Pay for Article

February 10, 2008

Freelancing: How to Keep Your Writing Engine Going

Filed under: Writing, Writing-and-Speaking — Harriet Hodgson @ 4:25 am

Many things in life are uncertain, but I know one thing for sure: Freelance writers are not lazy people. As a freelancer I have to watch book trends, do my own research, do my own marketing, write daily to retain my craft, and find new things to write about. There have been times when I asked myself, ‘Why am I doing this?’ The answer is always the same, ‘Because I love it.’ Here are some of the things I do to keep my writing engine going.

1. CALL TIME OUT. When I am discouraged it usually means I have been working too hard. So I force myself to stop writing and do something completely different. Last summer I decided to knit a sweater, though I had not picked up knitting needles in decades. This summer I decided to focus on home repairs - things my husband and I had been ignoring for months.

2. GO FOR A WALK. Like many writers, I have found that walking stimulates ideas. When I start my walk I am usually thinking about my family, grandchildren, nature, or current events. I let my thoughts roam freely. At the end of my walk I have usually found a solution for my writing problem. Walking also helps me think of new article and book ideas.

3. FIND A NEW SLANT. New ideas are generated all the time, but some ideas have their time. In other words, many authors are writing about them. I wrote two books about Alzheimer’s disease and, to make them different from others, I based them on my caregiving experiences with my mother. The books included many stories about my mother and I used the stories to bring research findings to life.

4. WRITE ABOUT SURPRISING TOPICS. Breaking out of your writing mold will help you to get your creative juices flowing. I used to freelance for my local newspaper and accepted assignments I never dreamed of accepting. These assignments included articles about roofing, motorcycle trends, and woodworking. Writing these articles forced me to switch my mental gears, learn about new things, and meet new people.

5. JOIN A WRITERS GROUP. Interacting with other writers will also help you to keep your freelance engine going. Since I am a health and wellness writer I belong to the Association of Health Care Journalists. I also write about grief, particularly anticipatory grief, so I belong to the Association for Death Education and Counseling. Both of these associations publish newsletters and I find them very helpful.

6. CHECK YOUR EZINEARTICLES.COM TRAFFIC. Several times a day I log onto Google to track the migration of my articles. Imagine my surprise when I saw a recent article, ‘Writing: Turning Your Rejections into Sales,’ was the feature in the June 21, 2006 issue of ‘Worldwide Freelance Writer.’ Until I saw their listing on Google I did not know the group existed. Today I subscribed to their free newsletter.

These steps work for me and I hope they work for you. Freelance work is demanding, but I like the freedom it provides. I choose the topics I want to write about, research the topics, write at home, set my own hours, and am my own boss. It’s a good life.

Copyright 2006 by Harriet Hodgson

http://www.harriethodgson.com
http://www.healthwriter.blogspot.com

Harriet Hodgson has been a freelance nonfiction writer for 28 years. She is a member of the Association of Health Care Journalists and the Association for Death Eduation and Counseling. Her 24th book, ‘Smiling Through Your Tears: Anticipating Grief,’ written with Lois Krahn, MD, is available from http://www.amazon.com. A five-star review of the book is posted on Amazon. You will find another review on the American Hospice Foundation website under the ‘School Corner’ heading.

February 4, 2008

On Writing: Recipes and Copyright Law

Filed under: Writing-Articles, Writing-and-Speaking — Pamela White @ 10:00 pm

As editor of an ezine, ‘Food Writing,’ I received a nice email a while back that included a question about writing recipes and copyright protection. This topic causes confusion about writers, and food writers, in particular.

Here’s the concise version of all you need to know about copyright laws and food writing.

1. U.S. copyright laws protect intellectual property with the purpose of encouraging artistic endeavor. Any original work is protected by copyright laws as soon as it is written or recorded. You don’t have to do anything to protect your original work but you may want to register it with the U.S. Copyright office. This is the only way you will be able to go to court for compensation if your work is used or stolen without your permission.

2. Copyright laws do not protect lists however, so your recipe’s list of ingredients is not protected.

3. The rest of the recipe you have developed and written down is copyrighted. This includes your directions, cooking tips, and personal preferences as you write them in your own words.

If you have an idea and tell someone about it, and that person writes it down and has it published, you are out of luck.

If you write down your recipe then it is protected by copyright laws.

