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Wednesday, July 18, 2007

IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT: INKTHINKER HAS MOVED

I'm delighted to announce that Inkthinker has officially moved to its new home at www.inkthinkerblog.com. Most of the content has been imported, and I'm working to ensure that everything is there ASAP. In the meantime, I'm going to start posting over there now. I hope you'll join me!

And don't forget, please change your bookmarks to reflect Inkthinker's new URL: www.inkthinkerblog.com

__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

One More Reason to Love Craigslist

Subject: Freelancing at [major regional magazine]

Message:

Hi there Kristen,

Another editor here at the magazine found your resume on Craigslist and passed it along to me. I edit our [special publication coming up soon], which includes [details about what they're looking for]. The next issue comes out [later this year]. ...The copy deadline would be [XYZ]; we pay [$XX]/word. Let me know if you'd like to pitch anything.

[Love, Magazine Editor]

How cool is that? The really funny thing is that pitching this publication was on my list of things to do this week. Ah, timing.

__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Friday, July 06, 2007

One of the Coolest Things I've Ever Seen

Despite what the person who initially showed it to me thinks, it's not a travesty. It's brilliant.





__________________________________________
http://www.kristenkingfreelancing.com/
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Thursday, July 05, 2007

Important Inkthinker Announcement: We're Moving!

I'm thrilled to announce that I've secured hosting and a domain for Inkthinker and will be transitioning to the new spot and a beautiful new WordPress platform over the next few weeks. I'm not going to give you the new URL yet because I don't want to confuse anyone, but I'll post a prominent announcement and redirect link when it's final. Yippee! Thanks for your advice, and thanks in advance for your patience as we work out the bugs.

__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, July 03, 2007

Certifiable

On one of my freelance writing discussion lists, a member mentioned two certifications she holds in the field of resume writing. This got me wondering: What other certifications do my fellow freelancers hold?

FYI, a quick Google search brings up resumes, technical writing, and grant writing as the most popular results for "certifications for writers."

I'm waiting to hear back from my listmates and wanted to pose the question to you as well. Do you have any communications-related certificates? What prompted you to pursue certification in that area? How has it benefited you? Please leave a comment!

__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Monday, July 02, 2007

Multiple Ideas = Multiple Queries

After reading all of your comments and mulling it over, I think we should count multiple ideas that are pitched in the same message as multiple queries. It's the QUERY challenge, not the query LETTER challenge, and the idea itself is the query.

So, for Anonymous who said, "I sent one to a travel editor. He said no, I immediately pitched back another tweaked idea. He said yes. I still counted that as one query," that should count as separate queries. (Even before this discussion, I would have counted those separately.)

I'm sending out the update reminder later this week, so if you need to adjust your totals based on the clarified formula, please do so when you give me your new numbers. Thanks!

__________________________________________
http://www.kristenkingfreelancing.com/
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Jessica Mousseau Spills Her Secrets to Freelance Success

You may know her as the girl with the insane number of queries in the Inkthinker Query Challenge. But people, she's that productive in every area of her writing career! I just had to ask Jessica Mousseau to share her tips for maximizing productivity. Here's her way of doing it. What's yours?

Achieving Maximum Productivity
by Jessica Mousseau

Productivity seems to be my middle name.

Ultimately, I achieve most of it through momentum. I admit I'm like most of us writers who have a tough time “gettin' goin.' However, once I do, you can't stop me. Energizer bunny, perhaps? A typical day, well let's just say, is never typical. However, after working for home, I continue to implement new ideas to increase my productivity. I find I waste a lot of time looking at email nonstop and/or marketing at inappropriate times when I should be writing. So, this blog will take you into the crazy thoughts and processes of me...... keep your hands and feet in the ride at all time folks. Let's go!

First of all, I'm the type of person that the minute she wakes up, she can work. In fact, I like doing things that way. I think I write best in complete silence, which is funny because everything else I do in life I have to have music while doing it. I think the sound of my fingers hitting the keyboards soothes me. Pathetic, yes I know. Anyhow, my newest practice involves creating a list of things to do the night before (maybe haven't been accomplished from previous day or maybe just thought of at the end of the day). After waking and preparing for the work day, start working on the list. In fact, I'm implementing this practice right now. Do not read email, turn on any messengers or open a browser, just get to work.

