When September’s blog post about times changing came up
last year, I never dreamed I would then go six (oops I guess now it’s 9 –
brings the point home though) months without a single post on a blog that has
been my passion, my stress relief, and a really devoted project of mine for
years. People who’ve followed me know
even when I’m “slow” – that means 1-2 posts a month. Until I disappeared. Letting the inner nerd of me out I’ll go to
Monty Python to assure everyone “I’m not dead yet.” Although I’ve certainly failed badly in
keeping the blog up and in even getting around to any “coming soon”
update. Even with the soon to be
mentioned in this post updates, a lot of those actions I meant to have happen
months ago.
I’m not dead yet – so where have I been?
But sometimes life gets in the way, sometimes you burn out, and sometimes it’s
just time to hit the reset button and be done with it. And sometimes you breakdown at the worst time
and are left with a mess to deal with in the aftermath. All of these combined only start to scratch
the surface of what’s been going on, and unfortunately even after all of that I
can’t honestly say I’ve had “time off.”
But it’s time for a change and time to return to my passions, and I
always did love this blog and all the amazing people I’ve been able to meet,
talk to, and help out along the way.
This is something that needs to come back as a major part of my life
again.
The last post even mentioned this in detail, and although
there’s been a mess of personal, financial, and other situations between then
and now, it’s finally time to just put that all behind and get kicking
again. I’m really invigorated and
finding my passion again, and I want the help given out by Master Dayton to be
a part of that.
So where is this freelance blog going?
So here’s the long post – probably the final super long
post on the blogspot blog although I will have smaller updates here always
pointing out when things are going on or when there’s a new post at the other
blog.
The kick-off of
masterdayton.com
also comes with some really cool announcements, but we’re about a week or two
away from that.
However the majority of
strong future posts will be at that new site and I want to encourage everyone
who wants to continue along for the ride to sign up on the e-mail list, which
will be getting really active in a very short time.
So before going on to my new thoughts, the changes on the
landscape, and what you can expect with a whirlwind of activity here in the
next few months I want to focus on the title of this post:
“How to fail as a
freelance writer and blogger”
This blog was never supposed to have more than a month
without a post, and I certainly never intended to disappear for now going on 8
plus months. In fact there are several
discarded drafts of Master Dayton blog posts that were started and then
abandoned on the way and never made it to the next publishing cycle. Some of what’s happened can be traced to
recent changes with Google updates and major freelance website writing changes,
while a lot of it goes from a ridiculously tumultuous year for me personally,
emotionally, financially, and basically every “-lly” out there you can imagine
that can turn your life upside down in an instant. Mix them all together and here’s where it all
happened. Just even when I thought life
was getting back to something even remotely akin to normal – this post has taken
several months to put together. Not a
good sign – except by the time you read this it’s been published and that means
progress has been made and it’s moving forward.
So getting back to the first point of this really long
post – how do you fail at freelance writing blogging or any type of blogging
for that matter?
For me there are 10
main points I can grab from my own personal experience (guess I should have
SEO’ed the title to 10 ways to fail at blogging, huh?) and hopefully you all
find these points helpful.
Another great
blog post on the subject you can find from Chris Deline, who used to run the
music blog “Culture Bully” (I know – great name, isn’t it?) and you can find
that URL at
http://chrisdeline.com/portfolio/how-to-market-your-music-online.
#1 Freelance blogging failure: Getting away
from your original passion
This is a huge one and one that really affects a lot of
bloggers at one point or another.
This
might sound weird: does that mean I no longer love freelance writing?
Well that wasn’t the original point of my
writing blog.
The idea of passive or
relatively passive income is still a passion, but I also never hid that I was a
creative writer first and fell into the freelance writing back in 2006 after a
2005 car accident on my birthday (see my
how
I became a freelance writer post for this one) and went on from then.
But my passion with this blog was helping others get
started from scratch. Whether it was a
college student making a part time income to prepare for after graduation,
someone on disability who just needed a little more to get by, a long time
unemployed person looking for anything to make ends meet, or a writer who had
no idea where to start – these were people I understood and whom I felt I could
help. That was the thing that was really
cool. Interacting with other people,
helping them get started or finding a new source of income, the really neat
comments and encouraging e-mails.
Helping others was great: but then as I wondered about keywords and SEO
or social function or marketing versus writing and whether or not I was getting
too advanced in lessons, eventually it just became frustrating and another
chore I had to do versus something I looked forward to all week.
In the end, I need to get back to what I’m most passionate
about: helping others. It’s been years
since I’ve been a true start from scratch beginner. Hopefully some of the old posts are helpful
(although the days of eHow, Demand Studios, and Associated Content are long
gone, among many others) but it’s not an area that really gives me the same
passion because I’m so far removed.
However basic freelance writing advice is always a good thing, and some
of the base tenants always apply. So the
fix to this is simple: go with the passion.
If right now that’s Kindle, re-evaluating Amazon associates and advanced
writing tips to get up to $30 a page or more, that’s what I’m going to write
about.
#2 Freelance blogging failure: Stretching
yourself too thin
This is one that really killed me and one that I am ridiculously
susceptible to. Part of the reason is
that I’m easily distracted and I’ve never been the type who can focus on one
single project for a couple hours at a time.
This means that it’s natural for me to juggle three, four, or more
projects at once. This isn’t bad in and
of itself but let’s take a look at this old list of what I was doing at one
point: eHow articles, HubPages, Squidoo lenses, daily Demand Studios articles,
daily writing for Constant-Content, Associated Content articles, Austin client
weekly reports, Iowa City client weekly articles, Guru.com 5-15 projects per
week, Elance projects, my own e-books and content for 25+ blogs and
websites. Try fitting all of that into a
weekly schedule. It doesn’t take long to
realize, that was not sustainable.
