sitetitle
 

 

Nine Career Zappers

So You re Considering a Career in Voiceover

eBay is the Greatest Opportunity YOU Have to Create a Career Online

Tackling the Transition The Confident Navigation of a Career Change

How to Reach Outside Yourself to Advance Your Career

Gifted Adults and their Careers

5 Benefits To Choosing A Career In Lomi Lomi

A Career in Medical Transcription

Speakers Communicate Your Speaking Career To The Next Level Top 7 Tips To Talk Your Way To The Top

When To Make Your Career Move To Self Employment

Is a Career Change on Your Horizon

Art Career Success with Local Businesses

Career Builder Using Job Boards For More Than Jobs

When Something s Not Right About Your Career Part IV VI Coaching

Advice From Successful Freelancers Starting and Maintaining A Freelancer Career

Time to start a new career

Make The Right Career Move

How to choose your career


Advice From Successful Freelancers: Starting & Maintaining A Freelancer Career

 

For the e-book, Advice from Successful Freelancers: How They Built Their Careers & How You Can Too!, I asked ten questions of freelancers who were living their dream life. Following are some of their answers. They cover successful marketing techniques, how to get clients and more!

1. Why did you start freelancing? Yuwanda Black, Writer, Editor, Small Business Columnist

My sister and I worked at the same company. We were freelancing on the side. Once we realized that we were making more as freelancers than as full-time employees, she quit and started Inkwell Editorial. Once the business was able to support two salaries, I joined her, which was one year later (1997).

2. How long have you been a full-time freelancer? Eileen Coale: Marketing & Corporate Communications Writer

I don't work full time. On average, I work about 15 hours a week, sometimes a bit more. I work mornings until my youngest gets home from kindergarten, and sometimes I'll put in evenings and Saturdays as well. Sixty to 70% of my work hours are spent networking and marketing to get assignments. The remainder is spent writing. In another year or two, I expect that ratio to flip.

3. How many years of experience do you have? Marcy L. Brown: Cataloging, Indexing & Information Management

I have five part-time years of indexing, but 10 years of library employment including cataloging, some indexing, and information management.

4. Do you specialize in a certain area, e.g., legal, medical, production? If so, what? Cathy Moore: Writer, Instructional & Marketing Copy

Instructional writing and marketing copy. I write appealing text for any readability level, including kids.

5. What specific marketing tips have you personally tried that worked? Jennifer Lawler: Writer, Editor

I tried a direct mail letter to editors that included the type of editing I could do, a few companies I had worked for, and my business card printed in such a way that it could be popped right onto someone's rolodex. This letter generated so much business for me that I never had to do another direct mail package.

6. How do you get most of your clients? Katharine O'Moore-Klopf: Editor, Copy Editor, Factchecker

When I first started freelancing, I got them mostly by word of mouth, and some were former employers. Now, I get them mostly by word of mouth and via my Web site.

7. Under what circumstances would you turn down work? Jennifer Dirks: Journalist, Editor, Writer, Speaker

I’ve turned down work if the pay (or potential payoff) won’t compensate me for the work I’d put into it. I also once turned down work from a magazine publisher who in the past has asked for several rewrites without explanation and I was unsure if anything new I did for her would ever please her.

8. Approximately how many hours a week would you estimate you work? Nan Yielding: Copywriter

Anywhere from 50-60. I pretty much work a 9-hour day ... weekends included. However, I do allow myself some time off every so often to just 'play,' so it averages out.

9. If offered a well-paying, full-time position, would you accept? Please explain why you would accept/refuse. Richard Adin: Desktop Publishing & Copyediting Services

This cannot be answered yes or no; there are too many factors that I would have to consider. "Well-paying" is important but also important, perhaps more so, are matters of responsibility and challenge.

10. What is the number one piece of advice you would offer to freelance newbies? Rachel Goldstein: Web Developer, Graphic Designer, Muralist

In order to assure your chances for the greatest success, you should do some self-evaluation before you leap into freelancing. Not only does it take a special temperament to run a successful business, but it also takes talent and expertise in your field. This includes some or all of the following personality features: self-confidence, common sense, innovation, and ambition.