If you take the list of ingredients (say for egg and olive salad) and write up, in your own words, how to make it, then, by law, you have an original recipe.

I do recommend that if you are inspired to create a recipe based on a restaurant’s signature dish or a recipe from a beloved cookbook, give credit to the source in a way that fits in with your recipe: ‘Last summer, I was so inspired by the white chocolate cake at The Lemongrass that I created a low-fat, vegan version for my friends.’

If you are publishing a newsletter, website or cookbook and want to use someone else’s recipe, get permission. Write to the cookbook’s publisher and include the cookbook’s information, the recipe and page it’s on, and in what context you will be using the recipe. You may be given permission to use it, or charged a fee. You may be denied permission. (If you are reviewing a cookbook, the author or publisher probably included a letter allowing you to include several recipes in your review.)

Do not write for a website or publication whose editor exhorts you to ‘just take recipes from cookbooks and reword them a little.’ I was offered a job doing that very thing for a site that needed recipes. They claimed that if you change a few words in the directions, ‘we can’t get into trouble.’ Personally, I wouldn’t write for someone who thinks narrowly avoiding being sued for copyright infringement is a strategy for business success.

To recap: your list of ingredients cannot be copyrighted. The directions and other information can. Practically speaking, this allows every food writer in the world to publish traditional recipes, home cooking favorites and simple recipes.

Ideas cannot be copyrighted but works that are in a publishable format (written, recorded) are protected by copyright laws as soon as they are put in that format.

I have also had writers take issue with my writing on copyrights and recipes, stating that they are compiling recipes, clipped from magazines, for publishing in cookbooks. I know that a traditional publisher would never allow that, unless all permissions are in order. However, the ease of self-publishing today allows writers to often mistakenly take the step of violating a magazine’s or author’s rights. The unpleasant result could include being sued for damages, a thing most writers cannot handle professionally or financially.

When in doubt, do some more research on rights, and visit: www.copyright.gov.

About the Author: Pamela White is the author of over 600 published articles, short stories and essays, and publishes ‘Food Writing’ at http://www.food-writing.com and ‘The Writing Parent’ at http://www.thewritingparent.net, two ezines that focus on unique writing niches. She teaches online writing classes at both sites, and invites readers to subscribe to the ezines by visiting each site.

? 2006 Pamela White

February 3, 2008

Hero’s Journey (Monomyth) And Screenwriting: The Antagonist Isn’t Always A Bad Guy

Filed under: Writing, Writing-and-Speaking — Kal Bishop @ 5:45 pm

[From our deconstruction of hundreds of Hollywood blockbusters and sitcoms (see below for the URL of our Home Page) and our isolation and identification of more than 188 stages of the Hero’s Journey that you need to know about…]

The Hero’s Journey is the template upon which the vast majority of successful stories and Hollywood blockbusters are based upon. In fact, ALL of the Hollywood movies we have deconstructed are based on this template.

Understanding this template is a priority for story or screenwriters.

The Hero’s Journey:

a) Attempts to tap into unconscious expectations the audience has regarding what a story is and how it should be told.

b) Gives the writer more structural elements than simply three or four acts, plot points, mid point and so on.

c) Gives you a tangible process for building and releasing dissonance (establishing and achieving catharsis).

d) Gives you a universal structural template upon which you can superimpose your situational story.

and more…

The Antagonist isn’t a Bad Guy

The antagonist isn’t necessarily a bad guy.

Whether he is or isn’t, is actually irrelevant. The point is that the Hero undergoes same process of resolution whether the

antagonist is Darth Vader or Bill Murray in Lost in Translation (2003).

This includes:

A defeated Antagonist. In Spiderman (2004), the Green Goblin is on his knees.

Redemption. The Hero often gives the Antagonist a chance to redeem himself.

The Antagonist’s True Nature. In Return of the Jedi (1983), Vader takes off his mask.

and more…

Learn more?

WRITE THAT SCREENPLAY!

The Complete 188 stage Hero?s Journey and other story structure templates can be found at http://www.clickok.co.uk/

Managing Creativity and Innovation and related techniques and tools can be found at http://www.managing-creativity.com/

You can also receive a regular, free newsletter by entering your email address at this site.

Kal Bishop, MBA

**********************************

You are free to reproduce this article as long as no changes are made, the author’s name is retained and the link to our site

URL remains active.