I find that if I sit and work without distractions including the phone, I can write very steadfast and split the time I actually have to work in a day. Who wouldn't want that? I think the trick is discipline. As freelancers working from home (some of you guys are moms), you realize the importance of making yourself sit down and write, distractions aside [as much as possible]. It's not easy, we all know this. However continuously working at it to perfect a specific plan to your liking is the key to this endeavor. What works for me may not for you, but I graciously accepted Kristen's invitation to guest blog about the topic.

QUERYING

Once again when it comes to this topic, I, at first, made myself do so many before I worked for the day. Then I dedicated an entire Saturday to doing it, to help myself gain some momentum. Another thing I do is create a Story Ideas folder, if I'm reading a newspaper or magazine or come up with an idea from somewhere else, I put a note or that article within the file. When it comes time to query, I have a folder of ideas waiting to be created. It makes the job easier when you're not struggling with things to write about. I have a template created for queries that I spice up for each individual publication. However, the basics are there and most are the same. I apply this practice to applying for work as well. The least amount of work you have to do, the better folks!

CONCLUSION

I think organization is the secret to this productivity success. Lists are my secret weapons, without them I would fail. There are hundreds of things we do each day and without some type of display of these things, I would forget everything, and probably lose clients because of it. Upping your productivity may take time, however with discipline and dedication, I'm confident you can do it too.

Jessica Mousseau is a freelance copywriter & magazine journalist. She resides on the Jersey Shore and takes writing breaks at the beach. Visit her blog at: http://jmwriting.blogspot.com

__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Agile Publishing

On Monday and Tuesday of this week, I attended a 2-day "Summer Publishing Institute" as part of my master's degree program in publishing at George Washington University. The speakers had varied backgrounds and areas of expertise -- but they all agreed on one thing: agility is critical for survival in the fast-changing world of publishing.

I'm not joking about that, by the way. Publishing really is changing fast. Ten years ago, who had a blog? Who had his or her own website? Who had used a vanity press to publish his or her own book? These things existed, but not nearly on the scale that they do right now. With so many ways to get and put out information, what place -- what lifespan -- does a print-centric traditional publisher have?

Look at article directories like EzineArticles.com or Associated Content.com. Content is free. People can get it out themselves. Publishing houses aren't the only option anymore. So how can publishers keep up? There's no simple answer -- heck, we spent 2 days talking about it and still didn't come up with a solution-in-a-box -- but one thing is certain. To remain competitive, or even to break even, in an info-saturated environment, you have to give the customers what they want.

It's not about creating a book anymore. It's about adding value to content and delivering it to people in a format that they want exactly when they want it. That can mean websites, e-books, PDA updates, things you can read on your cell phone, audio recordings, webcasts and podcasts, e-mail, anything you can think of. Yes, books became popular because of their portability and convenience. But now there are tools that are even more portable that offer even greater convenience, and in a world where everything is moving fast, and people won't stick around if you don't give them what they need right away. They'll move on to someone who will.

So, agile publishing is key. It's a far too complex concept to fully explain in a blog post (or at least one that I would feel like reading, anyway), but here are 10 elements that characterize agility, as described in the Agile Manifesto and summarized by Laura Fillmore of Open Book Systems in Rockport, MA:

  1. Reader driven
  2. Fast
  3. Supported by a team-based approach
  4. Rapid to market
  5. Content valued over delivery container
  6. Porous boundaries
  7. Simultaneous production (not linear)
  8. A state of permanent beta
  9. Balance of risk and opportunity
  10. Floating values
What do you think about the future of publishing? How do you fit in? Share your thoughts in the comments.
__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Tips for Dealing With Rejection From a Writer Who Knows

Whether you're participating in the Query Challenge or not, if you're a writer, you know rejection. Roy A. Barnes offers some excellent tips on handling an onslaught of "Nos" without losing your drive to write.

Surviving a Rejection Tsunami
by Roy A. Barnes

During a five-week stretch in 2005, I pegged 26 rejections, including seven in one 24-hour span. In that same time frame, I garnered only one acceptance. My mentor of seven years characterized this experience as a "rejection tsunami". During this tsunami, I must admit that I experienced feelings that alternated between depression and of being emotionally clubbed over and over.

