Nicole Slaughter-Graham – The Write Life https://thewritelife.com Helping writers create, connect and earn Mon, 05 Jun 2017 12:36:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 You Can Do Both! 3 Ways to Balance Creative Writing and Freelancing https://thewritelife.com/balance-creative-writing-and-freelancing/ Mon, 05 Jun 2017 10:00:00 +0000 https://thewritelife.com/?p=10705 For many creative writers, the yearning to live the write life feels more like a necessity than an option.

This makes freelance writing an attractive option. Making money freelance writing for businesses and publications preserves a writer’s ability to tend to their craft. The freelance life affords us creatives the opportunity to make money while maintaining a level of flexibility necessary to keep writing our stories, plays, memoirs, novels and poems.

At least, this is the ideal.

Sometimes, navigating the balance of freelancing writing and creative writing looks a little different than we expected.

As an 11-year-old poet, I dreamed of publishing my verses in books, magazines and anthologies. I wanted to make a living out of writing. As a college student, I found creative nonfiction, memoir and journalism, and I instantly fell in love.

As a mother, writer and wife, I wanted to find a way to keep writing while doing my part to support my family financially so I started freelance writing as a side job while maintaining a full-time office job.

Sooner than expected, my freelance side-hustle needed to become my full time job.

Freedom!

Or so I thought.

Some of us creative-turned-freelance-writers, myself included, find ourselves in the endless rabbit hole the freelance life creates. Freelance writing and the potential for endless income is addictive.

I need just one more client to make more money than I did last month. I have just one more blog post or case study to write at 11p.m. . I need to do just a little more marketing before bed. I need to take one more prospective client phone call while my baby boy naps.

Before we realize it, the flexibility we once craved to pursue our creative writing dreams is gone, sucked up by freelance writing.

I was thrust into full time freelancing before I was ready. As a result, I spent every available minute marketing, writing for clients, editing, sending proposals and negotiating contracts.

My essays and stories fell by the wayside. My Evernote folder full of ideas dulled into the background.

The freelance life is rewarding, and I’m thankful for the income and malleability it provides me. Still, writing for a client isn’t the same as writing for myself.

So I’ve decided to take my creative life back and make it my own again. Here’s how I’m doing it.

1. My agenda is my best friend

I live by my agenda.

I’ve always used my agenda to schedule interviews, time for invoicing, appointments and my oldest son’s tutoring sessions. I’ve never used it to schedule creative writing time, though.

If something is scheduled, I make sure to work around whatever the event might be, and it occurred to me that scheduling a chunk of time for my essays and stories make them a priority as well, which means I’ll make time to write them.

2. I’m limiting distractions while freelance writing

I’ll be the first to admit it. I open and close my social media pages at least 20 times while working on an assignment.

This costs me valuable time, and I decided to make a change. Through a little research, I’ve found a couple tools to help me focus and maximize my productivity:

  • The Pomodoro Technique: Using a timer, this technique uses time blocking: 25 minutes of work time with a five-minute break in between, and a longer break after a few productive sessions. I’m able to stay on task and figure out how much time different tasks actually take.This provides me insight so I can schedule my time a little more efficiently.
  • Cold Turkey Blocker: This distraction elimination app is a gem for increasing productivity. It is completely customizable, which is why I love it. I can set my work times in a calendar and the app blocks all of my social media habits for me so I can’t access them while working. And when I do try to access them, the app gives me a cute little motivational quote to help me get back on track.

If I need to access a few websites for research purposes, I can add those to the app’s Whitelist, and I’ll be able to view those sites only.

As if that wasn’t enough, Cold Turkey offers an extension specifically designed for writers. The free version allows me to set my parameters. I can choose a word count I want to meet or set a timer for, say, 20 minutes. Cold Turkey Writer brings up a blank page that I’m unable to deviate from, and I just write my heart out until I reach whatever parameter I’ve set.

The app also offers a paid version, which provides a few more features like soundtracks specifically created to help people focus.

3. Curbing my bills

When I started freelancing full time, I felt pressure because I needed to replace a full time income. Now that I’ve done so, it isn’t completely necessary for me to market as hard I was before.

Even when I wasn’t bringing in the kind of income I wanted, my creative writing was still important, which meant letting go of frivolous expenses so I could spend time on both freelancing and creative endeavors.

Upon realizing this, I also came to the conclusion that if I wanted to keep up with my creative writing as well as my freelance business. Letting go of unnecessary expenses helps me in two ways: Fewer bills mean I don’t have to stress about bringing in more and more income. Less income needed frees up more time for creative writing.

A couple of things I did to curb expenses include:

  • Cooking more
  • Cutting my cable bill down (next step is cutting cable all together)
  • Limiting shopping escapades
  • Finding free things to do with family and friends– beach outings, park visits, and the like

With less expenses comes less worry, I don’t feel guilty when I choose creative writing over freelance writing.

