Studio Blog
Using Demand Studios Clips to Land other Freelance Writing Opportunities
Posted by Deb | April 20, 2010 | Comments (1)
You know what else?
Some of the most vocal anti-content site writers and bloggers also used their content site clips to land more lucrative opportunities.
I sometimes read that editors won’t consider Demand Studios clips when looking for writers, but that’s not true in most cases. Just about every editor knows it’s about good writing and will hire writers as long as they provide excellent writing samples -- regardless of where they came from. That isn’t to say you’ll land every gig that comes along simply because you used your Demand Studios clips in your portfolio, but if you’re a good writer, and have solid samples to share, you could land other opportunities – even some that are quite lucrative.
Choosing Samples
If a cover letter or query letter is the first impression you make to an editor, a sample is the second. As the Demand Studios team will attest, you won’t get your foot in the door without a strong sample. The hiring editor wants to get a feel for your writing style and skills as well as your voice. He also wants to know that you know the subject matter. When choosing a writing sample, use one that is representative of the website or market you wish to break into and is relevant to the subject matter. In other words, if you’re looking to write for a gardening niche, don’t send in your automotive writing samples.
Choose your best writing. Use the articles that received the best response and the highest ratings. You can even ask your fellow writers and editors at the Demand Studios forum to help you pick your strongest clips. Make sure your personality shines through. Editors don’t necessarily like flat writing that only recites facts. Show you have a passion for writing and a flair for words.
Impressive Credentials
Editors are impressed when they see writers’ bylines under mastheads for USAToday.com Travel Tips and LIVESTRONG.com. Don’t be afraid to take your clips from the Demand Studios websites to advance your career. Sometimes writers will tell you it can’t happen, I’m here to tell you that it can and it does, many times over.
At Demand Studios you’re gaining valuable freelance writing experience; why not use it to your benefit?
Deb Ng is the founder of the Freelance Writing Jobs network of blogs and Conference Director for the BlogWorld and New Media Expo. Feel free to follow her on Twitter @debng.
The Importance of Correctly Categorizing Your Articles
Posted by Jennifer M | October 20, 2009 | Comments (1)
One of the topics we consistently receive questions on is title categorization—both when searching for available titles and once an article has been claimed. We thought we’d take a minute to address both.
As you know, when you write an article, you have to categorize it with the appropriate categories. What many of you probably don’t know is that each time you categorize a claimed title, you are categorizing it within the destination site’s taxonomy. What is a taxonomy you ask? Essentially, taxonomy is a fancy word for “categories.” It’s not too important for you to know the specifics of it, but, in short, a taxonomy is a classification system, and each of our sites have a different taxonomy—or category system. The taxonomy guides how articles are organized on the destination site.
We have noticed that many articles are incorrectly categorized. Though it may seem like a minute task when completing an article, it’s very important to categorize your articles correctly. As mentioned above, the categories you choose are the exact categories in which your article will appear on the site, so it’s essential to categorize them correctly. When a reader is browsing topics, you want your article to appear. However, if it’s miscategorized, chances are the reader won’t find your article. For example, if a reader is researching the job responsibilities of a nurse on eHow, she would click the Careers & Work category—not Health. If your article was categorized under Health, she wouldn’t find the quality article you have spent time writing and researching.
Many of the errors we noticed could be solved simply by paying closer attention and practicing diligence when categorizing your article. For example, we saw the Answerbag title "Who invented the prom?" in Home & Garden, rather than Life & Society/ Parties & Entertaining/Prom. Likewise, "How many 1979 Chevrolet C10 Pace trucks were made?" was in Hobbies/Collecting/Sports Cards, not Transportation/Autos/Antique & Classic Cars.
Additionally, as you're categorizing your article, think about the intent the title implies. For example, "How many years does it take to be a medical technician?" should be in Business/Professions & Industries/Health Care Professions, since the intent is to find out more about the profession, rather than somewhere in Health & Fitness.
