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Archiv for ‘writing skills’


published: July 24th, 2009

5 Killer Tips to Make Money Online Writing Articles Online

How to Make Money at Home Using Social Bookmarking

Recently in these recession hit times, a large number of people are trying to make money writing articles on the internet along with other means like forum postings, blogging, online trading etc.

Using search engines, a potential loyal reader, client or webmaster may never see your content. By bookmarking and tagging your content you are seen and evaluated by humans who then decide if your content is worthwhile. Bookmarking is an easy way to get recognition for the pages in your website. This is a great way of telling the world that you have new content. People interested in your niche will check it out and, if its good, the reward of free traffic and one-way backlinks will follow.

Selling Photos

If you’re a dab hand with a camera and have a good eye for a captivating frame then you can make money by submitting your pictures to a Stock Photography website where the world can marvel at your fine photography skills. You will be paid usually on a ‘per download’ basis or sometimes you may be offered a flat fee from the outset. The great thing with this is that it gets you out and about snapping pictures and will earn you a few bob if your chosen subjects are currently in demand.

Following are some tips on how to make money writing articles and most of you might find these points useful.

These tasks seem fairly simple but people don’t seem to understand these concepts. You have probably searched for something and ended up at a site that isn’t even related to what you were looking for. Actually it’s probably happened to you a lot just like everyone else on the internet. And what did you do? You clicked out of the website never to return.

Most amateur and part time writers tend to write articles on general topics like cooking, fitness, food, drinks, sports and so on but the large volume of articles in such general categories, don’t “monetize” as compared to the other more specific or technical topics, and this might put you at a disadvantage and lower the demand for your articles.

Resource Author Francisco Rodriguez Higueras
Todo sobre Juegos para gente que le gusta jugar
Encontrar un Trabajo – Empleo es facil si sabe donde buscar

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published: July 5th, 2009

The World In Writing

Writing has always fascinated me, the reason is that we all have access to the same amount of words and after all there are only so many words. Yet there are so many different combinations to put all these words into that we all have the same opportunity to create a great Story or Poem.

If we produce our own work then how do we know if it is worthy of the public to read. Up until recently it has always been down to some body within a Company of Publishers that decides whether you work will see the light of day. This is what can be so soul destroying for anyone that writes.

Think of all the great books that we haven’t read because it was down to Publishers whether they got to print or not, how do they know what the public wants. Have they ever actually asked them.

Those Stories or Books may have been loved by millions yet they have never had the chance to get out there into the world.

Times are changing and because of the Internet you can get your work that you have written out there for all to read. You don’t need the nod of the Publisher, You don’t have to send your work to endless Publishers only to recieve the same outcome.

I myself love writing, it’s the excitement of creating what ever you want out of words and using all your imagination and expressions. I am making my work available for the world to read, I know not everyone will like it, in fact some will probably hate it. The point is I have the freedom to share it, there is no point in writing if nobody gets to read it.

I hope that in the future more and more people use the Internet to let the world experience their own word creations. Say No to Publishers and Yes to choice.

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published: June 1st, 2009

Life, Class and Correspondence

How one communicates with world is an immense indication of one’s class. Although class has a great deal to do with how one carries oneself, perhaps even how one dresses, a keen barometer of this elusive thing called class is correspondence. The jaunty, and often garbled, text message — even the casual email — fails to do justice to the notion of class. With the tactile sensation of paper in hand, of embossed decorations, even a personalized stationary, you are just communicating. Mere communication is not correspondence.

A letterpress note, signed by a beloved friend or relative is something that will pass on through generations. The case is not even being made for handwriting a correspondence, indeed it is completely acceptable to type your missive, as long as you hand write a salutation and a valediction. The purpose, to be sure, is to communicate, but to do so with the direct intention of creating something that will stand the test of time. A deleted email or text message is as disposable as the world we live in.

We instinctively covet things — items, baubles that we can cherish and pass down. The letterpress has survived longer than the automobile, aviation, and even movable type. The letterpress may even outlive the Internet. We shall see. The point is a tool so ancient and revered is one that has survived precisely because we are creatures that seek out heirlooms. A beautifully crafted sheet of paper is no different. It is the exception to find a married couple that does not have at least one copy of their wedding invitations under glass.

We are creatures, divinely curious and hopeful, who need things to remind us of one another. You cannot cherish an email. You cannot frame a text message. For messages that truly matter, which will resound beyond a mere mortals lifetime, something more is required. Indulge in the wisdom of your elders and indulge in a set of custom-crafted invitations or stationary. We are feeling creatures, doomed to the beauty of a world that we cannot take with us when we pass.

J.B. Lieberman, the leader of the American Chapel movement in the late twentieth century said it best when he quipped: “YOU can print! You can do real printing, even if now you can’t tighten a nut, can’t boil water, can’t tell type from tape, live in one room with three other people, and have to hoard your money. It’s simple, it’s fun, it’s useful, and you’ll have something to show!” To be sure, to have something to show is the key, not just to your immediate intimates, but also to the generations yet to be born.

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published: December 11th, 2008

Tips – Writing Coach

Since I’m both a writing instructor and a writing coach, people are always asking me, “What’s the difference between a writing instructor and a writing coach? ” Here’s what I tell them. A writing instructor is someone who teaches a mortal (or persons) HOW to write.

A writing instructor can teach various types of writing such as technical writing, writing for children, resume writing, writing screenplays, etc. Generally, a writing instructor or teacher is needed when someone wants to learn the craft of writing in one genre or another. A writing coach can also teach the mechanics, or the “how-to” of writing, from time to time.

The writing coach’s client needs help with specific strategies to develop a focus for his writing (and perhaps even for his writing career) and then comes to the coach seeking additional help maintaining that focus. But generally, a writing coach works with a person (or persons) who knows the mechanics of the type of writing he wants to write, but he has trouble staying on track.

But a writing instructor develops the focus for the instruction he or she is presenting to the student(s), while, with a writing coach, the client is directly or indirectly responsible for setting the focus of each coaching session. Both writing instructors and writing coaches can help motivate the writing student or client.

Think of it this way. If you know the kind of writing you would like to do, but you don’t have the skills, education, and training required for this type of writing, then you probably need a writing teacher or instructor.

On the other hand, if you HAVE taken courses, workshops, and other training and are skilled at the type of writing you wish to pursue, yet you can’t seem to stay motivated or focused long enough to complete that book you’ve always wanted to write, or you can’t figure out how to use your skills to develop a full-time writing career, then you probably need a coach.

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