Copywriter’s Block

Get Rid of Your Writer’s Block!

Writer’s block is horrible, especially when there’s a deadline looming. It really is a nightmare for someone who is supposed to write large chunks of text on a daily basis. I don’t often get it, but when I do I use several techniques to help shake it off.

In the past, I used to try everything to get rid of the dreaded block; hanging upside down, kissing a frog (with tongues) at midnight, slapping myself with a wet fish, gargling water, gargling vodka…but none of it worked (- though I did get myself an interesting reputation).

To make matters worse, I believe there are two kinds of block that can fuzz up your brain:

There’s the kind where you have to write 2000 words and now that you’ve got through 500 of ‘em there’s nothing else to say. And then there’s also the kind where you have a blinking blank-screen that’s not going to get filled any time soon.

When I was at university I used to get them both quite regularly, and I learnt to deal with it the hard way!

The “blinking blank-screen block” is the easiest kind to quash. But please be aware that it won’t go away on its own; you can make three cups of coffee and it’ll still be there waiting, staring at you…

Writer’s block tips

I’ve written it and I can think of no more! 500 words into my 2000 word document and it’s no good. There really is nothing else to say.

Ah, but this is an easy kind of block to beat. Read through what you have written, I know, you’ve done it a million times by now, but – do it anyway. Underneath, list the points you have made in the order that you have made them. Highlight the most important points and brainstorm from each. If you’re trying, you’ll be able to think of several extra ideas. Now to make it better, link the ideas you have come up with, with the ones you already have to improve the structure. Add the highlighted bullet-points to the work you have done and there, you’ll be able to expand. Just fill out the points and make sure they link nicely. 500 words soon becomes 2000.

The other kind of block

If you know what you want to say, but can’t get it out on to the page, you should bullet-point a structured list. The page is no longer blank and you can work from anywhere you like. Write the conclusion first, if it helps.

If you still can’t write you should find a similar article, short story, news-report (or whatever) that you have written before. Take a random few sentences and mix them up to create new meanings. You’ll have a mess, but it’ll be a starting point and often gives you that creative spark that whirrs your brain back into action.

You can do the same with quotes. Find a useful quote relating to your article. Introduce it, talk about it – and there – you’ve started writing. It’s as good a way in to a writing-piece as any and it doesn’t require too much effort.

Alternatively, get someone else in to help. Ask them to write the first sentence and take that as your starting point. They may well come from an angle you weren’t expecting, and this is often all you need to jolt yourself into action. And, if you need to, you can always go back and change the first sentence later.

Adrenaline can help too. You often hear of students leaving their essays to the night before the deadline. The adrenaline helps them get the essay text out the way. However, I wouldn’t suggest that you do this; there are often issues with quality and coherence. But, if you do some mild exercise you can get the blood pumping, the endorphins flowing and, if it’s a competitive sport, the adrenaline rushing. It will, believe it or not, help you think more clearly – and your block will have disappeared, along with any lethargy.

George Chilton is an experienced Advertising and SEO copywriter at Herds of Words. He has fourteen years experience as a magician and public speaker and can be contacted at ezinearticles@herdsofwords.co.uk george@herdsofwords.co.uk
Or come join the herd at

Article Authors; What are Your Daily Statistic Increase Figures?

Many online amateur and professional online article writers have considered their over all statistics. This is smart thinking, but the true test of article author stats are the daily statistic increases. Let me illuminate this subject for you.

Currently, my page views increase 4,000 to 10,000 per 24 hours, depending on Over All Internet Traffic and what is in the News and what folks are searching. My Ezine Publisher pick-ups increase about 65 to 3000 per day or so. Average is more like 150-250. I just hope everyone understands that these numbers do not lie. These numbers of daily article statistic increases have been going up since the first day I stated writing some 19-months the prior. The true importance is not how many article views a single article does, but rather an authors increase of exposure over time.

The longer articles are out on the Internet and syndicated the better they will do and the more attention they receive. The more articles one writes the more the entire group of articles will do. In the end the daily statistic increases are all that count, because this indicates how well the online article author is doing out there. Please consider all this in 2006.

