#also seeing elon musk being mentioned gives me a jump scare every time
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There is nothing like learning you are bad at something because you had to do it at school (looking at you, business management)
#school#high school#classes#i haven't even been to a proper class and I am already in hell#i only did it because all my friends were doing it AND THEY ARE IN A DIFFERENT CLASS#there is three classes and I am all alone#my teacher is my year 7 and 8 math teacher#he knows me from before I would read fanfiction in class#maybe he was there when I first discovered it because I think i started reading it in year 8#for context I'm in year 11 now#also seeing elon musk being mentioned gives me a jump scare every time
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7 Problems That Every Single Writer Faces Before Becoming Successful
Unsplash / Brad Neathery
Starting out as a freelance writer can be scary, confusing, and leave you feeling more than a little overwhelmed.
There is so much information out there itâs hard to know where you fit into the bigger picture.
There is good news though: youâre not the first freelance writer to ever have to deal with these problems.
Every writer who came before you, and all of the ones who come after you, has to contend with the same problems in order to be successful.
1. Having no idea where to start.
Every new freelance writer finds themselves staring blankly at their computer screen with what they need to do to get started.
Do you perfect your portfolio? Do you start a blog? Do you look for jobs on content mills? Do you look for jobs because a guru said you shouldnât use content mills? Do you create a LinkedIn profile? Do you start guest blogging? Do you try and do of it?
Itâs easy to see why the default response is closing your laptop, heading to the couch, and losing yourself in a new Netflix series. Trying to make sense of it all is a full time job in and of itself. No wonder Elon Musk likened starting a new business to chewing glass whilst staring into the abyss.
Dealing with this problem isnât as hard as you might think, though.
All you have to do is choose one item from your List and commit to doing it until completion. It doesnât matter if itâs the right action to take, it just matters that you do it. Why?
Because when you take action youâre not scared anymore. Youâre lost in the moment, free from resistance, and able to tackle whatever might be thrown at you.
Once itâs completed you can take a step back and think, âDid that help me achieve what I set out this morning to do?â If the results are positive, do more of that. If theyâre negative, choose a different option and try that one instead.
Wash, rinse, and repeat.
2. Feeling like youâre a sellout.
Writing purists will tell you that youâre not a real writer if you donât make your money through publishing books or having a huge online following.
If youâre writing anything that they donât consider to be true to the sacred art of writing, youâre a sellout. A hack. A word-based prostitute selling your soul.
âŚand itâs all bullshit.
As Jeff Goins points out in his book of the same title, â Some of the greatest works of art have been made upon commission.
Neil Gaiman, Ernest Hemingway, Kurt Vonnegut, and Terry Pratchett all spent time writing for newspapers. It was a way to how to write, build a following, and get paid to learn to write. Were they sellouts too?
The modern day equivalent to taking a job at a newspaper is freelance writing. Finding niches that you love and writing about them because youâre interested, you want to learn, and you want to feed your family.
Youâre not a sellout. Youâve just found a way to get paid to do what you love.
If thereâs one thing Iâve noticed about these writing purists itâs that many of them donât make any money writing. They preach their values at you from the comfort of their motherâs spare room, or after a hard day at a job they hate.
Iâd rather use my skills to help people, master my craft, and pay my bills whilst Iâm alive than hope my book sells when Iâm dead.
3. Thinking your writing just isnât good enough.
Each new freelance writer asks themselves the same question, âIs my writing good enough?â
Itâs a sadistic question we all have to ask ourselves. And, in business, it makes sense. If you canât string together a sentence you probably be a freelance writer.
But good writers being overcome by the fear that their writing isnât quite good enough is what kills most careers before they ever began.
Every time I submit an article â even after four years of writing online â Iâm worried is going to turn around to me and say, âYour writing is
I still toy with the fear that all of my clients are going to realize that Iâm making this up as I go along and my writing is terrible and cancel their contracts and leave me to go back to my job in a shoe shop selling sneakers for seven bucks an hour.
But despite all of this, Iâve come to learn that this fear is a blessing. Itâs what keeps you alive as a writer.
It you edit your writing. Try new techniques. Read books. Absorb feedback (even if it feels like a knife to the heart when an editor tears apart your piece). Then use it all to go on and become a better writer.
The writer who is comfortable, who has decided their writing is good enough, is the one whose writing will become truly awful.
If you ever feel like this problem will get the better of you, take the time to read this passage from Neil Gaiman and how he feels about his writing after publishing at least 37 books and having a net worth of around $18 million:
You have to have a level of confidence in your writing to sit down and have the audacity to write an article that someone will spend their time reading. But you also need to have a little self doubt to keep you from becoming stagnant.