The balance between my writing lives is an ongoing, ever changing process, but I find it necessary to serve my creative self. When I take the time to focus on my creative writing, I am better at my freelance writing. More ideas come. I get better at my craft. My writing becomes more concise and clear.

In short, my creative writing is just as important and necessary as my freelance life, and I encourage any writer battling with the need to freelance and the want to write creatively to do one thing: give in to the want. Let it become a part of your routine.

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Flying Under The Radar: How to Use LinkedIn to Find Writing Jobs https://thewritelife.com/use-linkedin-to-find-writing-jobs/ Tue, 18 Apr 2017 10:00:00 +0000 https://thewritelife.com/?p=10359 With so many social media outlets available, and many of them much more popular, LinkedIn flies under the radar for freelance writers.

LinkedIn is largely thought of as the professional’s social media network, but freelancers (myself included until I learned better) generally think LinkedIn is for the professional looking for full-time work only. Wrong.

Not too long ago, I wouldn’t have thought of using LinkedIn to find freelance writing gigs. Now that I know better, I regularly use LinkedIn to connect with businesses looking for writers, and the leads just keep coming.

Here’s how to use the professional network to get more assignments.

Start with your network

Most people have at least 100 connections on LinkedIn.

Those connections are probably a mix past business colleagues, friends and family, and people you don’t actually know but are in similar professions.

Have you ever thought of asking those connections for an introduction to a publication or business you want to write for?

I have 312 connections. Of those connections, I might know 75 of them personally. But when I search for a company or a business I want to write for, most of the time one of my connections is also connected to someone at said business or publication.

This provides the perfect opportunity to leverage my network to make a new connection.

Most would agree, knowing someone who knows someone is better than a blind pitch. LinkedIn, as Carol Tice, long-term, successful freelance writer told me me in a mentoring conversation, “This is the one place where asking your network to introduce you to a new publication or business is acceptable.” In fact, she’s been hired by Fortune 500 companies through LinkedIn.

It’s the professional’s social media network for a reason!

So how do you do this?

  1. In the search bar, type in the company or publication you’re interested in writing for.
  1. Pull up the company page and see if you have any connections in common.

LinkedIn Business Page

  1. Click on the blue link that tells you how many connections you have in common, and choose one of them to reach out to.
  1. Reach out to one of them directly, and send a quick intro (not a full-fledged letter of intent or pitch) through the messaging option. You can ask if they know who you’d contact or if they’d be willing to introduce you through email to someone.

Ever looked up a marketing manager or editor and noticed you had connections in common?

Another way to use your LinkedIn network to your advantage is to ask for an introduction to the person you’re trying to connect to.

how to use linkedin

Use InMail

Did you know you can try LinkedIn Premium for 30 days for free?

Sign up for a trial and use the 30 free InMails to get your name out there to businesses you want to work for.

LinkedIn makes it really easy to find marketing managers and editors with its intuitive search features.

When sending InMail, a quick introduction rather than a detailed pitch is best. Send a little inquiry letting the prospective client know about your experience and your services.

This is what mine looked like:

LinkedIn_Message

About three weeks later, I received a response that went a little something like this:

LinkedIn_Response

I learned about using InMail thanks to a post on Carol Tice’s blog, Make A Living Writing about how to use InMail to connect with prospects.

The easiest way to use InMail in volume is to narrow down your niche. I chose higher education and health, because those are two of my favorite topics to write about. Then, I used the LinkedIn search feature to search marketing managers in those two niches. This helped me narrow my results so I could choose who to send InMail to.

Become a LinkedIn Pro with ProFinder

A relatively new feature, LinkedIn ProFinder connects freelancers with clients. It’s easy to get started, and the results can be pretty great.

Just click on the “Join as a Pro” link in the top right-hand corner of the LinkedIn Profinder page and fill out the prompts. You are able to select the services you provide and once approved, ProFinder will connect you with businesses submitting jobs that match your skills.

I signed up for ProFinder and about a week later, I found out through email I was added to the ProFinder network. Not two days after that, I received an email for my first lead.

The leads include everything you want to know about the project, and you will be invited to submit a proposal.

It will look a little something like this:

LinkedIn_ProFinder

If the job is something you are interested in, go ahead and submit away! In the proposal, you will write a brief cover letter and submit an hourly or project rate.

Since I started with ProFinder about a month ago, I’ve been notified of five projects, submitted proposals for three of them, and been contacted for two interviews. I’m still in conversation with one of the prospects and have already signed a contract with the other.

Definitely worth the time!

Even if you aren’t keen on using social media to find freelance gigs, think of LinkedIn as more of a networking tool.

It really is a goldmine if used to its full potential.

Have you used LinkedIn in your freelance business? What techniques work for you?

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