For 188+ stages of the Hero’s Journey, successful story deconstructions and the Advanced Screenwriting Worksheets goto http://clickok.co.uk/

January 31, 2008

Should Article Authors Pay Automatic Submission Companies to Post Online?

Filed under: Article-Marketing, Writing-and-Speaking — Lance Winslow @ 12:20 am

If you are an online article marketer perhaps you have considered hiring one of those services, which posts your articles online for a small fee. Actually the fee adds up rather quickly so it might be better for a Corporation Marketing Department than a sole article marketer to do. How many companies provide such a service and will post your articles to many online article submission sites? Well there are quite a few and that industry sub-sector has recently been estimated at about $700,000 per year or more.

Regarding the 700K total Industry take of the automatic online article submissions sub-sector. You know that sounds about right to me. And it is being divided quite substantially by many folks. 4 rather large ones, about 12 second tier and hundreds of little folks trying to make a little extra money. So does it make sense to hire these folks?

Well some say yes and yet being the all-time most prolific online article author in the history of the Internet, I believe that it is just as good to find a solid online article submission site which uses RSS or Real Simple Syndication to blast your articles across cyberspace instead. Many of the top online article submission sites allow free submissions and then use RSS. Thus sometimes I wonder why people pay others to post these articles when you can basically get all this for free anyway? Think on this in 2006.

‘Lance Winslow’ - Online Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; www.WorldThinkTank.net/. Lance is a guest writer for Our Spokane Magazine in Spokane, Washington

January 30, 2008

Should Online Article Submission Sites Allow Automatic Computer Postings?

Filed under: Article-Marketing, Writing-and-Speaking — Lance Winslow @ 4:40 pm

If you are an article marketer you know that you need to get your articles out to as many sources as possible to insure that they are read by thousands if not millions of Internet Surfers and in doing so you can get the desired target traffic you need driven to your websites for you online marketing campaigns. Now then should you pay an automatic computer submission service to post your articles on an online article submission site?

And more importantly consider if you will the online article submission site itself; Should Online Article Submission Sites Allow Automatic Computer Postings? Well one would suppose that if they can do it with quality and careful review I agree it makes sense to you to allow that. If not, obviously not; of course in saying that we know that; IF, is an iffy word indeed.

I find these Automatic Computer Posting Services charge somewhat high rates and as others compete for price, I wonder if they are making minimum wage if they do hand submissions and question quality if they do it totally automated. Therefore it makes sense to carefully screen the authors. But do they? Hmmm?

One would suppose some, which can be found do and so they charge more, if they charge more then they have better articles, but fewer customers with the increasing saturated market. So all in all, I think in reviewing this that an online article submission site would be correct for all their stated reasons and the changing and evolving of that market; to play it safe with Automatic Computer Posting Companies and Services.

‘Lance Winslow’ - Online Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; www.WorldThinkTank.net/. Lance is a guest writer for Our Spokane Magazine in Spokane, Washington

Automatic Submission Services and Forum Spammers Considered

Filed under: Article-Marketing, Writing-and-Speaking — Lance Winslow @ 11:10 am

There is a big difference between online article submission services for online article authors who use article marketing to promote targeted traffic compared to those Forum and Blog Spamming programs, which post advertising links. Although in reality is there really any difference in how the systems actually work?

On one hand some online article marketers use these automatic submission services to speed up the process of submitting their created articles allowing them to spend more time creating for a small fee. The other Forum Spammers are basically graffiti artists. Automatic Submission Services provide a much needed service.

Meanwhile I want to kill these automated programs, which put posts on forums, they are ruining the Internet indeed, but that is a whole other story and one I have written a few articles on and letters to our government. Of course the articles are read by many but the problem persists.

Now let me give you some advice here. If you will post your online articles to one online article submission site, which sends out its articles collected RSS then you will not need to pay and Automatic Submission Service, because the top online article submission sites are free. So perhaps you will think on all this in 2006.

‘Lance Winslow’ - Online Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; www.WorldThinkTank.net/. Lance is a guest writer for Our Spokane Magazine in Spokane, Washington

Article Marketing and Automatic Article Submission Services

Filed under: Article-Marketing, Writing-and-Speaking — Lance Winslow @ 6:20 am

Some online article marketers use Automatic Article Submission Services to post authors’ articles to many online article submission sites. Does this make sense? Well yes and no. Yes because it allows the author to concentrate on creating rather than posting at many sites and NO, because if the online article marketer simply will find one really good online article submission site and then post their for free then those articles will go out RSS or Real Simple Syndication around the Internet.

