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Time Management – Free Report Download

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Working with Demand Studios has shown me that I need to get to grips with time management.

This isn’t something that’s new to me. I’m well aware that I get sidetracked very easily. Particularly when doing online research – which writing for Demand Studios is really all about.

Consequently I’m putting a few brakes on myself to try and streamline my working process and stay more focused on the task in hand.

So I’ve been looking around on the net a bit, (hmmm, does that count as getting sidetracked?) for some time management tips. When I come across any I’ll pass them on here.

Here’s one, it’s an affiliate link but don’t let that put you off. The report is free to download and it contains some good advice with regard to getting more done in the allotted time: Time Management Secrets of a Madman

Speaking of Demand Studios – I’m now on my 8th article for them and my work is beginning to appear online. The regular payment is very nice, the not having to come up with ideas is nice too. The search for assignments can be a challenge (more on that later) and is another area where I need to be more proactive with my time management.

Here’s that link again. And remember, it’s a free download. Nothing to lose but your timewasting habits.

Time Management Secrets of a Madman

Demand Studios Rewrites

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I was a little bit more canny with my next choice of assignment titles.

“Write about what you know” is almost a mantra for writers, so I decided to put it to use in a practical sense.

What do I know?

Well, sometimes that’s a hard question to answer. I know loads. Lots of little bits about a lot of subjects. But what do I know really well?

Writing.

I know how to write, and I know how to teach other people how to write – or at least how to make their writing better and avoid some of the pitfalls.

I plugged ‘writing’ and various alternatives into the demand studios filter and came up with a title on the writer’s code of ethics which I quickly claimed.

Having one title left out of my initial three, I did a little thinking ‘outside the box’, and found another title relating to telling stories to preschool children which I also claimed.

Writing about the code of ethics was easy for me, the research and writing combined took just over an hour. That’s better than my long ramble with the raccoons of a few days ago. I’d like to do it faster, and maybe when I’m more familiar with the DS style and voice I’ll be able to. For now, I’m happy with that.

Shock, horror. The article came back within hours asking for rewrites. Glancing through the rewrite requests it seemed just about everything I’d written was flagged for change.

I’d expected the raccoons to come back. They didn’t. I didn’t expect the code of ethics to come back. It did. Lesson. Don’t assume anything with Demand Studios. Copy Editors work to strict guidelines (as do the writers) and theoretically we’re all working to the same rules. Interpretations, however, differ.

For instance, I didn’t include a caption with the illustration I sent with the raccoons. No problem there according to the CE who reviewed it. But the copy editor who reviewed my second article insisted all photos must have a caption.

To be fair, the rewrites were very simple changes and on reflection I couldn’t argue with any of them. They were small changes, but as writers we know what a huge difference small changes to word order or language can make.

I made the changes as requested and resubmitted and, happily, the second version was quickly accepted. Again within hours.

The point I’m making here is that you just can’t be precious about your words. If you get a rewrite request, just do it. Of course there are instances when the request is wrong or will change the meaning or angle of your article, and in those cases you need to think carefully about where you stand on the issue. If the change goes against the grain with you then maybe you need to walk away from it. But you don’t niggle about the small stuff. It’s not worth it, not even when it surprises you.

First Article with Demand Studios

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It’s been a month since I signed up with Demand Studios. This week I decided I’d better do something about it.

The search for assignments is actually quite hard, and the amount of documentation that details the style, content, level of research, referencing system etc is staggering.

Whilst I haven’t been actively writing for Demand Studios since signing up, I have been dipping into the various style guides and reading the forums – and thinking this is waaay too much work for what they’re offering.

Anyone who tells you it’s a piece of cake, or even a scam, hasn’t been there. Yes, once you know how it probably is easy. But so is everything when you’ve learned it. The Demand Studios learning curve is quite steep.

But I lost a relatively lucrative gig this month. So, here we go. I always said Demand would be more of a standby than a main earner. I just didn’t expect to need the standby this soon.

The Search for Assignments

Back to the search for assignments. When you first start out with Demand Studios you’re allowed to claim a maximum of 3 titles. You have to get those approved before you’re allowed any more. Once you pass the magic 3 acceptances mark you can maintain a rolling total of 10 titles.

You’re presented with literally hundreds of article titles on just about every topic under the sun. And yet I couldn’t find a single one that appealed to me. I gave up the first search thinking this just wasn’t for me.

But I’m nothing if not persistent, so I went back again, and this time tried searching a little bit more intelligently. There’s a filter box where you can enter specific keywords for the subject you’d like to write about.

An Unwise Choice

I like animals. I’ve written about dogs before (http://www.dogtrainingguidance.com) so I thought I’d see if that threw anything my way and started searching for animal-based titles.

I actually ended up myself quite a task. I found a title that involved raccoons and how they mark their territory. Okay. I can do that, thinks I.

Ha! Do I know anything about Raccoons? Nope. Did I set myself up for a load of reasearch? Yep. Are Raccoons triksy little beasts that change behaviour depending on their geographical location? Yep. Does that make documenting their habits in 500 words harder? Too right.

The article took over three hours to write. Very bad on Demand Studios pay.

On the upside, it was accepted straight away which surprised me no end. I was sure I’d have a rewrite call.

Lesson learned. Choose titles that I know at least something about. 2 to get then I get to the magic 10.