4. Feeling like getting hired is impossible.
When you first start out it feels as though every client wants you to have published portfolio pieces to get hired. But in order to get those published portfolio pieces you need to get hired in the first place.
It feels like a never-ending cycle that you canât see a way out of. And, itâs enough to turn your away from freelance writing altogether.
When Iâd open my emails to find rejections letters saying that I didnât have enough portfolio pieces Iâd want to scream, âHow the hell am I supposed to get them if you donât bloody hire me!?â at the screen.
But when I took a step back I realized that there were lots of opportunities to get portfolio pieces that didnât involve me getting paid. And when you realize this for yourself your entire business begins to change. Think:
Do you have any friends who need a website? Do you know someone with a blog? Can you contact a local business and offer to write for them for free? Can you contact someone on a job board and offer to write in exchange for a testimonial?
The cruel world of freelancing is that if youâre stuck itâs your job to get yourself . Nobody is going to come along and fix the problem for you.
5. Dealing with rejection.
Every new freelancer has to face rejection and every time it feels like a dagger plunged straight to the heart of your self-worth. (It doesnât get much better with experience, either).
In my early days Iâd get rejected for articles, throw my arms in the air, walk away from my laptop, and proclaim that I was going to make a success of this. Youâve probably felt like doing (or have done) something similar.
But there is a way to reframe rejection to make it work for, and help you actually feel good about getting rejected.
It all starts with a simple question you need to ask yourself you start any interaction:
This question allows you to focus on and not the (read: you getting paid).
When you look at it this way everything that happens is to help the client get the results they need.
You can help them by not working with them because itâs not what they need right now.
You can help them by giving them a few tips on how to improve their blog and then leaving them to do it on their own.
You can help them by recommending another freelancer because youâre not the right person for the job.
Youâre also able to decide if youâre the person to help them. Perhaps the best way to help this person is to let them find another freelancer to do the work instead.
There is probably some self-help, spiritual term for this. I just call it putting the clientâs needs first. And it helps rejection much more palatable by showing you it was the right decision at this time.
So, the next time you write a pitch, go into a meeting, or jump on the phone, ask yourself this question and watch the fear of rejection melt away.
6. Feeling like you canât charge what youâre worth.
At the start of your career money is the most topic of conversation.
You never know what to charge and it can be uncomfortable to name a price.
Youâre met with this horrible fear that the potential client â who youâve got on the hook â is going to turn you down and leave you with nothing if you charge what you really want.
How often has someone asked you for your price and youâve written, deleted, re-written, and done some quick maths on your phone calculator before you finally replied to their email?
If youâre anything like I was, quite a lot. I remember once I wrote for $300 just to avoid mentioning the rate I wanted to charge.
This is completely normal and itâs not your fault that you feel that way.
But there comes a time when every freelance writer has to sit back and think, âIâm damn good at what I do. Why am I not charging what Iâm worth?â
When you realize clients need you as much as you need them and that youâre equal in this relationship. Youâre not to your potential client. Youâre not negotiating a contract so you work for them.
Youâre working on a contract so that youâre able to create something incredible together.
7. Your friends and family donât understand what you do.
When I first started out I had a group of friends who could not wrap their head around what I did.
They told me it was a hobby, not a job. That Iâd never get paid for writing. That I should go back and get a proper job with a pension plan and dental and stop trying to get paid for something I enjoyed doing.
My Mum thought it was a risky decision. There was no guaranteed income, so how would I pay bills? Surely there wasnât money to be made until you were in the top flight of authors. You could see the worry on her face the minute I told her Iâd quit my job to be a freelancer.
After four years of writing and a successful business later people still say to me, âI donât get it, how do you make money?â
When I work from home people still come in and talk to me and ask me mundane questions and invite me to go to the shops. Despite the fact Iâm clearly working. (They should be used to me still being in my pajamas at 2pm by now, right?).
The truth is that the majority of people you know wonât understand what you do. Theyâll be confused â or scared â by it. Theyâll try and talk you away from it because it doesnât fit in with view of the world and how it should work. Theyâll distract you because the concept of making money whilst sitting in your slippers is alien to them. And itâs not their fault.
No matter what, you have to stay strong against their pull. Their arguments are convincing and their intentions are good.
But the reason wanted to be a freelance writer is because you see the world, and your skills, in a different way. You want something else for yourself.