The plot to this writing phenomenon of the worst kind took a strange twist towards the end of this rejection tsunami. My artist friend was to take someone to a benefit, but she backed out at the last minute. So he asked me to come along. This benefit just happened to be called "S.E.A. The Hope.” Granted, the event was on behalf of the victims of the natural disaster that occurred on December 26, 2004, in Southeast Asia. Still, I decided to attend, anticipating that a symbolic message of hope would be in store for me, given the timing of the event, and by what my mentor had quipped to me days earlier.

One of the speakers, a retired professor of geology, said that tsunamis come as a result of a build up of pressure in the earth. I had been submitting so many queries and completed works since the end of January (a literary build-up of pressure), that it was inevitable for me to get walloped with a litany of rejection slips and emails during such a short time frame. But just like the name of the benefit for the tsunami victims, I’ve come to the conclusion that hope exists for my writing career after my first rejection tsunami. Why? Let me tell you where I stood with my writing as of the summer of 2004:

I had never made one dime from writing, other than receiving a 12-pack of Ccca-Cola from a former co-worker as a thank-you gesture. She ditched writing an article for the company newsletter, but asked me on short notice to compose the article. Up to that time, my writing career could be summed up as letters to the editors of local papers, and writing for company newsletters, none of which generated any cash for my efforts. I half-heartedly sent out one to three travel-related or literary submissions per year, using outdated writers' market books. I futilely hoped for an acceptance and a check from an editor with this approach.

Since 2004, a lot has changed due to a number of notable milestones. I've been invited to press trips. I actually attended my first one while that rejection tsunami was in force. I have received real money for my travel, writing-themed, prose, and poetry works. My writing and editing skills have improved greatly. I'm more adept at researching markets and following writer guidelines. Yes, I've made dumb mistakes, and let downs are still a fact of life for my writing career. Still, hope resides in me because getting all those rejections meant that I’d been generating a lot of queries and submissions. With each query and submission, my writing skills have improved. The key is to persevere and let the acceptances come as they may.

Up until the middle of June 2004, I was employed full-time by a regional airline. I made decent money and had good benefits, but I was very unfulfilled. The three to four weeks a year of vacation time were all I looked forward to. The other 48 weeks a year were spent constantly fantasizing about the four weeks of escape from a working life of utter boredom and irritation. Yet what I have found is that since I've gotten more serious about my writing, most days are like an adventure; and thus, I don't find myself constantly fantasizing about faraway places.

When I told my airline boss that I was resigning, he commented to me that I wouldn't find an easier job or place to work at. That was the problem: Doing the easy thing just isn't fulfilling. The answer doesn't lie in walking the path the masses trample on day after day, year after year.

When people get more serious about pursuing their dreams, they often find themselves caught between the Egyptians chasing them in one direction (the unfulfilled life of bondage) while staring at the raging Red Sea of uncertainty in the other. They can't go back, but can only move forward and hope the waters will part. As for me, I won't go back to the bondage of an unfulfilling career. Maybe I will never become a famous writer nor even get to the point to where I can totally sustain myself economically with my writing. But for well over two years now, I’ve been experiencing quite an odyssey because I have chosen to follow my heart like never before!


Roy A. Barnes writes from the windy plains of southeastern Wyoming. His writing-themed articles have appeared at such publications like The Fabulist Flash, The Busy Freelancer, The InkSpotter News, The Willamette Writer, and The Dabbling Mum. His travel articles have appeared at Transitions Abroad, GoNOMAD.com, Northwest Prime Time, and Live Life Travel. The Goblin Reader, Swimming Kangaroo, Skatefic.com, and Poesia have published his poetry and prose.

__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Please Vote: Does 3 in 1 Count as 3 or 1?

I need your collective opinion on a Query Challenge judicial issue:

If I submit a query with three articles ideas in it, does it count as one query or three queries since it would result in three separate assignments? I ask this because it happened to me yesterday, and I know it happened to another challenge participant with NINE QUERIES earlier this week. It never occurred to me to make a rule about multiples in one shot...

