Want to know what high-earning freelancers do
differently? Check out Mridu’s free report on the secrets of six-figure freelancers.
If you’ve ever read any advice out there about how
to get to a higher income level with your freelance writing business, you’ll
notice that it all sounds pretty much the same as the general advice given to
freelancers: Learn how to pitch, market a lot, network, bring good stories to
your editors, be proactive, etc.
Here’s what I believe, though: You can’t increase
your income by doing more things; you can only increase it by
bringing more value.
How can you bring more value when you’re already
doing your best work and putting yourself out there to be the best of your
ability?
Simple. Add new skills to your repertoire that will
enable you to either bring in more money or charge more for your services.
Let me give you some ideas.
1. Learn to
negotiate well
When I train freelancers, this is the first thing I
tell them. The resistance I encounter is pretty much universal.
No one jumps up in their seat and says, “Yes! I
can’t wait to ask for more.” Instead, most people try to shrink down further
because if it wasn’t bad enough that they had to leave their comfort zones and
indulge in marketing, now they have to push even more when that
marketing pays off?
I get the resistance. I do. It’s a natural instinct
and of course, you don’t to want to seem like you’re only in this for the
money.
But here’s the thing I’ve learned: If you
want more money, you have to ask
for more money. It’s that simple.
This is where the whole value idea comes into play.
People don’t just give you more money because you said they should (though
sometimes they do), but more so because you’ve proven how valuable you can be
to them.
So prove why you’re worth it. And then ask for
more.
2. Start to
diversify
Also known as: Add other income streams.
You can diversify in terms of the types of writing
you do. You can diversify in terms of the subject areas. You can even diversify
geographically, so that when clients in one part of the world are struggling
with an uncertain economy, there are others in parts of the world that are
booming.
What made a massive difference in my own career was
adding in high-paying work that was also easy to get given my journalism
experience. For me (and many others), that ideal work proved to be content
marketing. I went straight from earning $100 an hour as a journalist to $400 an hour in content marketing— in less than a year.
3. Learn to
repurpose your work
That series of articles you wrote for a finance
blog — could it be turned into a short ebook to be sold on Amazon? How about
taking one of those points and turning it into an entire article of its own?
Could you create an infographic? Write a personal essay based on the topic of
your article? Create a video?
There are so many ways now available to freelancers
to get paid for work, but you do have be creative about it and you have to be
willing to experiment with the new technologies.
Not all of it will stick, but if you’re using old content and
repurposing it to create something in a different format or for a different
market, your work is cut down massively and you get paid repeatedly for the
same research and ideas.
4. Learn and
practice new marketing strategies
You might get discovered. It’s great when it
happens. It doesn’t happen often.
What does happen often is that you knock on doors.
And you knock on more doors. And some of them are opened and you get invited in
and others are slammed in your face. Then you go and knock on more doors.
The more doors you knock on, the more chances there
are that some might open.
Do I need to go on, guys?
There will be a point in your freelancing life when
you have regular clients and you’ve got money coming in each month that you can
rely on. That’s great. Even so, if you want to grow your income over time, you
constantly need to be finding newer higher-paying clients and replacing your
lowest-paying ones with them.
Get skilled at it. Learn how to do it most
effectively. Experiment with all thestrategies other freelancers talk about and see what
works best for you.
You won’t always be marketing aggressively, but you
will always be marketing. It’s a good idea to get used to that.
5. Invest in your
education
How do you consistently add to your skills? You
learn, of course. You take free courses, paid courses, online courses, offline
classes — whatever suits your personality, your budget and your geographical
situation.
If you want to stay current in the market and
increase your income, you need to constantly learn and stay one step ahead of
the marketplace. Remember what I said about the only way to increase your
income is to add more value?
You add more value when you make your client’s life
easier by offering a diverse set of skills.
You don’t have to know it all. No one does. But
make the effort to invest in learning about things that interest you. It’ll pay
off, literally.
Listen, every writer I talk to says they want to
make six figures. But “I’d like to earn more someday” is not a plan. If you
want to make six figures, passively sitting back and waiting for it to happen
won’t make it happen.
You need to create a plan, act in certain ways, and
have marketable skills. You need to know how much you need to earn on a
weekly or monthly basis to be able to hit your target and you need to be able
to adjust course when you don’t reach your goal two or three months in a row.
Anyone can make six figures. Even you. But you have
to commit to it.
Are you committed?
What are you doing to increase your freelance
writing income?
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