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Author: Brad Johnson

Brad Johnson is an author and blogger who helps writers discover their niche, build successful habits, and quit their 9-5. His books include Ignite Your Beacon, Writing Clout and Tomes Of A Healing Heart. For strategic content and practical tips on how to become a full-time writer, visit: BradleyJohnsonProductions.com.

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Thinking of using TikTok? Wondering how to publish your first TikTok video? In this article, you’ll discover how to use TikTok’s in-app recording, editing, and effects features to create your first TikTok for business. #1: Get Acquainted With the TikTok Interface TikTok has experienced massive growth in the last 12 months with nearly 1 billion […]

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This 30-Day Course Will Help You Earn a Living Online as a Freelance Writer

Freelance writers come from all walks of life. Few of us knew as youngsters this is what we’d do for a living.

That means many of us don’t study anything related to writing or business, or even follow a career path that would naturally lead to freelancing. We usually just have to sort of dive in and figure it out.

Writer Gina Horkey pivoted from her work with a family-owned financial firm to freelance writing and virtual assistance in 2014.

She had no formal training or professional experience, but she put up a website, wrote for Huffington Post in the early mornings to build clips and found her first paying client within two months by leaning into her experience in personal finance to quickly carve out a niche.

She made more than $800 in her first month of paid work. She’s since written for big-name financial firms and publishers, including BMOHarris, Discover and GoBankingRates.

Now she teaches others how to launch their own freelance writing or VA business through her well-known “30 Days or Less” courses and her blog, Horkey Handbook.

Through her course 30 Days or Less to Freelance Writing Success (30DOL), Gina promises, “If you give me just 30 days, I’ll give you everything you need to build a high-paying freelance writing business.”

I’ve been freelancing for nearly 10 years, and I wish I’d found this course at the beginning of my career. I recommend it to any writer who wants to quit their day job and quickly find paid writing work.

How to find freelance writing success

Without training or experience, Gina attributes her success to grit. She was unhappy in the job she’d had for 10 years and determined to develop a career she loved as a writer.

Gina recommends goal setting and networking to set a foundation for your new career or side hustle as a freelance writer. But the real driver of your success will be how much work you put in.

Gina got up to write at 4:30 a.m. until she left her day job at the end of 2014. She’s a mother of two, and her new income had to continue to support her kids and husband, who’s a stay-at-home dad.

Your goals might be different — maybe you define success as a side hustle, extra income that pays off your debt or a hobby that lets you share your talent and explore your creativity.

Whatever success means to you, you have to commit to doing the work to get there. 30DOL is a great introduction to how that work might look and where to start.

Who should be a freelance writer?

As Gina’s story illustrates, anyone can become a freelance writer. The work doesn’t require formal training, and you can start small to build experience that will help you get better clients and make more money.

You should, at least, enjoy writing. There’s no sense in being self-employed at something you don’t enjoy — finding clients and managing your finances are unnecessary work if you’d be just as happy working for someone else.

Freelancing is for people who want to carve their own path. Gina left behind her full-time job because she was unhappy there, and she chose freelance writing because she wanted flexibility and autonomy. She developed her writing skills along the way.

As long as you enjoy it, writing is a learnable skill. Tons of writing websites, communities and courses exist to help you hone the craft, so don’t be intimidated if you’re not a star writer (yet). You can learn with practice and experience.

30 Days or Less to Freelance Writing Success: Course details

30DOL is an all-online course that covers the basics of becoming a freelance writer: what kind of writing you can do, how to find clients, how to pitch, business basics, building a website and self-promotion.

It includes 12 text-based modules and a 90-day pitch challenge. Course participants can also purchase a membership to an exclusive Facebook group for leads and support.