My first inclination is to say one query is one query regardless of how many ideas are in it. But I thought I'd better take this one to the streets! Leave your opinion in the comments.

__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Sunday, June 24, 2007

A Different Kind of Query Challenge Success Story

When Colleen e-mailed me the other week to assure me that, even though she hadn't reported numbers recently, she was still in the Query Challenge, I just had to ask her to write an essay about it (and fortunately she wasn't offended by the title I came up with). Here's her unlikely success story.

How Sucking at the Inkthinker Query Challenge Skyrocketed My Freelance Career
by Colleen Vanderlinden


It's true. I suck at the Inkthinker Query Challenge.

I signed up in February, full of determination and motivation. This would be the year I finally became a real writer. A writer who gets paid. A writer who is read by someone other than her family. The Inkthinker Query Challenge would just be another way to keep me on track, stoke my competitive drive, and finally make this dream a reality.

Almost five months later, there I sit at four queries.

Four.

The really weird thing is, I'm a real writer anyway. I get paid, regularly. Not enough to send my kids to Harvard, but it's a start. I have bylines. Quite a few people (other than family!) have read me. How did it happen?

Well. The four queries did net me one job: a contract for a short article for Mother Earth Living. Sweet. I was totally on my way. And then, my querying activities just kind of...stalled. I applied for a job to be a Contributing Writer for Suite101.com, and got the job. All of a sudden, I had deadlines. I signed a contract with another website to write regular content. More deadlines, a second (small, but there!) paycheck.

I've been writing my own content for my garden website and blog, In the Garden Online, and while that's been great, I added another project into the mix: the Mouse & Trowel Awards for gardening websites and blogs. That took a good two months of my life, but put me in contact with a couple of editors and got me written up in my hometown paper, The Detroit Free Press.

I was really sailing along, but still bothered by those measly four queries. I promised myself, week after week, that I'd send out some queries. Every week, that task was left undone. My freelance life changed a little more. I was promoted from Contributing Writer to Feature Writer at Suite. Now I had more deadlines, and a topic all my own to build. I got accepted into About.com's Guide Prep program, and am still waiting to hear if I got the position of Detroit Guide.

What I'm saying is, there are lots of ways to do this whole freelancing thing. Right now, the bulk of my work is for online entities, and that's awesome. Some of my projects, such as the blog awards, haven't netted me a single cent, yet I'd do them all over again for the contacts and exposure they've given me. The great thing about being a freelancer right now is that there are so many options available to us. Blogging in and of itself has opened doors that freelancers five to ten years ago couldn't have dreamed of.

Kristen invited me to write this guest post after I emailed her about the Query Challenge. The subject line of my email read "Query Challenge/I'm not really a slacker." I wanted to explain my sloth. I wanted her to know that I was still participating, if in a screwy way. She said it sounded like a success story, and asked me to write a post on it. Here I am. Well, after a slight delay. See, I was supposed to have this to her on Tuesday. I emailed her Monday night with the message "Okay, maybe I am a slacker...." (This is, apparently, just the kind of irony Kristen gets a kick out of.)

Either way, here I am, with my screwy success story and the promise that I'm still taking the Query Challenge. I just have my own way of doing things. In the end, isn't that one of the reasons all of us want to freelance in the first place?

Visit Colleen for more tales of writing suckiness -- I mean success! ;] -- at Just Write.

__________________________________________
http://www.kristenkingfreelancing.com/
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Thursday, June 21, 2007

7 Random Things Meme

Sharon tagged me for the 7 random facts/habits meme, so here they are!

  1. I have OCD, and it leads me to straighten piles, books on the shelf, and pictures on the wall. And not just at my house. Other people's houses, too. I try to fight the urge, but sometimes I can't help myself.
  2. My first "writing gig" was launching the Student Council Update when I was in fifth or sixth grade, wherein I and my team of writers summarized Student Council meetings and wrote reviews of dances and other SC activities.
  3. I was the editor of my middle school yearbook and my high school literary magazine.
  4. In high school, I was runner up for Class Thespian, but I won Teacher's Pet.
  5. One book I've read more than a dozen times is Say Goodnight, Gracie by Julie Reece Deaver, which I first picked up in Mr. Short's class in seventh grade. I borrowed it so many times that he gave it to me as a graduation present the next year. I highly recommend it.
  6. I hated dogs until I got Pickles. Now I can't get enough of them, and I plan to amass a legion of small dogs.
  7. I started Inkthinker as an experiment inspired by the electronic publishing class I was taking in the spring of 2006, and I had no idea it would go from a random musing to this!