“Lance Winslow” - Online WorldThinkTank.net/wttbbs/ Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance in the Online Think Tank and solve the problems of the World; WorldThinkTank.net www.WorldThinkTank.net/

Writing a Book About Future Technology - Are You Really Up For It?

How hard is it to write a book about future technologies? Well, it may not be as tough as you think. In fact I have just written three eBooks on Future Technology and it was indeed a whole lot of fun actually. The three books were:

Hoverboards and Skate Boards of the FutureTruck Technologies of the FutureHolographic Projection Technologies of the FutureIf you decide to write an eBook on Technology, well that might be a cool project. I am writing an eBook for “Motorcycles of the Future” and “Cars of the Future” too. Yes I think I have written some stuff on Skateboards in my Hoverboard eBook, which blow low pressure under them and a re-design for the segway scooter.

I see DARPA and several other groups have been haphazardly working on these things, but now with lighter materials and new technologies. (Carbon nano-tubes, fuel-cell, plastic based solar panels, magnetic based wheels, etc.).

Well I believe that there will indeed be a few more chapters written in the annals of the Skateboarding, this trend is not over heck it is just warming up. What is the best way to get started on a Future Technology eBook? Well pick a subject that you know about and then go search your files.

In the case of the skateboard or hoverboard eBook - I did not realize I had so much on inter-related subjects. I did recall some interesting articles I had written on Skateboards with WiFi, iPods and “Intel Inside” as well as skimmer boards for the street, verticals and water. I simply imagined skateboarders in the fountains without ever touching the concrete, Property owners would not complain, no damage would occur? Except slip and fall injuries.

This was a fun project and I was happy to do the research background work and send write down my thoughts. Maybe the new skateboards will cause kids to lose weight? If you are going to write a Technology Book on the Future then do your research, study what is available and have fun, oh and send me a copy too. Thanks a million and may all those dreams come true.

L. Winslow is an Economic Advisor to the Online Think Tank, a Futurist and retired entreprenuer. Currently he is planning a bicycle ride across the US to raise money for charity and is sponsored by Calling-Plans.com Calling-Plans.com and all the proceeds will go to various charities who sign up.

A Prolific South Carolina Travel Author and Writer

Today, Norm Goldman, Editor of Bookpleasures.com and Sketchandtravel.com is excited to have as our guest, Barbie Perkins-Cooper.

Barbie is a playwright, travel writer, author and an award winning screenwriter. Barbie lives in Charleston, South Carolina and is an expert on SC as well as North Carolina and other geographical areas. Barbie is also the author of a soon to be published Insides′ Guide to Asheville, NC

Good day Barbie and thank you for agreeing to participate in our interview.

Norm:

Please tell our readers a little bit about your personal and professional background. When did your passion for travel writing begin and when did you start traveling? What keeps you going? How do you come up with ideas for what you write? What methods do you use to flesh out your idea to determine if it’s salable?

Barbie:

Thank you Norm. It is a pleasure to be here and to discuss travel writing. I have been a writer since the third grade of elementary school. My first science fiction story was published many, many years ago, all to the credit of my third grade teacher and father. Of course, like most kids, I failed to see the thrill and passion of writing until later in life. In the 1980’s I suffered from depression and started writing again. Looking back, I discovered I did have a flair for words, so I joined a writers group giving myself ten years to achieve something, or I’d only write for fun and family letters.

In 1994, after writing my first screenplay, I entered a few screenplay competitions, after suggestions from my agent, and I was selected as a finalist. My passion for travel writing started in 2003 after attending a travel writing workshop hosted by Sharon Spence Lieb. She inspired me so much that I had to put my credentials to the test. Within 24 hours, I had my first FAM trip. I have been working as a travel writer since October 2003. At first, it was a struggle, but with each decline, I persevered, determined to achieve my goals.

Since I write (and revise) my goals every January, my goal for 2005 was to target guidebook publishers. I developed a proposal, based on the Charleston, SC community. Because I was still working full-time at a college, like most writers, my desk was stacking high with e-mails and snail mail to read. I targeted the higher paying markets, at first.

