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Author: lwidmer

More Freelance Truths

Posted on March 21, 2012 by lwidmer

Nice day yesterday. I spent a good deal of time contacting conference attendees to get some meetings lined up. Progress is good, and I expect to have a full calendar soon. I did get one weird response to my letter of inquiry — the marketing person, who obviously hadn’t read my note, said she’d never…

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Why Writers Need a Website

Posted on March 20, 2012 by lwidmer

Happy Spring! Yesterday was one of those glorious days where winter was nowhere to be found. Ironically, that’s pretty much how winter was here this year, so it was no surprise to have 78 degrees, blazing sunshine, and daffodils gleaming in the sun. Oh yes, I played hookie. I did some writing on a manuscript…

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Return to Reality

Posted on March 19, 2012 by lwidmer

There’s something about the anticipation of an event that sends you into this other-worldly state. That’s how it was for me this year with St. Patrick’s Day. Having had several wonderful celebrations at my favorite pub, I expected no less this year. Let’s just say there are several factors that go into creating a wonderful…

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Writerly Resources

Posted on March 16, 2012 by lwidmer

Had a fantastic webinar session yesterday! We covered a lot of ground, and there’s a lot more to cover in our next session. It’s not too late for you to join — we recorded this session, and we’ll have handouts at the end. Oh, happy day! Tomorrow is my favorite day of the year (Faith…

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What We Don’t Do — Redux

Posted on March 15, 2012 by lwidmer

Good day yesterday. I negotiated a fair contract with a new client and I turned down a client project that I simply don’t have time or energy for. I got a few appointments lined up for the upcoming trade show, and I started on the new client project. It was a glorious, sunny day, so…

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There’s Still Time: Trade Writing Webinar Registration

Posted on March 15, 2012 by lwidmer

Last chance to get on board! We’ve added six more spots for the Trade Magazine Webinar. Register for the two-session 31 Days to Trade Magazine Profits webinar for just just $99 for both sessions. Plus you get a free month of membership in the Five Buck Forum. Hurry! The webinar series begins this Thursday! Click…

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Marketing 365: Your Monthly Strategy

Posted on March 14, 2012 by lwidmer

Yesterday was a mishmash of fits and stresses — not that anyone blatantly conspired to do so, but it seemed like most (not all) communications were laced with interruptions, technical glitches, miscommunication, confusion, you name it. I see my role in it — in one case, I didn’t read the slews of emails from every…

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Not Always the Joiner

Posted on March 13, 2012 by lwidmer

Busy yesterday with admin work and a little project in the morning that took no time to complete. After that, Anne and I worked out some of the technology kinks in our upcoming webinar. I was feeling good for the first time in weeks, but I didn’t push it. I gave myself plenty of breaks….

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How to Accept Losing Clients

Posted on March 12, 2012 by lwidmer

Great weekend. My son was visiting and while I saw him for a small amount of time, that time was special. Sorry to see him leave, but glad for the time he was here. Despite this lingering sinus problem and remaining internal junk going on, I got outside and waged war on the whitlow grass….

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The Staple Work

Posted on March 9, 2012 by lwidmer

What a difference a day makes. We live in a world where medicines made to cure us make us feel worse. Once one of the antibiotics I’d been taking wore off, I felt infinitely better. Not 100 percent because now I have to wait out the medicine’s effects on the body, but better. If the…

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  1. Kimberly Ben Avatar
    Kimberly Ben
    March 9, 2012

    Great list of ideas, Lori. Blog posts, resumes and a monthly contributor gig for a small, niche magazine are a few of my long-stretch staple projects.

    Reply
  2. Paula Avatar
    Paula
    March 9, 2012

    I also do a semi-regular column for a local paper. Pay isn't great at a small weekly paper, but one column pays multiple times more than you'd get for a content mill. They tend to pay really fast, too.

    Now that I'm beginning to figure out Twitter a bit more, I'd love to branch into social media promotion. My first start may be voluntary – I want to set up a Twitter account for my neighborhood group. If they don't want an official account, I might just start an unofficial one of my own. Seriously, who knows the neighborhood better than someone who's lived in it her entire life? If I manage that well, perhaps I can leverage it to get some paying Twitter gigs. Ditto for the blog. (I already have one client in mind that I would love to run a blog for! First I need to prove I can do it.)

    Glad you're feeling better, Lori. I hope your daughter is well soon, too.

    Reply
  3. Wade Finnegan Avatar
    Wade Finnegan
    March 9, 2012

    Man, sickness is rampant everywhere. Disinfect all surfaces!

    There are so many avenues that a writer can go. The message I've received from Lori (finally) is to get paid what you're worth. Fluctuations in pay are fine, but don't take something just because it is something. We have a talent and that talent is worth fair compensation, and there are decent paying gigs if you search.

    Glad you're feeling better Lori. 🙂

    Reply
  4. AnnaLisa Avatar
    AnnaLisa
    March 12, 2012

    I agree with Kimberly and Paula, the smaller pubs don't pay much, but they're real gems. I do a couple columns a month for a hyperlocal newspaper. I write for the food page. Since I have a family to feed and love to cook, the columns don't feel much like work. Add to that my opinion that the editor is the nicest guy in the world to work for, and it all makes the small pay more than worthwhile. (Bonus: Food makes for fun portfolio clips!)

    Reply
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