus, readers of
your paid blog may click your byline link and discover your blog as
well, giving you possible new readers.
10. Keep raising your rates. As you move up, your
rates should increase. Gradually drop lower-paying blog clients in favor
of better-paying ones. Think in terms of how long it takes you to
create a post, and aim for a rate of $50-$100 an hour. Don’t forget to
charge by the hour if the client also wants you to do social-media
promotion of your posts, or needs advice on blog-marketing strategy.
I’ve seen rates as high as $300 a blog post, and $100 a post is fairly
common. Don’t settle for peanuts — keep looking until you find clients
who understand how a powerful blog will help build their business.
Wednesday, July 2, 2014
How to Start Earning From Your Blog
Posted by Unknown on 7:48 PM with No comments
Posted in All About Blogging
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