I think I've just about exhausted my network of people to tag, so I'm not going to do the requisite seven. Instead, I'm tagging these four:

Suzanne

Hope

Susan

Harmony

__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Guest Article: Six Steps to a Killer Quiz

Back in December, we talked about what a great idea it is to write quizzes. And now, Hope Wilbanks shows us how to do it in six easy steps! This article is adapted from a two-part series. Click to see original parts 1 and 2. Reprinted with permission.

How to Write a Quiz in 6 Easy Steps
By Hope Wilbanks

So you want to write a quiz, but you aren't sure how or where to begin? No problem! I'm going to show you a step-by-step formula that will make writing quizzes as easy as pie.

Step 1: Choose your topic.
Before you begin writing a quiz, you need to settle on a topic. What will be the subject of your quiz? You can write quizzes on just about anything. But you should never start until you know what your topic will be.

Got your hot topic? Good, let's move on to the next step.

TIP: Choose a topic that is "hot" and you'll generate lots of immediate interest.

Step 2: Determine the purpose.
Now that you know what you're going to write a quiz about, it's time to decide what the point of your quiz will be. What purpose will the quiz have? Is it to test the quizzer's knowledge about a certain subject? Will you help the quizzer determine if they are ready for something in particular?

Every quiz should have a purpose. If yours doesn't, then maybe you should start back at the beginning and choose a different topic. Do not move to the third step until you have a topic and purpose.

TIP: The purpose of your quiz should be to answer a specific question that your reader has.

Step 3: Decide what type of quiz to write.
As you already know, there are a variety of quizzes. Do you want to write a multiple choice quiz? Or maybe you want to write a True or False quiz. How about a quiz that allows the reader to answer on a sliding scale?

In addition to deciding what type of quiz you'll write, you need to determine how many questions your quiz should have. Most quizzes contain 5, 7, or 10 questions. If you're new at writing quizzes and still unsure, start with a 5-question quiz.

TIP: What type of quiz do you enjoy taking? Write that kind of quiz first.


Now, so far I've shown you the first three steps to writing a great quiz. First, you chose the topic of your quiz. Next, you determined the reason for the quiz. Last, you decided what kind of quiz to write.

Now comes the fun part...writing your quiz. Ready? Let's get started! Here are the final steps to writing your quiz.

Step 4: Write the questions.
Keeping the purpose of your quiz in mind, you will now write questions for your quiz. This is often the part where writers freeze up and quit. Don't stop now!

Let's say the topic of your quiz is house plants, and the purpose of the quiz is to determine whether or not your quizzer has a green thumb. Keeping this in mind, you might write questions like:

1. How often should you water an ivy?
2. Where is the best spot to place a potted plant?

TIP: If you are writing a True or False quiz, remember to write questions that have an affirmative answer (yes or no).

Step 5: Fill in the rest of the quiz.
After you've written all the questions for your quiz, you'll need to go back fill it in. For example, if you are writing a multiple choice quiz, write 3-5 possible answers, making one of those the correct answer. If you are writing a quiz that will require the test-taker to score points, write statements that result in yes or no answers.

Using the example above, let's plug multiple choice answers into one of the questions:
1. How often should you water an ivy?
a. Every week.
b. Every day.
c. Every hour.
d. Every three months.

TIP: Keep it simple, sweetie.

Step 6: Write the summary.
The end of your quiz should contain two parts: the results of the quiz and the call to action (the purpose of your quiz).

First, explain to the quizzer how to tally their results. Then give them the findings of their results. The final part of your summary should also contain a call to action. Now that they've taken the quiz and learned the results, what should they do now? Give your reader specific direction that they can take away from the quiz.

Using the house plant quiz sample above, the end of your quiz might contain the following results for quizzers:

If you answered mostly A's, you have a green thumb. In fact, you probably have a house full of beautiful, blooming plants right now. Keep up the good job!