In December 2004, I submitted a query to a travel guide site, pitching an idea about Charleston. The editor responded stating she had just finalized the Charleston guidebook but she liked my style and wanted me to keep in touch. Flash forward to May of 2005. The clock was ticking as my job was downsized and I had no clue what I would do after June 2 when my career in the Corporate World ended. I knew I wanted to write, so I reread my dusty goals, and those cluttered e-mails, finding the correspondence with the editor. Quickly, I sent her another e-mail, and within minutes (or so it seemed) she responded, wanting a proposal from me within three days. I wrote the shortest proposal in history and sent it to her.

After a few weeks of negotiations, we agreed on the contract and now I am working on my first guidebook, Insiders’ Guide to Asheville, NC, scheduled for publication in the spring of 2007. My father lived in Asheville for many years, and I have several friends there, so I felt comfortable writing about the city. After that doorway opened, a few magazines I had targeted previously responded to my queries and now, I am publishing travel stories on a regular basis.

The things that keep me going are the people, places, and things I discover while traveling. I love meeting the people and discovering the flavor of the area.

On a recent trip to one of the devastated areas from Hurricane Katrina, I met a displaced man from New Orleans. Although he had relocated, he still had a passion for life. He will be a character I use in a story. The stories I discover at each location inspire me to look deep within to discover the actions and characters revealed. Not only is there a character, there is adventure.

While traveling, you get to try new adventures you never anticipated before. On a trip to Alabama, we visited the Alabama Music Hall of Fame. My goal and dream as a teenager was to become a famous singer. Unfortunately, I never pursued that dream until I stepped into the Alabama Music Hall of Fame, and there, I was able to record a song while the group cheered me on. My dream was now reality!

On a trip to Kentucky, I interviewed blue grass musicians, coal miners, male quilt makers, and singers. During each interview, I discovered that regardless who they were, despite all of the adversities in life, these people held a passion for life in their hearts, and a love for their town and artistry. Each time I meet and interview someone, I am inspired with new stories to tell. On another trip, I met a mother who was desperate to save her daughter’s school in Kentucky. The more we talked, the more I realized this was a story I needed to tell others, and I am still sending queries pertaining to her story and the educational plans of Kentucky.

The methods I use to determine if a story is marketable are to determine the angle I will use and I research the markets, answering the questions:

Who is the story targeting to and what angle?

What markets may I approach?

Who cares about this story?

Resources I use weekly are:

Writersmarket.com

Writer’s Guidelines, 4th Edition by Brigitte M. Phillips, Susan D. Klassen, and Doris Hall

The Internet

Fortunately, after many hurdles, I now have editors approaching me about story ideas. It’s taken me years to accomplish this, but it is exciting to finally have regular assignments. Nevertheless, I still have a goal of sending five query letters out weekly, and I have an idea spreadsheet that I update with new story ideas, almost on a weekly basis. I encourage all writers to write goals down. Build an ideas file, update on a regular basis, and never give up. Always remember, one editor’s rejection will be another editor’s acceptance. It has certainly happened to me, and each time, I’ve submitted that same query, or an updated version, to another market.

Norm:

As you are very familiar with South Carolina, if you had to choose eight of the most romantic venues for a wedding celebration, honeymoon, or romantic getaway, which ones would you choose and why?

Barbie:

Eight romantic venues in the South Carolina area for weddings would be:

Any of the beautiful churches in the downtown area of Charleston are romantic and stunning for weddings. There are so many that it would be really hard to choose which one, although St. Michael’s Episcopal Church is the one that really stands out in my mind.

Grace Episcopal Church is another breathtaking beauty for a wedding. The architecture, statues, and ceilings are stunning.

Sullivan’s Island Beach I’ve seen several beach weddings along the shores of Sullivan’s Island. With the backdrop of the ocean, and the sand dunes along the shore, the view makes for a beautiful setting.

Alhambra Hall a garden wedding on the lawn, overlooking the harbor of Charleston and our new signature bridge the Arthur Ravenel, Jr. Bridge. Many of the weddings are held on the lawn, decorated with all white chairs draped in white bows, ribbons, and flowers, lining the walkway for the bride. One particular wedding had a red and white theme, a red carpet, white chairs and the bridal attendants dressed in red. This was an afternoon wedding and was gorgeous. At Alhambra Hall, the reception may be held either outside or in the fellowship hall area. This building was remodeled after Hurricane Hugo and it is a beautiful, romantic setting for receptions, weddings, and family reunions. Book it early it usually has a long waiting list!