Many Article Marketing and Automatic Article Submission Services have lessened their integrity, by not screening the articles, which are sent out and posted. With that said I wonder if the automated services are leaning towards a degraded skew, as these mass forum posters charge $.35 each and the services posting articles are as high as $3-4 each as I have seen. Big gap and low cost bidder will see more business, but the worst articles and manipulators ruining article sites who do not screen articles and authors.

Currently, I am the all time leading article author on the Internet with over 8500 articles and I DO NOT USE Article Marketing and Automatic Article Submission Services, but rather have chosen the top online article submission site with massive internet informational contacts and my target traffic is thru the roof and think how much money I have saved in doing it my way? Consider all this in 2006.

‘Lance Winslow’ - Online Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; www.WorldThinkTank.net/. Lance is a guest writer for Our Spokane Magazine in Spokane, Washington

January 27, 2008

No One Can Write 8500 Articles in 18-months Time

Filed under: Writing-Articles, Writing-and-Speaking — Lance Winslow @ 7:50 pm

Most authors find it difficult to write online articles more than a few per day. One online article author who has some very decent articles actually writes between one and two articles per day and works extremely hard to do it. She feels drowned out and does not see how anyone can possibly write thousands of articles.

Well to this I say sure they can, I did. In fact I wrote 1111 articles in I think it was June alone. I consistently write 400-600 per month and am already up 240 on the month this month and it is only the 6th of the month. I do not use software to do this, although I have used voice activated assist yet I find that generally when I do I spend more time editing than it is worth really.

Additionally I do most all the articles off the top of my head, so if someone were to simply think and observe what they see and be actively involved in their lives they could do the same thing too. People are generally lazy. And I have been accused of not having the best or perfect-est articles, but I am not a writer or an editor and so if I can do this anyone can.

I bet I hit 1000 articles this month and top 10,000 by end of October. So I say to the critics, despite there comments, stop lowering your expectations and get busy doing rather than putting false barriers of productivity in front of you. Consider this in 2006.

‘Lance Winslow’ - Online Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; www.WorldThinkTank.net/. Lance is a guest writer for Our Spokane Magazine in Spokane, Washington

Does Writing One or Two Articles Per Day Make a Difference?

Filed under: Writing-Articles, Writing-and-Speaking — Lance Winslow @ 5:35 pm

Online article writers often feel over whelmed by the number of articles produced by other authors. In fact sometimes they think that they can never accomplish the incredible rates of productivity of the top online article writers and yet they might be surprised how well they could do if they would stop allowing negative bio-feedback to rule their thoughts?

One online article writer asks; Does Writing One or Two Articles Per Day Make a Difference? Well of course it does. You see one article does make a difference if it is it captures the imagination of the reader and gets them thinking, do not assume that one or two articles is nothing, because that is 365-730 articles per year and that certainly makes a big difference indeed. A very big difference; Power to the people, power to those who persevere. Remember; Never, ever, ever, ever, ever Give Up. Never. Winston Churchill.

If someone writes one or two articles per day and then gets better then they can write four to 5 articles per day. Eventually they get better and better and eventually they are able to write 10-articles a day. The first year I started writing articles I actually got up to 13 articles a day and have 4000 articles by the end of the year. And here is the kicker. I am not even a writer, I am a retired entrepreneur you see? This is article number 8499 and the next one will be 8500.

‘Lance Winslow’ - Online Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; www.WorldThinkTank.net/. Lance is a guest writer for Our Spokane Magazine in Spokane, Washington

January 23, 2008

How-To Break Writer’s Block

Filed under: Writing, Writing-and-Speaking — Michelle L Devon @ 7:10 am

Are you a writer? Maybe you’re not a writer, but part of your job requires you to write… something, anything, web copy, correspondence, emails, newsletters… maybe you are not a writer but use article writing as a marketing and promotional tool… any way it goes, if you write anything as part of your job, the time may come when you find yourself sitting in front of the computer screen, hands poised over the keys, the thoughts all in your mind, but the words just won’t flow from your brain through your fingers to actually come out the other side of the screen.

Now what?