Summarizng the experts:

►Have experience in your area: All of the contributors worked full-time in their area at some point to gain experience.

►Marketing: Simply put, you will not succeed unless and until you learn how to market your skills (effectively and consistently).

►Perseverance: Simply hanging in there is the final piece of advice our contributors offered.

Excerpted from Advice for Successful Editorial Freelancers: How They Built Their Careers & How You Can Too! on 11/01. It is a companion to How to Really Make a Living as an Editorial Freelancer.

May be reprinted with inclusion of the following: Yuwanda Black is an entrepreneur, author, speaker and syndicated small business columnist whose focus is controlling your destiny through small business ownership. Her most recent e-books, How to Really Make a Living as an Editorial Freelancer and Advice from Successful Freelancers: How They Built Their Careers & How You Can Too! are available for immediate download at http://www.InkwellEditorial.com/bizguides.html Visit her on the web at http://www.EntrepreDoer.biz for a complete list of how-to, small business books and articles.


columnist@EntrepreDoer.biz

 Yuwanda Black

More Articles 

20 Questions That Helped Me Take A Leap Of Faith And Change Careers - Suzanne Beardsmore
When I was working more than 45 hours a week in a job with a two hour commute each day, the challenge of a new husband, new step children, two beagle dogs and maintaining a home was more than a stretch! Something had to give, and unfortunately I...

Choosing Medical Transcription as a Career - Mila Sidman
Medical transcription is one of those careers where you either hate it or love it. I have been a medical transcriptionist for a long time and still love what I do. I enjoy the continuous learning, take pride in my work and think it's...

The Career Athlete: What it takes to Manage your Career - Cecile Peterkin
Managing your career, just like managing your life, requires preparation and ensuring that your time is directed meaningfully. Don't wait and see; make things happen. Just like athletes who prepare for the "big game” or a marathon, designing...

Your Job Is Not Necessarily For Life. Should You Switch Careers? - Burns Carlton
Executive search firms regularly come across people who have decided to switch careers. There was a time where you chose your profession and stuck with it until retirement and many people still follow that path. An increasing number of people,...

Five Ways for Women to Accelerate Their Career - Roxanne Batson
While the corporate world may no longer be a man's game, the sad truth is that businesswomen are still paid less than men for the same positions, and fewer women than men fill the top positions. Further, when a woman is assertive and works hard...

Career Development - When It's Time for a Change - Martin Haworth
Your career might be going great guns - or it might not. You may be 27 or 47; you might be at the top of the tree or you might be just a couple of years into your career. Male or female, pfahh, it doesn't matter a single jot! You don't feel right...

How to Know if You Are in the Right Career - Kathleen Gage
How to Know if You Are In The Right Career by Kathleen Gage Ever wonder if you are in the right career? If you are like most people you have. Did you know that 80% of people are currently misemployed? They are either underemployed, not happy with...

Risk and Stock Trading Fees: The Two Barriers To Overcome If You Want A Successful Trading Career. - David Jenyns
You know the old joke: "How do you make a million in the stock market? Start with two million?" There is no way around it, risk and stock market fees are a part of trading that you can`t avoid. But, you can manage your risk. You can also manage...

Career Talk: A Day In The Life Of A Lawyer - Chad McDonald
A lawyer is a person who is authorized by the state or country to practice law, give advice to his or her clients and represent their legal matters in the courts. According to classes or ranks of jurists lawyers can be designated as...

Lose your career and find your new life - Cathy Goodwin Ph D
I hear from many people who feel trapped in a career after fifteen or twenty happy, productive years. It's been a good ride, they say, but now it's time to jump off the train. They want to fulfill a creative dream, recover from burnout or just try...

20 Ways to Advance Your Career - Cecile Peterkin
To survive and thrive in today's competitive environment, it is not just what you know. You also need to be competent. You must stand out from the crowd - be memorable, impressive, credible, trusted and liked. "Success is never a destination...

Choosing The Right Career - Sintilia Miecevole
How to choose a career for yourself? It is important to go for a career that is your calling. There are numbers of options to choose from. You can make a career in medicine, law, architecture, finance, designing, media and many more fields. Your...

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright sitetitle @2007  Turnkey Websites
[an error occurred while processing this directive]