Magnolia Gardens Magnolia Plantation and Gardens is another dramatic place to hold a wedding, especially during the spring time when the gardens are in full bloom. There is a beautiful white bridge serving as a backdrop that makes a gorgeous site, also, a gazebo. Since the trend in Charleston is to host a wedding outside near the gardens, Magnolia Plantation is definitely a romantic place to make the special, romantic times of a wedding spectacular.

Park locations including the Waterfront Park, located in downtown Charleston, White Point Gardens, Hampton Park, and Washington Park. Waterfront Park provides the scenery of the harbor, and deep in the horizon a view of the new bridge previously mentioned. The other parks have breathtaking views serving as a mesmerizing backdrop, so any of the parks in Charleston, especially during the spring time, can make a beautiful wedding. For additional information about park weddings visit HERE

The Citadel If you’ve never visited Charleston and driven by the Citadel, you are missing a great picturesque view. Summerall Chapel hosts a variety of weddings. The campus, complete with landscapes, interesting architecture and military history is beautiful. CLICK HERE

Boone Hall Plantation with the sweeping landscapes, plantation home, and the history attached to Boone Hall Plantation, this is the perfect location to have a traditional Southern wedding, full of charm, heritage, and romance that would make Scarlett and Rhett envious.

In the Charleston community, there are so many romantic and beautiful sites it is truly difficult to narrow the locations down to only eight. Since I love the ocean, I enjoy the beauty of the city at the Battery, and while walking along the beach. For additional sites to consider, CLICK HERE

Norm:

What does travel mean to you? As a traveler and fact/story-gatherer, what is your biggest challenge on the road and how do you overcome these challenges.

Barbie:

If I had to define travel, I would define it as a thrilling adventure and exploration about life and people. I find people fascinating. I enjoy watching them, their body language, and their zest for life. Almost everyone has a story to tell and to share.

The biggest challenge I have while traveling is sometimes I am so rushed I don’t have enough time to get all the ideas completed. These ideas dance inside my head until I can get them down on paper. That is why I always ask for contact information because I know I’ll have additional questions when I transcribe the notes.

I practice the idea of following up by sending thank you letters within two weeks of my trips, and I try to point out something significant that happened during my trip. Another practice I strive for is to take photographs plenty of digital photographs! If I have an image as reference, my brain will usually retrieve the information.

Norm:

Besides writing travel articles, what other writing gigs have you found profitable or rewarding? As a follow up, you have written in various genre, which ones do you prefer, i.e. travel writing, screen writing, etc

Barbie:

You’ll laugh when I share this information! Although I am a travel writer, many of my credentials are in construction. Since my husband was in construction for many years, I broke into the construction industry, writing stories about highway roadbeds, tilt wall construction, bridge construction, shopping center renovations, John Deere and Komatsu equipment, and a few stories about the construction workers.

Although the pay wasn’t well, it was a stepping stone for me to break into magazine and newspaper writing, and the stories were regular, dependable assignments. Other genres I’ve written for include health and beauty, elder care, business journals, hospitality, food, bedding (a recent story about the new Revive Marriott bed) military venues, and of course, travel.

In 2001, I published a non-fiction memoir titled A Condition of Limbo. I’ve also written seven screenplays, four plays, and I am presently writing a memoir titled, Chattahoochee Child. In October 2005, that story won second place at the South Carolina Writers Workshop writer’s conference held in Myrtle Beach, SC. Lately, most of my time is spent on my guidebook. The deadline for the final project is scheduled for June 2006, with the spring 2007 as the publication date. I am excited about this project and continue to schedule time to write travel stories.

Norm:

What advice would you give to someone who is considering going into travel writing in order to achieve success?

Barbie:

My friends tease me constantly about writing so much, but as we know, life is a challenge. Life is much too short to look back with regret, so every day, I strive to make the most of that day. Writing is something I attempt to schedule on a daily basis, although as writers know, life does have a way of breaking into the demands of our busy lives. Writers must continue to work towards their goals and dreams and never give up. We must persevere with belief and pride for what we do.

