Monday, August 31, 2009

Searching for Writing Opportunities Using alexa.com

Writers looking for freelance opportunities on the Internet need to be able to find what's most valuable to them. It's not one-size-fits-all.



Image: "Search the Light", by Flickr.com user (le)doo.(embellit votre quotidien), under Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 License, with many thanks for sharing this.

Searching for Writing Opportunities

Last time, I mentioned that opportunities are not always as attractive as we might wish them to be. For example, working as a writer to support yourself may mean choosing a lifestyle somewhat different than what you now have. If you didn't like what I said there, you may like this even less. Homework!

There are two kinds of Internet and, if you wish, paper (library books, magazines, and newspapers) searches I'm going to suggest as exercises in finding opportunities.

The first is to see who the leading online publishers in your field are.

How?

Start with the website alexa.com. This site ranks other websites, although websites without much traffic won't show up here.

In my next post, I will show you how to find information on alexa.com about sites in your niche. However, as an Internet user myself, I remember things better if I figure them out for myself. So, if you're like that too, go ahead and start exploring what alexa.com offers. There is information on there specifically about the leading hunting and fishing websites, and using that as an example, that's what we'll look at next.

We're examining opportunities for your writing business, and as part of that, we're looking at who is using content similar to what you created or can create.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

How Has the Business Environment for Writers Changed?

"I don't think we're in Kansas anymore."

We opened the POMA (Professional Outdoor Media Association) panel discussion on business planning for writers in changing times by acknowledging that things indeed are different.

Image: "Crystal Lake, Garnett, Kansas", by Flickr.com user Kansas Poetry (Patrick), shared under Creative Commons Attribution No Derivative Works License. Thank you, Patrick!

When I talk to freelancers and read writers' posts here and there around the Web, I hear things like:

- My usual reliable markets have dried up;
- The editor likes it but doesn't have the budget;
- The magazine I used to sell a lot of work to has folded;
- They're doing everything in house now;
- They're only offering an online version;
- Ad revenues are way down for print.

Where are the Opportunities for Writers?

It's somewhat individual, since each writer has a target market of his or her own. However, here are a few things I picked up at the POMA conference, both in my own panel session with Jay Cassell of Field and Stream and Tack Robinson of Mossy Oak, and at some of the other sessions, and also in hallway conversations here and there.

A Good Story Can Still Find a Home

Maybe that's a platitude, and maybe it's not adding much to what you already know, but it does give hope to writers. That original angle may still open a door. Keep on top of developments in your field, whatever it is. Work with what you're good at, and keep pitching.

When your customers are going through lean times, maybe you create opportunities by finding ways to work with them. If the idea of cutting your per-word rates is totally unpalatable, then try to think of some other way of making your work more affordable.

Is Going Online an Opportunity for You?

It's no secret that I have my feet planted in the online world these days, but I do realize that online writing is not for everyone. However, I would like to say, don't knock it until you've tried it.

I work part-time as an editor for the online site Suite101.com. At the POMA conference, I met two long-time writers (called "Guides") from About.com. While these sites are distinct and different from each other, they do share a common approach to writing, particularly in that most readers find the stories on those sites through search engines. So, if you are willing to learn how to write stories that search engines will find, online writing may work for you.

Another option writers who've done it have recommended is to own your own website. This message comes through loud and clear, but it comes from people whose first objective is to make a living, not necessarily to write for the sake of writing. If that seems like a non-distinction to you, so be it, but for some I think it will hit home.

This takes us back to the self-analysis. In looking over your personal Strengths and Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats, and the ones that seemed most important to you, does it seem like you are desperate to make a living any way you can? Does that outweigh your desire to make a living by writing?

This is a really hard thing to face. One opportunity for you may be to cut your cost of living so you can afford to write. Are you prepared to do that? Or does it seem like a great sacrifice?

One person's opportunity is another's threat.

Next time: we'll do some digging around the Internet for online and offline writing opportunities.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Tip #3: Know Your Business Environment

In going through the four boxes of the SWOT analysis, we've already looked at the external environment.

Today I'd like to direct you to one of the all-time most respected business scholars, the late Peter Drucker.

This link to a publication called The encyclopedia of leadership: a practical guide to popular leadership ..., by Murray Hiebert, Bruce Klatt, should open at section 3.3, on page 76, "SWOT". From here to page 78 it's somewhat technical but even if you just take the passage at face value, I hope it will give you ideas about what to look at in your own external environment.

Remember, focus mainly on the Opportunities. Look at Threats if their impacts are likely to be very serious, and consider how you can guard against the risks they present.

The main purpose of this exercise is to try different ways of discovering opportunities. You may come away with a generic idea, e.g. that new media is in need of fresh content. That tells you where to do further research, which we will talk about in greater detail in another post.