Now being diversified isn’t bad at all.
In fact, I highly recommend that.
However there is such a thing as going too
far and I can write an entire book about this.
Well I’m on Kindle now (as of this publishing it’s
my
first fiction Kindle book, but many non-fiction reports and books on
freelance writing will be coming up in the future, as well)
so maybe I will.
The point is I should have concentrated on
the three or four sources of income that were best for me now, and one or two
with the long term in the future.
There
was no denying some of these sources of income had far more potential than
others – and I failed to fully take advantage of that at the time.
Not only do I get to dream of missed $20-30k buyouts, but
also being too spread out meant I didn’t see the results as quickly as I
wanted, especially for long term projects, but there were times I had to work
on short term income when I wanted to go on a roll for long term projects. Being more focused instead of stretching in
100 new directions would have helped me out immensely. Don’t put all your eggs in one basket, but
don’t make the opposite mistake, either.
#3 Freelance blogging failure: Spend too
little time on long term projects
If you’re building big sites long term for Amazon
Associates or AdSense funding, or even a passion site you want to turn into a
business – these are long term projects because you’re not going to do it
overnight. Likewise there’s nothing
wrong with getting started with Guru.com, Elance.com, or $9-$15 an article
content mills found around online.
However, you always want to spend 10-20% of your time a week on long
term projects whether it’s residual income or cold calling local businesses to
build simple WordPress blogs and maintain them or finding the high end clients
who pay $30 or more a page. I understand
having to pay rent, but don’t sacrifice the long term.
#4 Freelance blogging failure: Fail to adapt
I’ve been freelance writing since January of 2006 but
this blog didn’t come into existence until September 2008. Doesn’t seem like it was that long ago, but the
online writing world has changed. Back
then Squidoo was slapped while HubPages and eHow gave a quick way to rank
articles and build up massive passive income.
Now many Squidoo veterans are fine or doing better than ever while
HubPages died and then is showing some minor signs of life and eHow isn’t open
to writers anymore. Many of the best
content mills from back then are gone, and Google’s updates have hammered
thousands of marketers while pushing up established brands. On the other hand, there’s never been a
better time to find independent clients who are willing to pay high dollar
amounts for high quality work. I needed
to adapt more with this blog and stop forcing everything to be “for beginners”
or “for part-timers.” Things evolve and
change – this isn’t a bad thing. The
2008 plan won’t work in 2012. Time to
keep moving on.
#5 Freelance blogging failure: Start without
a plan, continue without a plan
This one is pretty self-explanatory. It’s not something that is necessary if
you’re working on a personal site or blog but for a blog you want to stick with
or one you want to build into something it is important. The plan doesn’t have to be exact or precise
or x number of points, but you want at least an idea of where you are, where
you’re going, and where you want to end up.
#6 Freelance blogging failure: Never take
time off
No matter how passionate you are or how much of a
workhorse you are, sometimes you just need a little bit of time off.
If you don’t – then expect burnout.
That’s what happened to me with the
Master
Dayton blogspot blog, was burnout.
Burnout comes from a wide variety of sources, but not taking time off
for yourself now and then is a disaster waiting to happen.
This can also result as part of the next one.
#7 Freelance blogging failure: Let your
personal life sink you
This one is pretty self-explanatory. Nothing you do is stuck in a vacuum. So don’t pretend it does, and take time to
yourself when you need it but remember that sometimes work and projects can be
a stabilizing force for you instead of another stack of worries when you have
already too much on your shoulders. This
is good for life anyway, and the rest goes beyond the scope of this blog
post. There’s always reason to take care
of business and push forward. Like that
motto for Britain during WWII: Keep Calm and Carry On. It’s good advice for blogging whether about
freelance writing or something else completely.
#8 Freelance blogging failure: Worry about
what others think
You are always going to have detractors. And Internet comment trolls. Or well-meaning people who still are going to
discourage you or want you to go in a different direction or forget that online
stuff or blah, blah, blah. Basically you
need to stay passionate and in love with what you’re doing. If you’re going to do that, then you are
going to be happier, more fulfilled by what you’re doing, and less likely to
burn out than if you don’t. Advice from
other bloggers or writers can be a good thing and by all means, enjoy the
community you build – but you have to be who you are. Don’t worry about what others think.
#9 Freelance blogging failure: Get
exasperated
This goes along with burn out and worrying what others
think. If a post doesn’t seem to be
working then shelve it and go on to the next one. If your plan doesn’t seem to be inspiring you
anymore or working the way you want it to then get a new plan. Don’t get exasperated. The frustration from getting exasperated just
creates an albatross ten times larger than what the actual project is. Exasperation is also an early sign of
possibly burn out or that other issues are cropping up that need to be dealt
with. Getting exasperated I’ve found
just doesn’t help writing, it doesn’t help building a business, it just doesn’t
really help anything.
#10 Freelance blogging failure: Be afraid to
try something new – or just be afraid
Fear is the opposite of success.
Sometimes you’ll screw up.
Sometimes you’ll do really well.
You might be surprised by what posts take off
(I never expected my
rant
against a former professor to be one of my most popular posts), and
which ones fizzle.
You may discover your
natural voice, a new “online tone” that you fall in love with and readers react
to – there’s
These are my ten ways to fail at freelance writing and
blogging.
Part 2 of the original part of
this article will be coming soon – and probably be one of the first features at
my
new Master Dayton website.
It’s good to be back.
Let’s see if we can finish 2012 strong!