The best advice I would give to a writer considering travel writing is to learn all that you can learn and to establish your goals every January. I am constantly adjusting my goals, but for 2005, my goal was to land a book contract. Following the guidelines I wrote, I achieved that goal this year by following up with editors. I have a notebook on my desk titled Follow up. I file all comments from editors, contacts, etc. in that booklet and refer to it at least once a month.

Networking is crucial. Last week while on a press trip I met an editor and now I have an assignment with her. Networking is the key.

If truly interested in travel writing, contact the Convention and Visitors Bureaus (CVB’s) introduce yourself along with your credentials and request consideration to be added to their press list. I have made many contacts by doing this. Most of them are most receptive to assisting with story ideas and they will make suggestions.

Another suggestion is to start out slow. I made the attempt to break into the bigger markets, only to discover the majority of them have staff writers they use. I write for trade and regional magazines, and now I’m writing a guidebook. The most important suggestion I would tell anyone wanting to break into travel writing is to never give up. A writer must keep marketing. Build a web site (or hire someone else to do this for you). I am not a web master, so I use resources that will assist me. Carry business cards everywhere, and introduce yourself as a writer. After all, if you don’t believe in yourself, how can others believe in you?

Norm:

Is there anything else you wish to share with us that we have not covered?

Barbie:

Yes, I would like to end this interview by saying you must move forward and believe in yourself. Whenever a writer receives a rejection, move on to the next submission. Once, for a construction magazine, I sent a spec assignment, only to discover the editor did not like it. He phoned me stating that he was returning it because it did not meet his needs. I thanked him and moved on, looking for another market. Exactly 24 hours later, I received a phone call from the same publication, but a different editor. He stated he needed an invoice to pay me for the story. I was shocked, stating that only yesterday I was told it was being returned. He replied that he was the new editor and was publishing the story verbatim and he needed an invoice.

This is only one example of how we must persevere. What is one editor’s rejection could be another editor’s acceptance. Never give up! Find your stories while looking for the unique characters. Develop your voice and style. Listen to what your editors say, but believe in your talent, passion, and ability to communicate. Practice your goals, readjust when necessary, and make certain you follow up and practice what you preach to others.

Thanks once again and good luck with all of your future endeavors.

Norm Goldman is the Editor of the travel site, sketchandtravel.com/ Sketchandtravel.com and the book reviewing and author interviewing site bookpleasures.com/ Bookpleasures.com.

Norm is also a travel writer and together with his artist wife, Lily, this unique couple meld words with art focusing on romantic destinations.

Norm also offers an express book review service that you can find out more about by clicking on: bookpleasures.com under the heading of express review services.

Helpful Guidance on Writing an Article

Here is some helpful guidance for writing an article, whether it’s in print or on the Web.

The first thing that is important is to avoid the use of the passive voice. While passive voice is okay occasionally when you’re writing an article it shouldn’t be prevalent. Active voice lends excitement and sounds much more powerful. It is the difference between it got done to them and they did it. See the difference?

Make sure you maintain control of any article you write. This is one place where you can be fairly dogmatic. Telling someone not to use the passive voice is a much stronger instruction that to say “you might want to avoid the passive voice.” Not only that, you will come across much more firmly as the expert who knows what to do. Don’t be ‘wishy washy’ when you′re writing an instructional article.

Internet users are skim readers - they do not read word for word. So keep your sentences and paragraphs short. Use short snappy headlines and sub-headlines and make good use of bullet points.

Nor should your article writing be vague. You will want to include plenty of details and keep in mind the only newsroom adage of including who, what, when, where, how and why. In fact, if you’re writing in print these topics should be summarized in the first paragraph of the article that you’re writing.

Get your facts right when you’re writing an article. One wrong fact and you’ve lost your ability to influence those readers. Especially if you’re writing an article as a marketing tool for your firm by presenting yourself as an expert in your field and industry, you’ll not want to be known as someone who gets her or his facts wrong. Not only can it be embarrassing. It can lose you money. Your business won’t get those new customers from your article writing, nor will the site or publication ask you to do any subsequent article writing.