If you answered mostly B's, you have a good chance of growing indoor plants. Sometimes you might forget to water your plants, but overall you're able to maintain pretty plants. Remember to feed and water your plants regularly and your plants will love you forever.

If you answered mostly C's, you should stay away from plants altogether. You're most likely to neglect or kill even the toughest of greenery. Opt for live-like silk plants instead.

TIP: Keep your quiz fun and light. If your quiz is on a more serious topic, you might want to include some background research information in your summary.


Need copy? I can help revive and refresh old copy or write all new copy for your business. I specialize in copywriting articles, advertorials, Web content, blogs, newsletters and more. For more information on my copywriting services, or to view my rates, visit Hope Writes online at http://www.hopewrites.com

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Hope_Wilbanks


__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

How Typos and Verbal Missteps Can Ruin a Good Article

This morning I was leafing through a prominent magazine for writers when I found an article that seemed immediately applicable. I started reading it, thinking to myself, "This is great!" And then I found it: the glaring error that ruined the rest of the article for me.

The typo? The writer shared an example of getting "antidotes" from a local teacher for an article for children. As in "Alas! I've been poisoned!" "Never fear, I have the antidote!" Yeah. What she really meant was "anecdotes." For those who aren't familiar with the difference,

An anecdote is a short tale narrating an interesting or amusing biographical incident. ... An anecdote is always based on real life, an incident involving actual persons, whether famous or not, in real places. ... Sometimes humorous, anecdotes are not jokes, because their primary purpose is not simply to evoke laughter, but to reveal a truth more general than the brief tale itself, or to delineate a character trait or the workings of an institution in such a light that it strikes in a flash of insight to their very essence. (source)

I don't know, maybe I'm being harder on the publication because it's a writers' magazine, or maybe because I feel like the writer should know better (which she should!), but I just couldn't enjoy it after that. How could someone who doesn't know the difference between anecdote and antidote possible speak authoritatively in a how-to article for writers?

Admittedly, this error could have been cause by a well-meaning but misinformed copyeditor. But if the writer had a chance to look at the galleys before publication, she should have caught it. And if she submitted the article with the error in place, copyediting should have caught it. So whose fault is it?

Frankly, I don't care. I'm just mad that it ruined the article.

__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

More Info on the Craigslist Profits Guide

Hope asked for more info on the Craigslist Profits Guide, and I aim to please. If checking out the sales page doesn't give you enough, well, here's more!

As I mentioned before, the guide is not targeted specifically to writers. However, writers can definitely utilize these techniques in writing-related ways. Trent Brownrigg really does deliver what he promises: "you will be given the exact methods you can use to profit from Craigslist, starting right now." And that's exactly what you get. Literally, it's step-by-step instructions. Even if you've never used Craigslist, you'll be completely comfortable thanks to his detailed explanation of exactly what to do.

The premise is building on affiliate relationships (wherein you get a comission for sales you facilitate) and serving as an information waystation to help people find what they're looking for in ways that can help you make money through those affiliate relationships.

Trent also discusses how you can utilize connections you make while providing information to build your mailing list, and gives you specific instructions on how to do that, too.

So, like I said, it's not writing specific, but what writer couldn't use (1) more money and (2) more people on his or her mailing list?

It's kind of a short book, so I'm reluctant to get too detailed or point out the specific tips he gives because that kind of gives away the farm, but I'll do what I can to answer specific questions about it in the comment trail.

__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Friday, June 15, 2007

Make More Money With Craigslist

This resource isn't completely writing related, but it's all about making money and I'm all for that!

It's called the Craigslist Profit Guide (subtitle: Simple Techniques for Pulling In Profits and Building Your List Using Craigslist.org), and it's 41 pages of step-by-step instructions, and it's not one of those scheme-tastic wonders. I'm definitely going to see how I can adapt it to my business, and I think it's worth checking out for you.

Despite what most people think, it's not hard to make money online. You just need to know what methods work, how to use them, and put them into action! Sure it takes a little work, but do you honestly expect to make thousands of dollars per month without doing anything at all?
This guide isn't some get rich quick scheme or anything like that.