Text-based modules that cover the basics of freelance writing

The text-based modules cover:

  • Laying the foundation: Set goals for your freelance business and build a support network of friends, family and colleagues.
  • Types of online writing: Learn the industries, mediums, formats and topics you can specialize in, plus what kind of writing pays best.
  • Where to find paid work: Research your target audience or clients, tap into your existing knowledge and find work through job boards and other sites.
  • Get your pitch on: Learn what makes a good pitch, how to keep track of your pitches and how to get started with a 90-day pitch challenge.
  • Establishing your business: Keep track of your finances, decide whether to create an official business, set your rates, create invoices and contracts, write your bio and polish your LinkedIn profile.
  • Building your writer’s website: Learn what your website needs (and why you need one).
  • Web hosting and WordPress tutorial: Learn the nitty gritty of creating a site, including registering a domain, setting up hosting and how to navigate WordPress. This module also includes video tutorials to show you how to set up pages and other functions in WordPress.
  • Promoting your new business: Build your brand on social media and email, and protect yourself as your profile grows online.
  • Honing your writing skills: Get tips for coming up with ideas, formatting for the web, using images, conducting research, interviewing sources; and writing for various markets, including content marketing, copywriting, SEO writing and B2B writing.
  • Helpful tools: Get an overview of the Google suite, tools and courses to help you write better, and tools to streamline your pitches.

Each module includes several lessons, a checklist of action items to apply the lesson to your work and a quiz to help you evaluate what you’ve learned.

Each lesson ends with an action step or several, which I love. They’re filled with useful resources, including Gina’s own worksheets, personalized tools (like the Pitch Tracker) and links to third-party resources.

90-day pitch challenge

The course doesn’t present the challenge as a separate component — it’s just part of the pitching module — but I think it’s a section worth pointing out for its unique value. The 90-Day Pitch Challenge encourages you to send 10 pitches per weekday — 600 total by the end of the challenge.

It sounds like a lot — but that’s the point. Setting the goal to write and send tons of pitches forces you to get into the habit of brainstorming, researching publications and pitching. Plus, you’re bound to get at least a few yeses out of 600!

The challenge includes a free Pitch Tracker spreadsheet so you can track where and what you’ve pitched, contact information and responses.

This challenge is a good example of how 30DOL drives participants to action. You get a framework for action and the tools you need to succeed — you just have to commit to the work.

Optional add-on: Facebook group for leads and support

30DOL course participants have the option to purchase a $33-per-month membership subscription to the exclusive VA Leads Facebook group, where you can network with other freelancers, get support from Gina and her team and take advantage of shared client leads.

The benefit of the additional price tag is the group is pretty small for an online community — fewer than 500 members when I checked. And you know everyone there is serious about making their freelance business work. That makes for focused and valuable discussion, and the intimate size gives you better access to career and course support.

The membership also includes a free Flywheel WordPress hosting account, usually $15 to $30 per month.

Pros and cons of 30 Days or Less to Freelance Writing Success

My favorite aspect of 30 Days or Less to Freelance Writing Success is its focus on actionable advice. Every lesson includes explicit action steps, so you know how to apply what you’ve learned to building your freelance business.

Most importantly, the advice in the course is sound. Gina shares action steps and exercises she used to find success as a writer, and I’ve had success with many of the same tactics throughout my career. It’s safe to say you’ll find freelance writing work by following the steps recommended in the course.

I also like that the lessons are text-based, because it keeps the course simple and accessible. You can read them on any device. The course platform is easy to use on desktop or mobile, so it’s easy to bounce around among modules and mark them as completed when you want to.

The biggest drawback to the course is it’s a lot of information to absorb as a new freelancer. It’s everything you need to know to run a freelance business and make it your main source of income. You could become overwhelmed if you try to tackle it all as you start freelancing, especially if you’re writing on the side of a full-time job.

But the course is a trove of information and resources you’ll find valuable throughout your career. Once you sign up, you’ll have lifetime access to the course, so you could take it slow and revisit things like building your website and promoting your business when you’re further along.

How much does 30 Days or Less to Freelance Writing Success cost?

The course costs either a one-time payment of $297 or four monthly installments of $89 ($356 total). Registration gets you instant, lifetime access to all course modules and materials.

Access to the VA Leads Facebook group (which includes free WordPress hosting) costs an additional $33 per month, and you can make your first payment when you register for the course.

Is Gina Horkey legit?