You have to learn how to say no, or that you donât agree, or that youâre working right now and youâll sadly have to decline. That the risks, once you realize someone pay you for your work, are really worth it.Â
Read more: http://ift.tt/2eP6wuT
from Viral News HQ http://ift.tt/2lf276S via Viral News HQ
0 notes
Text
7 Problems That Every Single Writer Faces Before Becoming Successful
Unsplash / Brad Neathery
Starting out as a freelance writer can be scary, confusing, and leave you feeling more than a little overwhelmed.
There is so much information out there itâs hard to know where you fit into the bigger picture.
There is good news though: youâre not the first freelance writer to ever have to deal with these problems.
Every writer who came before you, and all of the ones who come after you, has to contend with the same problems in order to be successful.
1. Having no idea where to start.
Every new freelance writer finds themselves staring blankly at their computer screen with what they need to do to get started.
Do you perfect your portfolio? Do you start a blog? Do you look for jobs on content mills? Do you look for jobs because a guru said you shouldnât use content mills? Do you create a LinkedIn profile? Do you start guest blogging? Do you try and do of it?
Itâs easy to see why the default response is closing your laptop, heading to the couch, and losing yourself in a new Netflix series. Trying to make sense of it all is a full time job in and of itself. No wonder Elon Musk likened starting a new business to chewing glass whilst staring into the abyss.
Dealing with this problem isnât as hard as you might think, though.
All you have to do is choose one item from your List and commit to doing it until completion. It doesnât matter if itâs the right action to take, it just matters that you do it. Why?
Because when you take action youâre not scared anymore. Youâre lost in the moment, free from resistance, and able to tackle whatever might be thrown at you.
Once itâs completed you can take a step back and think, âDid that help me achieve what I set out this morning to do?â If the results are positive, do more of that. If theyâre negative, choose a different option and try that one instead.
Wash, rinse, and repeat.
2. Feeling like youâre a sellout.
Writing purists will tell you that youâre not a real writer if you donât make your money through publishing books or having a huge online following.
If youâre writing anything that they donât consider to be true to the sacred art of writing, youâre a sellout. A hack. A word-based prostitute selling your soul.
âŚand itâs all bullshit.
As Jeff Goins points out in his book of the same title, â Some of the greatest works of art have been made upon commission.
Neil Gaiman, Ernest Hemingway, Kurt Vonnegut, and Terry Pratchett all spent time writing for newspapers. It was a way to how to write, build a following, and get paid to learn to write. Were they sellouts too?
The modern day equivalent to taking a job at a newspaper is freelance writing. Finding niches that you love and writing about them because youâre interested, you want to learn, and you want to feed your family.
Youâre not a sellout. Youâve just found a way to get paid to do what you love.
If thereâs one thing Iâve noticed about these writing purists itâs that many of them donât make any money writing. They preach their values at you from the comfort of their motherâs spare room, or after a hard day at a job they hate.
Iâd rather use my skills to help people, master my craft, and pay my bills whilst Iâm alive than hope my book sells when Iâm dead.
3. Thinking your writing just isnât good enough.
Each new freelance writer asks themselves the same question, âIs my writing good enough?â
Itâs a sadistic question we all have to ask ourselves. And, in business, it makes sense. If you canât string together a sentence you probably be a freelance writer.
But good writers being overcome by the fear that their writing isnât quite good enough is what kills most careers before they ever began.
Every time I submit an article â even after four years of writing online â Iâm worried is going to turn around to me and say, âYour writing is
I still toy with the fear that all of my clients are going to realize that Iâm making this up as I go along and my writing is terrible and cancel their contracts and leave me to go back to my job in a shoe shop selling sneakers for seven bucks an hour.
But despite all of this, Iâve come to learn that this fear is a blessing. Itâs what keeps you alive as a writer.
It you edit your writing. Try new techniques. Read books. Absorb feedback (even if it feels like a knife to the heart when an editor tears apart your piece). Then use it all to go on and become a better writer.
The writer who is comfortable, who has decided their writing is good enough, is the one whose writing will become truly awful.
If you ever feel like this problem will get the better of you, take the time to read this passage from Neil Gaiman and how he feels about his writing after publishing at least 37 books and having a net worth of around $18 million:
You have to have a level of confidence in your writing to sit down and have the audacity to write an article that someone will spend their time reading. But you also need to have a little self doubt to keep you from becoming stagnant.
4. Feeling like getting hired is impossible.
When you first start out it feels as though every client wants you to have published portfolio pieces to get hired. But in order to get those published portfolio pieces you need to get hired in the first place.