Profiting from Craigslist still requires some work... but you will be given the exact methods you can use to profit from Craigslist, starting right now.
Want to know more? Check out the sales page. It's $27 if you decide to go for it, and yes, I do make money every time someone buys it from here, but don't let that stop you. Heck, buy a few copies and help me feed my dogs!

__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

The DC Chapter of STC Loves KK and GG!

Last night’s CIC SIG event, Breaking Out of Solitary Confinement: Networking Tips for Freelancers, Work-at-Homers, and Other Professionals, was a hit. Forty-three area independent consultants and professionals that want to be independent turned out at NRECA in Arlington. The chapter provided a sumptuous spread of food from Whole Foods and chairs and tables were arranged in a large U shape to facilitate networking while providing a comfortable place to sit and eat.

Read the full report! And don't forget to e-mail me to request a FREE networking tips handout.

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www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

International Weblogger's Day 2007

Did you know that bloggers have their very own holiday? Started in 2004, International Weblogger's Day is an annual celebration of blogs and the people who make them so valuable.

From the official InWeDay website:

Blogging has changed from being simply a personal journal designed to give us a sense of our past to becoming a medium, a channel through which words work to change things, be it ourselves, those around us, or the world beyond.

Has blogging changed your life? Has it changed your writing style, or the way you look at how others write? Do you love it or hate it? Could you live without it?

Today is all about blogs. Share your thoughts in the comments.

International Weblogger's Day 2007



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http://www.kristenkingfreelancing.com/
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Tips For Editors: 30 freelancers sound off on rules they'd wish their editors would follow

Two and a half years ago I waltzed out of a law office and into a new career as a freelance writer. Despite the fact that I held a JD and had five years legal experience under my belt, when it came to journalism I was as green as a baby tree frog. I wasn't sure how to craft a query, didn't understand pitching protocol, and had never heard terms like "galley," "FOB," or "masthead," not to mention I was without a single industry contact.

For guidance, I read articles -- written by editors -- offering tips for freelance writers. While I found helpful advice, I also sensed a communication gap. I agree writers should familiarize ourselves with a publication before pitching, but I wonder if editors have ever attempted to page through their own magazine's back issues at the library.

Read the rest of this article at MediaBistro!

Thanks to Star Lawrence for the tip.

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www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Guest Article: Tips for Working your Blog Network Through Comments

One of my fellow Lieurance-King Spring Article Challenge participants, Trish Anderson, has published a great article on commenting on other people's blogs and articles, reprinted with permission. Enjoy!

Leaving A Comment
Five Tips When Commenting On Blogs & Articles

By Trish Anderson

Leaving a comment is a great way to let an author know how much you liked their work. Your words may help them shape other articles, give them new ideas or simply let them know that someone is reading. There is some etiquette involved though and you will greatly improve the worth of your comment by following these five tips and suggestions.

1. Leave a comment. Even if you're only going to say "Great stuff!" or "Love your work!". That's something at least for the writer who sits alone at their computer wondering if the writing life is really for them.

2. Encouraging words. Whether you like the article or not, always try to shape the language of your comment so that it reads as positive and encouraging. Constructive criticism travels further than a blatant flame. Remember that abruptness is easily taken as rudeness and will not help a writer improve their work.

3. Praise. If the article or blog has inspired, helped, educated you in some way, say so. A writer wants to know this and, again, your words will encourage further explorations into a topic.

4. Improving "sales." In some article directories, leaving comments improves the ranking of individual authors/articles. If you have a favourite author, help them out by commenting on their articles whenever possible. Try to have something constructive to say. For some authors, comments are similar to sales. The more comments, or sales, the author achieves the more they know they are reaching an audience.

5. Generosity. Not every blogger can attract the number of comments some of the "high-rollers" can and not every blogger wants to. The reasons for opening a blog and continuing it are many and varied. Supporting some of the smaller blog sites with your comments can be the very straw that balances in favour of keeping a site open and up to date. Be generous with your words. They cost you little, but are worth much.

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Trish is a freelance writer for hire. Read more of her articles and pick up a copy of her new e-book, Plan to Write Plan to Succeed, for free at
http://beginningsmiddlesends.blogspot.com/

Trish Anderson - EzineArticles Expert Author

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www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer's Digest Best Writer's Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.



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