In a nutshell, yes! Gina Horkey is absolutely legit. She has shared her advice with The Write Life readers before, and we’re happy to recommend her course to anyone who wants to kickstart a freelance writing career.

Gina has been working as a freelance writer, covering personal finance, freelancing and entrepreneurship, since 2014. Throughout the course, she’s transparent about her finances, sharing her early income wins and goals.

She’s built a strong network around Horkey Handbook courses and resources, and her readers and students share glowing online reviews.

If you’re not sure whether you’re ready to dive in, check out Gina’s article on becoming a freelance writer, including some worksheets to boost your writing business, to see what she has to offer.

Bottom line of our 30 Days or Less to Freelance Writing Success review: Gina Horkey knows what it takes to launch a freelancing career from scratch, and she laid out the blueprint in 30DOL. 

Following the action steps in the course will almost certainly get you freelance writing work. The course might be a bit too comprehensive for side hustlers, but it’s well worth it if you’re ready to make writing your full-time job.

This post contains affiliate links. That means if you purchase through our links, you’re supporting The Write Life — and we thank you for that!

The original version of this story was written by Cruz Santana. We updated the post so it’s more useful for our readers.

Photo via GuadiLab / Shutterstock 

The post This 30-Day Course Will Help You Earn a Living Online as a Freelance Writer appeared first on The Write Life.

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If anxiety, boredom, overwhelm, or (ahem) listlessness have paralyzed your creative work, here’s a quick writing exercise to get you going again: 1. Make a list. 2. Repeat.

Lists for Writers: 2 Steps to Jumpstart Your Writing Habit with Lists

Lists for Writers in Life and in Fiction

This week I’ve been revising a character in a work-in-progress. She makes lists to deal with uncertainty in her life to give her a feeling of control. (Is she based on me? No. What makes you say that? *closes desk drawer holding a sheaf of lists*)

Some of the lists my character makes echo the daily mundane lists we all make: 

  1. Water the plants.
  2. Get the dog groomed.
  3. Drop the car at the shop.

In a normal week, that list is completely attainable. Some of her other lists, though, border on the absurd:

  1. Learn to make lemon meringue pie.
  2. Visit the Alps.
  3. Remodel the master bathroom.

Now this second list isn’t unreachable, but as goals she’d like to finish in the six weeks before her husband returns from a long trip, complicated by the fact that she doesn’t have a working oven or the budget for travel or a remodel? Yeah, the list is absurd for the timeline and situation. 

She organizes her thoughts about a murder suspect in a list. She prioritizes escape routes in an albeit rushed list. Her lists are a quirk of her character and they’ve been fun to write, even if I’ll delete most of them by the end.

But there are other ways to jumpstart your writing habit using lists for writers.

A List of Reasons We Love Lists

As I revised, I remembered a section in Austin Kleon’s book Keep Going about how lists help make sense of a chaotic universe (highly recommend this book, especially right now). He mentions lists such as: to do, to draw, to learn, not to do, and thank you lists. These are all great starting points and can get you writing on a day you are stuck.

What makes a list satisfying? 

  1. Brevity 
  2. Specificity 
  3. Organization 

I wonder if we are drawn to list-making because it is a quick way to make sense of our day and world. Most people won’t journal, but nearly everyone I know makes lists. As I revised my character’s lists, I began pulling out the ones that didn’t advance the plot or reveal character. I put the discarded lists in a cut file and immediately began thinking about what our lists reveal about us. 

My grocery list reveals our food preferences and the reality of feeding four teenagers. My chore list shows what matters to me most in keeping our home clean(ish). If I collected all the lists I make daily, weekly, monthly into one book, it might be a boring book, but it would certainly show where I’ve been and what I cared about. 

In The Writing Life, Annie Dillard writes, “How we spend our days is, of course, how we spend our lives. What we do with this hour, and that one, is what we are doing. A schedule defends from chaos and whim.” She’s referring specifically to a schedule, but isn’t a schedule just another type of list? 

Rethink the List

As a writing exercise, a list can be a quick, concise collection of sorts, one that forces you into rapid fire ideas. A title provides the prompt and you can fire off as many ideas as you like. Is this too simple for a writing prompt?