Just about any article you are writing should have at least one example. It’s personalizing, it’s clear and it takes your article from the realm of boring to easily understood. Readers can more easily identify with what you’re trying to convince them of if you provide examples they can empathize with.

Perhaps the most important jvmembers.com″ target=”_blank article writing maxim to remember is that you should never present an article writing to your editor or to the public without your proofing it a good 24 hours after writing it, and without someone else whose eye and command of the language you trust proofing it as well.

Peter Morgan is the founder of jvmembers.com” target=”_blank “JV Members″ which is a new article publishing system, which enables anyone to earn money writing short articles at home - and it won’t cost you a penny! Click jvmembers.com” target=”_blank Earn Money Writing Articles to find out more and claim your Free Membership.

Writing Articles – A Basic Perspective

Writing articles is a subject of huge interest and much debate in the internet medium for well over 3 years and gaining momentum for the past year. The tremendous interest in article writing stems from one single factor. Website traffic!

Authors selling secrets of web traffic through search engine optimization, keyword density, email lists through their e-Books have made a huge pile of cash. But these secrets have been more of a time consuming effort with temporary results in the ever changing search engine algorithms.

The best kept secret of traffic is still the secret of good content. Writing articles is the surest way to create original content which the search engines love.

The question remains how many can create original content.

The answer is very few can. At least till now. However that situation is going to change soon and more people can become expert authors churning out an article per hour that can bring in traffic to their web sites. This article took just under an hour to write and edit.

But let us first get the perspective clear. Why free internet articles and how and who benefits from them.

Of the millions of web pages that we see very few have content that is written by web masters. They are all created by a few thousand savvy marketers who have understood the power of free content and article writing which could bring them name fame and free traffic.

Let us see how this article writing or free content strategy works as a win-win for all the people involved in the process.

The authors use article writing as a tool to market their own products and services by providing the hungry web masters with free content for their websites. At the end of the article is a resource box with a few lines about the author and his business with a link to his web sites.

The web site gets free content to keep their audience coming back. The author gets traffic through the link as the reader is interested in the article and looks for more information on similar subjects and clicks over to the writer’s website.

Now the issue is how the author finds the webmasters who will publish them. How do the webmasters find these articles and authors and get the permission to publish them.

There is one more link between the webmaster and the article marketer. These are the article syndication sites. Now these sites publish articles on a wide variety of subjects by the article authors with prior permission to publish them with certain conditions. The webmasters come to these sites and pick up the articles of choice for publication in their own websites.

There are five beneficiaries In this entire process.

The writer and author

Web Masters

Content syndication portals

Search engines

Web user seeking information

Each one acts as an interface for others constantly feeding and receiving a perfect flow of information through their articles and content.

Any one can become an expert author. This author too had been a novice but now recognized as a platinum level author by leading content syndication portals as www.ezinearticles.com with thousands of pages of articles to his credit. It only takes a little patience and perseverance and you too can turn out articles by the dozen.

Well. That is another article.

R.G. Srinivasan is a Managerial professional, Writer and Author. You can view his home-business resources blog at home-businessresources.blogspot.com home-businessresources.blogspot.com for online marketing tips, resources,links and business opportunities.

Writing Science Fiction and the Use of the Fear Factor

When writing Science Fiction it behooves the writer to look at past historical records of ancient civilization, tales, writings and all the conspiracy theories of the ages. Now then there are many Conspiracy Theories out there, all of which use fear. Some of the “Fear” controls used to control civilizations are well known. There are also many events, which seem real at the time or are actual very real threats.

These fears include such things as; Y2K, 9-11, Nuclear War, Comet Impact, Bird Flu, International Terrorism, Domino Effect, etc. And these are a good place to start. If you have been observing present period human societies and civilizations you have seen these fears, which keep coming up every 10-years or so you may start to get rather cynical. You may start to believe these fears are incited merely, as ways to control the masses and the powers simply want more control and this “fear factor” is enabling those folks more power.

One cannot deny the appetite of human civilizations for sound and fury, as they need to bite into something to improve their life experience and give it meaning (innate characteristic).