On a similar note, many of you have noted that some of the titles in the Find Assignments queue are miscategorized. Rest assured, we are working on this, but we wanted to remind you to write your articles according to the title, not the category in which you’ve found the title. Titles are assigned a category to help writers easily search for titles. Every so often, an incorrect or ill-defined category may appear with a title. Do not base the meaning of a title or the way you categorize it solely on the category you found in the available titles queue. The category is to help you search for the article, not to specify the details of what the article should contain. Always write and categorize the article to fulfill the goal outlined in the title. For example, if the title “About Blood Glucose” is assigned a category of diabetes in the Find Assignments queue, do not write the article addressing blood glucose for diabetics. The title does not specify diabetics, so the article and categories shouldn’t either.
Happy categorizing!
The Relationship Between CEs and Writers
Posted by Carolyn Williams | September 11, 2009 | Comments (10)
Editor’s note: We will be featuring blog entries from our own creators from time to time. This installment is from Carolyn Williams on the changing role of the Demand Studios copy editors.
It’s been intriguing, watching Demand Studios grow, and as a veteran Copy Editor (CE) as well as an active member of the writing community, I get to participate in and observe both sides of the publication process. Back in the day when eHow was first created, the CE had a simple role: to check that semi-colons and other grammatical issues were correct. As Demand Studios has grown, so has the role of the CE. Now, rather than simply ensuring that grammar is acceptable, we team with the writers to ensure that the published content provides valuable, insightful, helpful advice to our readers. And we provide a simple logic check for much of that advice. After all, if you’re unstopping your sink, you don’t particularly care if the commas are all there. But you care an awful lot if “Step 2: Put a bucket under the sink to catch the water when you release the trap” is missing. Grammar issues that crop up repeatedly might be noted to the writer to avoid in future. But it’s much more time-efficient for fixes of that nature to be done by your friendly, neighborhood (okay, Internet-enabled) CE. As a CE, as you don’t get paid until the article is rewritten and comes back to your queue a second time. For simple grammar fixes, going in and fixing them is your best bet to getting paid. Larger issues get sent back to the writer.
That, in short, encapsulates how the CE job has evolved. We care as much as the writers do about the integrity of the information published on our many and varied sites. And we care for a very specific reason: job security. If our sites publish information that isn’t good, useful, well written, helpful and on task, then we’ve failed as a publishing team. Readers won’t click on our site to get information if they don’t think what we publish is useful. It becomes, then, a swirling drain. No readers, no new content to publish, no new articles to review, no editing work.
There’s a natural dissonance between the CE team and the writing team; that’s healthy, normal and part of the business of writing. We love the language, we love writing. We’re always working toward stronger, better content with the end goal of providing usable, good quality information that our readers can embrace. There are natural bumps in the road for this 21st-century publishing business model we’re all using; development issues, technical errors, learning curves, dynamic style guides. That’s part of the environment. You either roll with it, or move to an environment that is more appropriate to your particular skills and needs. This is true for both writers and editors.
We’re all in this together, this new, modern publishing process. We deeply appreciate using and understanding the Style Guides. We’ll shepherd the content to publication wherever possible. And we'll team with the writers to make our sites increasingly helpful, useful, authoritative, well written and of high quality.
Freelancewritinggigs.com, otherwise known as Freelance Writing Jobs (FWJ), created by freelance writer, professional blogger and social media consultant Deb Ng is an essential piece of any freelance writer’s puzzle to not only find work, but connect with a writer community that offers lively discussion, tips and advice for the hard knock life of writing for a living.
With job leads posted every day and categorized into sections such as copywriting, blogging and freelance reporting positions, the FWJ network essentially cuts down the time you might spend on scouring job boards and allows you to focus your attention on acquiring positions instead of just searching for them.
The site also offers job hunting tips such as figuring out how full your freelancing plate is and why targeted job searches work best. The advice also extends to actual writing as well, including such information about plagiarism and making sure your query gets to the right editor.
Taking in all the important aspects of FWJ to a freelance writer’s career, we are excited to announce that Demand Studios and FWJ have joined forces – you can read about the partnership on FWJ here!