Maybe. But consider: we are surrounded by content organized this way: top 10 books or songs, top 30 entrepreneurs under 30, top five murder suspects in books or film. Open any site and peruse its articles and you will likely find a list.

What creative lists could you make?

A List of Lists You Can Make

Just like most old ideas, it merely takes your specific viewpoint and creativity to make a list into something fresh and delightful.

And what better way to end this article than with a list of lists for writers?

  1. Maybe you love cream puffs and dogs. Can you mash that up into a list?
  2. Are you a sports buff? Make a list.
  3. Are you trying to get in a daily writing habit? Start a list of topics you will or won’t write about.
  4. Passionate about mixed drinks and murder? Top five drinks for amateur sleuths, complete with recipes. (OK, I might be stopping to go write that list right now.)

If you find yourself stuck, unsure what to write, I’ll point you back to the exercise we began with: 1. Make a list. 2. Repeat.

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Do you like lists? When have you seen lists used creatively in fiction, TV, or film (I’m thinking of the movie How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days)? Share your ideas for creative lists or list prompts in the comments and play along! 

PRACTICE

If your brain is circling with things that you need to get done, write a quick list with those items and put it away for now. Our goal with this first list is to clear space. 

Now, here’s a list for writers: two creative list-making prompts. Pick one and make a list of your own:

  1. Pick three topics you know a lot about. Try to mash up two of them in a short list. 
  2. Take a daily task and combine it with something absurd: Laundry Tips for Zombies or Yard Work for Errant Knights.

Choose a title to organize your list. Be brief and specific.

Take fifteen minutes to make your list. Share your practice in the comments, and be sure to leave feedback for your fellow writers! Can you add items to their lists, too?

The post Lists for Writers: 2 Steps to Jumpstart Your Writing Habit With Lists appeared first on The Write Practice.

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Thinking of going live on Instagram? Wondering how to attract more viewers or what tech to use? In this article, you’ll discover four tips to plan, promote, and broadcast your next Instagram live. Why Use Instagram Live? One of the fastest ways to build rapport with your Instagram followers is through live video. Live experiences […]

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99p Ebooks for Lockdown Reading

For the duration of the coronavirus crisis, Granta Books is running special offers on themed selections of our ebooks to make them as accessible as possible. Each week we’ll announce a new theme, and five titles which you can purchase for no more than 99p. This week’s theme is American Fiction.

Leaving the Atocha Station
Ben Lerner

Adam Gordon is a brilliant, if highly unreliable, young American poet on a prestigious fellowship in Madrid, struggling to establish his sense of self and his attitude towards art. Buy from Apple Books or on Kindle.

Dept. of Speculation
Jenny Offill

Written with the dazzling lucidity of poetry, Dept. of Speculation navigates the jagged edges of a modern marriage to tell a story that is darkly funny, surprising and wise. Buy from Apple Books or on Kindle.

Whatever Happened to Interracial Love? 
Kathleen Collins

Written in the late 1960s and early 1970s but overlooked in Kathleen Collins’s lifetime, these stories mark the debut of a masterful writer whose electrifying voice was almost lost to history. Buy from Apple Books or on Kindle.

We the Animals
Justin Torres

From the intense familial unity felt by a child to the profound alienation he endures as he begins to forge his own way in the world, this beautiful novel reinvents the coming-of-age story in a way that is sly and incredibly powerful. Buy from Apple Books or on Kindle.

This Book Will Save Your Life
A. M. Homes

Richard is a modern-day everyman, a middle-aged divorcee trading stocks out of his home in Los Angeles who needs no one. His life has slowed almost to a standstill until two incidents conspire to hurl him back into the world. Buy from Apple Books or on Kindle.

The post 99p Ebooks for Lockdown Reading appeared first on Granta.

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Welcome to this week’s edition of the Social Media Marketing Talk Show, a news show for marketers who want to stay on the leading edge of social media. On this week’s Social Media Marketing Talk Show, we explore Instagram rolling out the ability to view live video and direct messages on desktop, and other business […]

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