When writing Sci Fi, one would want to use such conspiracy theory fears to set up a “what if…” scenario and then push it into the future, as they design a probable or possible future using that line of thought. It makes for a good movie script, Novel or even a good selling computer game. Of course, then you have set up the battle, which must ensure and the characters on each side, which must fight it. Sci Fi Novelists must consider that the reader is looking to adopt a character in the work to side with. Therefore in such a futuristic battle you may wish to consider the individual stars and the antagonists. If you consider the battles in the movie “ANTS” or even “Rocky” it is about the individual, “YOU” vs “The World” or in this case the politically correct establishment of the “Borg” or “Gatica” and/or the Bad Guys with the death ray, such as George Lucas’s Darth Vader and Dark Side or Gene Roddenbury’s “Klingons.” Think on this in 2006.

“Lance Winslow” - Online WorldThinkTank.net/wttbbs/ Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance in the Online Think Tank and solve the problems of the World; WorldThinkTank.net www.WorldThinkTank.net/

Super Online Article Production; Team Strategy

Over an almost 20 month period, I personally wrote over 10,000 articles online. It was an impossible feat indeed. I look back at all that hard work and thought wow, I actually did it. Normally, I could care less what anyone else thinks, I just do not have the luxury of thinking there. Nevertheless, I impressed myself.

Others have asked me how I did it and it was a lot of hard work. Is there a short cut to such a goal? Well I believe if you are willing to cheat there is, that is to say put together a team of writers to do it for you. You know I am pretty certain with a team of 5 writers we could do 200 articles a day without any problem. How would it be done?

Well first, the writers would get one paragraph kick off and a title from a team of 2-3 people each morning. Each writer would get 40 articles. Each articles would contain one paragraph being about 50 words, which they would do on voice recognition software and put into a separate word file.

The night before the team of 2 or 3 would make 200 titles, specifically with correct key words and the one paragraphs starting point. At the bottom of each word file would be 3 sentences with ideas to add in. The paragraphs, titles and 3-sentences using Dragon 8.0 and then email the files to each person. The writers could use voice or not, that is not as serious because writing 40 articles already started is pretty easy doing them 10 at a time.

After each writer did ten, they would email them back to the central command and then there would be an editor read them add in key word content, perhaps re-work some sentences and then post them. And folks that is how I would do it, if I put together a team of writers for the online article submission venue as a strategy.

Of course this is not how I wrote 10,000 articles, but I see others envy what I have done and do not have the abilities I posses, so for them they are indeed going to have to cheat to beat the feat. I hope this article propels thought in 2007.

“Lance Winslow″ - Online WorldThinkTank.net/wttbbs/ Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance in the Online Think Tank and solve the problems of the World; WorldThinkTank.net www.WorldThinkTank.net/

Make Easy Money From Online Writing: Why You Need To Be Fast

Writing is a very easy way to make money online. However what many writers do not realize is the fact that the rules are very different from those that govern an offline writer.

The brutal truth is that your chances of making some serious money from your online writing are very slim and almost nil, if you can’t write fast. Assignments online pay much less and the only way to make a living is to have the ability to write very fast so that you will be able to take on many more assignments and complete them quickly to take on others.

Your writing speed will also determine the rate at which you are able to pick up new clients. Being a writer it makes a lot of sense for you to promote your services using your writing skills. Articles are actually a great and easy way to promote virtually anything online and to make money. This includes your online writing services. The more articles that you have out there with links pointing to your blog or site advertising your writing service, the higher the traffic, and the more the clients you will end up getting. The only way for you to get many articles out there promoting your service is for you to write them yourself or to get a ghostwriter to do it on your behalf. If you are a writer starting out, chances are that you will not be able to afford to hire another writer. You will have to write the promotional articles on your own. If you are a fast writer you will also be able to continue to write our promotional articles even as you handle client assignments.

If you have Adsense ads in the blog that you are using to promote your online writing services (and I recommend that you do) then, again, the more articles/pages you have in the blog, the higher the chances of making a decent income from Adsense.

Increase the extra cash you will earn from faster writing by discovering sites that will pay you for an endless supply of your articles at my 100grandonlinewriters.blogspot.com/2006/11/make-easy-money-from-online-writing.html make money writing blog.