I am a writer. I’m also an editor. For me, it’s a bit easier, because I do both for a living, and unless I’m up against a writing deadline, I can simply put the writing aside and move over to an editing project and take my mind off of the writing. Truth is, writer’s block isn’t much of an issue for me anymore. If the idea is in my head, I can usually write about it, but even I have my moments when the idea just won’t flow.

Since I administer a writer’s forum on the internet, I have had the chance to talk to many writers and have discovered that writer’s block is often the single most irritating problem among writers of any caliber. So I decided to do some research and put together this list for people who write on 10 effective ways to combat writer’s block:

1. Walk away from the keyboard. I know you may think that this is counter productive, but it can often work wonders. You see, the brain never stops processing information. Even when you are not actively thinking about something, your brain continues to work on the problem. Walk away from the keyboard and take a short break, grab yourself a cup of coffee or a soda, take a bathroom break, or do some other activity that doesn’t require you to think about your writing for several minutes. Often times, you’ll find that when you come back and sit down to write again, your brain has solved your writer’s block on its own.

2. When taking a break doesn’t work, and if you have the time, put the writing aside and work on something else you need to finish that is not writing related. This works about the same as the suggestion above, but takes it a bit further by actually redirecting your thoughts to another activity. Later, you can come back to your writing and see if the thoughts flow a bit better.

3. Read something. If you need to write about something in particular, read something that pertains to what you want to write about. Reading what other have said might inspire some spark in you and get the creative juices flowing again.

4. Write something. Okay, so you’re asking, "I have writer’s block and you’re telling to write something?" Sure. I mean, you don’t have to write the piece that you are stuck, but write something. Jot down some personal notes, write anything that comes to your mind. If you do poetry, write a poem. If you blog, go write in your blog. If you subscribe to newsgroups, go post something. Answer some emails you’ve been putting off. What may be getting you stuck isn’t the writing itself, but perhaps you are stuck on that one piece. If you can get yourself into the writing mode by writing something else, anything else, you might find that the writing will flow again when you go back to the piece on which you were stuck.

5. Make an outline. I’m not big on outlining stories or articles, myself, but sometimes when I get stuck and don’t know where to go or how to start, making a brief outline of what I want to say, and then moving things on the outline around into some sort of order can help the writing flow by giving it a direction.

6. Now, number 6 and number 7 are going to seem to contradict each other, but if you read them, you’ll see why I have included them both. Write when you are well rested! Get a good night’s sleep, wake up refreshed, and come to the writing again rested and prepared to write. Sometimes, we can be so tired, or have so many things going through our minds that writing is the last thing we want to do. Now, this doesn’t work for everyone, especially people who get stuck inside their heads, so if this doesn’t work for you, try number 7.

7. Write when you are tired. Write at the end of the day, when you are so exhausted that your mind isn’t interfering with the flow. Don’t worry about what you have written, or if there are typos or editing errors. You can come back and fix the errors later, when you are more refreshed. The point of breaking writer’s block isn’t to get you to write perfectly - it’s to get you to write at all! Let it just flow from you naturally, and then come back in the morning or the next day when you are rested and then you can make it perfect.

8. Talk to someone about your writing. Call a friend or family member, chat with someone from one of your writer’s groups. Tell them you are writing something but have become stuck and you need some inspiration, and then, let them inspire you!

9. Do some research. This falls into the same line as reading about your topic, but takes it a step further. Call some friends, ask them questions about your topic. Post some questions in your blog, get some feedback. When you are confident you know a lot about your topic, writing becomes so much easier. Fill your mind with so much information about your selected topic that you are just bursting from too much information and you just HAVE to write about it.

10. Lastly, write about having writer’s block. Seriously! Write about why you feel stuck. What is it that seems to be keeping you from writing? Free associate and write about it. When you get down to the reasons why you have writer’s block, you can address them and correct them.

Writing is like any other hobby or profession. You may love your job, but that doesn’t mean you don’t have mornings you wake up and say, "Ugh, I don’t want to go to work today!" There will be days, no matter how much you love to write, that you just don’t feel like writing. That’s okay, write anyway!

Good luck, and keep writing!

Michelle L Devon is a freelance writer and editor, providing literary services through her company, Accentuate Services. For more information or to receive a free scope of work on Ms. Devon’s professional editing services, you can visit her website at http://www.accentuateservices.com You can also view her official author’s site at http://www.MichelleLDevon.com

Newer Posts »