PS – I managed to get my first article accepted immediately, but it took me 3 rewrites before they liked my Bio because I wasn’t presenting it just exactly as they liked. And even now, when it’s been accepted, they’ve changed what I wrote. They maybe should have written it themselves in the first place.

Writing with Demand Studios

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I’ve decided to give writing with Demand Studios a try, and I’ll log here how it goes and whether it turns out to be worth the effort or not.

First Impressions

Having got through the application process, which took about four days and involved submitting my resume along with a writing sample, I was required to fill in my profile/bio and submit tax information before I could claim any assignments. Fair enough. I’ve read a lot from people who object to giving tax information online (understandably), but as I’m writing from the UK all this meant for me was to give them my contact details and declare I was outside the USA. Nothing scary there.

The attractive thing about writing with Demand Studios is that it’s always there, with writing assignments on tap when other work is a bit scarce.

The pay’s not great, but if you’ve spent any time browsing the writing gig boards and become depressed over the number of $2 jobs, then $15 at Demand Studios suddenly doesn’t seem so bad. At today’s conversion rate it’s somewhere around the £9.80 mark for 400 – 500 words.

It’s definitely not a way to get rich through writing, but it is (possibly) a way to find ongoing motivation to write that has a tangible reward with twice weekly pay days through PayPal.

There are a lot of assignments.

I can’t claim any before filling in the resume/bio bit, but I could glance through what was available. It’s a real mixed bag, with some titles making no sense whatsoever. I can see finding titles to claim could become a big time drain – and if writing with Demand Studios is going to pay then time is of the essence.

I’m putting a strict time limit of one hour on each assignment I take on, and that has to include the research, gathering of resources and sources where needed, and the writing. My practised ability to freewrite will pay dividends here.

Guidance for New Demand Studios Writers

Of this there is a ton. Everything from style sheets to finished, approved articles. It’s all in the resource centre. Whereas some people like to dive right in and get writing, I’m in the camp that likes to have a good read around what’s expected of me. Yep, I always read instruction manuals before I press buttons on new gadgets, and yep, I drive the family mad.

So I approached writing with Demand Studios in the same fashion, and I’m reading everything, including forum postings on the newbie board so I can get an idea of what other new Demand Studios writers have struggled with.

I advise any other new writers to do the same. The forum community seems friendly, helpful and knowledgeable.

As each submitted assignment has to go through an editing process, most new writers worry that they won’t pass, or that they’ll be fired for getting rejections. Or they fret over why something was rejected and whether or not a rewrite is worth the time. The more experienced writers provide a steadying, reassuring voice and I’ve yet to come across any patronising voices – the biggest turn off for newcomers who want to ask questions.

It’s early days for me, having not even claimed my first assignment yet, so I have no idea how it’ll turn out.

The thing is to make it work for me rather than the other way round. The articles/assignments aren’t rocket science, but I can already see that the format and research could make writing with Demand Studios time consuming if I don’t choose titles carefully.

Off to find one then. As a newbie, I have a maximum of three, which I need to write and get approved. After that I can maintain a queue of ten.

I’ll let you know how it goes.

Getting Over the Writing Blues

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Following on from the ‘secretive’ post, I did a little hard thinking and decided I needed to get myself out of that kind mindset.

I suppose we all have crises of confidence at some point. Maybe it’s the time of year, maybe it’s the fact that there seems to be so little freelance writing work that actually pays worth a damn, coupled with the depressing news generally on the publishing front.

It’s easy to start thinking ‘why bother’ and ‘one more day off won’t make any difference’.

So I took a couple or three days off. Nursed and nurtured the sulks that a client who’d promised fresh work in the new year still hasn’t come up with anything, and depressed myself further looking over the job bidding sites. (Don’t do it, it’ll make you cry.)

Then I decided that this behaviour just won’t do and set about turning myself around.

First Step

- Revisit my motivations and reasons for wanting to write.

- I love writing. From coming up with ideas (sometimes the hardest part for me), to researching my subject, to the physical act of typing and watching the words mount up on the page.

- I love working for myself. Yes it’s hard to prioritise and harder still to make family understand that the length of time I spend buried in the computer is actually me at work.

Second Step

- Plan specifically what I can do right now, today, to help me land writing assignments in the future.

- To that end I started designing and writing a new, more professional-looking and focussed personal website which advertises and promotes my freelance and ‘work for hire’ writing, and nothing else.

Third Step

- Look in new places for writing work to seek out new clients.

- Contact old clients and say hello. (It’s just a note, but it’ll remind them I’m alive and you never know, maybe they need some writing done).

- Find an advertised assignment that I can complete and apply for it. Anything within reason will do, just to feel I’m being proactive. I don’t have to accept the work if I change my mind later on.

- Seek out new print magazines and come up with at least two ideas for ones I’m attracted to.

So far I have done all of the above bar the last step which I’m still working on.

Results are promising.

After only two days I have offers of work. Maybe they’re not the most lucrative writing jobs in the world, but these missions, should I choose to accept them, will keep me writing, keep the ideas flowing and the skills honed, and remind me on a daily basis that I’m a writer and people pay me to write.

If you’re feeling demotivated, give it a try. Maybe you’ll get some work, or maybe you’ll luck out this time, but one thing’s for sure. DOING something, WRITING something, CREATING something is the best cure for a crisis of confidence and the sense of demotivation it brings.