Become an Instant Author by Playing Well with Others

You wrote a tips booklet. Maybe more than one. Oh wait, are you one of the people who still hasn’t done one yet? Not to worry. This is not leading up to any kind of guilt trip for you. This article is going in a completely different direction. Stay with me on this.

Look around you. You probably have colleagues, a circle of professional friends, people you utilize as a sounding board, as a mastermind, as a respite from your daily process. And you each like doing the work you’ve prepared yourself to do, whether it’s being a business coach, a hypnotist, a retailer, an artist, a realtor, or endless other possibilities. Yet you also love the idea of being a published author…someday, when you get around to it, when the stars and planets are aligned just perfectly. Or the idea of expanding an existing product line appeals to you, and a booklet seems to be the perfect answer for that. After all, these are some of the things that drove you to subscribe to this newsletter to begin with, right?

What would you and your colleagues think of jointly creating a tips booklet? Each of you would contribute several tips, have someone else oversee all of the production, give you ideas for marketing it. Each colleague shares in the costs, making the entire thing not only palatable but an exciting prospect and even fun to do instead of some kind of drudgery. It’s very possible this is a solution that just had not yet come to mind. I can almost see you sitting there saying some version of ‘yes, that’s perfect (or ‘brilliant’ for our friends in the UK).

Several years ago, a group of veteran professional organizers wanted to create a revenue stream for themselves so they did not have to tap the general budget of the umbrella association to which they belonged. About 100 organizers (104, to be exact) each contributed several tips. We then selected one tip from each person and created a booklet for the group. To date, the booklet has brought in quite a few thousand dollars for that group of veteran organizers. The great thing about that booklet is how it serves as both a revenue stream for the group plus it markets the business of each contributor in the booklet. You’ll find their name, business name, and city right under their tip. Every organizer whose tip is in that booklet instantly became a published author. Not only that. There’s more. Any booklet that a co-author distributes markets every other co-author in the booklet. Plus (and this is just so terrific) the booklet is of great interest to reporters and journalists in the media who love to interview more than one person for any article they write. It’s a ready-made mechanism for getting lots and lots of publicity.

I recently started a conversation with a representative from a group of about 15 health care professionals in related areas of expertise, exploring the idea of the group jointly co-authoring a booklet. Each person in the group contributes a handful of tips, shares in the production costs (bringing that way down), and becomes a published author. This takes much less time, m0ney, and brain damage than if any one of these people wrote a complete booklet themselves. That’s not to say they won’t ever do one on their own. It just means they will get one done probably sooner through the collaboration of this tips booklet anthology, and they will expand their reach every time any other co-author distributes this booklet.

Collaboration is far from being a new thing. Book anthologies are done all the time. Cookbooks have been put together just this way for years and years, with each person in a particular group contributing their favorite recipe. The “Chicken Soup for the …”series is probably one of the best known anthologies of recent times. It’s just taken awhile to realize that the same thing can be done with tips booklets, and done within any self-contained, self-formed group rather than a publisher of an anthology gathering unrelated people together to create the book.

Has your mind started racing about who you can approach to jointly do a booklet with you? You don’t have to be best pals with a colleague or love everyone in your mastermind group or agree with every pearl that comes out of every coach in your Special Interest Group, or think that each person at the recent chamber of commerce meeting was the most brilliant person you ever met. You don’t even need to live anywhere near each other in order to put together a collaborative booklet. All you need is to find a group of people interested in contributing some tips in a somewhat related field. Depending on the size of the group, it may be one or two tips, or 10-12 tips. In either case, it’s a minor amount of time, effort, and m0ney to instantly become a published author.

To find out more about getting started with one of these collaborations (and completed before you even realize it!), contact us.

Paulette Ensign has personally sold over a million copies of her own tips booklet, 110 Ideas for Organizing Your Business Life, in 4 languages and various formats without spending a penny on advertising. She has worked with hundreds of small business, corporate, and association clients, worldwide, helping them transform their knowledge into tips booklets. One of her association clients has made tens of thousands of dollars on their tips booklet anthology, with almost no marketing.

Contact Paulette at 1-858-481-0890 in California or visit tipsbooklets.com tipsbooklets.com for more details about your group’s tips booklet anthology.

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