It feels like a never-ending cycle that you canât see a way out of. And, itâs enough to turn your away from freelance writing altogether.
When Iâd open my emails to find rejections letters saying that I didnât have enough portfolio pieces Iâd want to scream, âHow the hell am I supposed to get them if you donât bloody hire me!?â at the screen.
But when I took a step back I realized that there were lots of opportunities to get portfolio pieces that didnât involve me getting paid. And when you realize this for yourself your entire business begins to change. Think:
Do you have any friends who need a website? Do you know someone with a blog? Can you contact a local business and offer to write for them for free? Can you contact someone on a job board and offer to write in exchange for a testimonial?
The cruel world of freelancing is that if youâre stuck itâs your job to get yourself . Nobody is going to come along and fix the problem for you.
5. Dealing with rejection.
Every new freelancer has to face rejection and every time it feels like a dagger plunged straight to the heart of your self-worth. (It doesnât get much better with experience, either).
In my early days Iâd get rejected for articles, throw my arms in the air, walk away from my laptop, and proclaim that I was going to make a success of this. Youâve probably felt like doing (or have done) something similar.
But there is a way to reframe rejection to make it work for, and help you actually feel good about getting rejected.
It all starts with a simple question you need to ask yourself you start any interaction:
This question allows you to focus on and not the (read: you getting paid).
When you look at it this way everything that happens is to help the client get the results they need.
You can help them by not working with them because itâs not what they need right now.
You can help them by giving them a few tips on how to improve their blog and then leaving them to do it on their own.
You can help them by recommending another freelancer because youâre not the right person for the job.
Youâre also able to decide if youâre the person to help them. Perhaps the best way to help this person is to let them find another freelancer to do the work instead.
There is probably some self-help, spiritual term for this. I just call it putting the clientâs needs first. And it helps rejection much more palatable by showing you it was the right decision at this time.
So, the next time you write a pitch, go into a meeting, or jump on the phone, ask yourself this question and watch the fear of rejection melt away.
6. Feeling like you canât charge what youâre worth.
At the start of your career money is the most topic of conversation.
You never know what to charge and it can be uncomfortable to name a price.
Youâre met with this horrible fear that the potential client â who youâve got on the hook â is going to turn you down and leave you with nothing if you charge what you really want.
How often has someone asked you for your price and youâve written, deleted, re-written, and done some quick maths on your phone calculator before you finally replied to their email?
If youâre anything like I was, quite a lot. I remember once I wrote for $300 just to avoid mentioning the rate I wanted to charge.
This is completely normal and itâs not your fault that you feel that way.
But there comes a time when every freelance writer has to sit back and think, âIâm damn good at what I do. Why am I not charging what Iâm worth?â
When you realize clients need you as much as you need them and that youâre equal in this relationship. Youâre not to your potential client. Youâre not negotiating a contract so you work for them.
Youâre working on a contract so that youâre able to create something incredible together.
7. Your friends and family donât understand what you do.
When I first started out I had a group of friends who could not wrap their head around what I did.
They told me it was a hobby, not a job. That Iâd never get paid for writing. That I should go back and get a proper job with a pension plan and dental and stop trying to get paid for something I enjoyed doing.
My Mum thought it was a risky decision. There was no guaranteed income, so how would I pay bills? Surely there wasnât money to be made until you were in the top flight of authors. You could see the worry on her face the minute I told her Iâd quit my job to be a freelancer.
After four years of writing and a successful business later people still say to me, âI donât get it, how do you make money?â
When I work from home people still come in and talk to me and ask me mundane questions and invite me to go to the shops. Despite the fact Iâm clearly working. (They should be used to me still being in my pajamas at 2pm by now, right?).
The truth is that the majority of people you know wonât understand what you do. Theyâll be confused â or scared â by it. Theyâll try and talk you away from it because it doesnât fit in with view of the world and how it should work. Theyâll distract you because the concept of making money whilst sitting in your slippers is alien to them. And itâs not their fault.
No matter what, you have to stay strong against their pull. Their arguments are convincing and their intentions are good.
But the reason wanted to be a freelance writer is because you see the world, and your skills, in a different way. You want something else for yourself.
You have to learn how to say no, or that you donât agree, or that youâre working right now and youâll sadly have to decline. That the risks, once you realize someone pay you for your work, are really worth it.Â
Read more: http://ift.tt/2eP6wuT
from Viral News HQ http://ift.tt/2lf276S via Viral News HQ
0 notes