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It's
A Dog-Eat-Dog World In The Freelance Work
Marketplace |
by:
Lorraine
Cote |
The
Trials and Tribulations of Finding Writing
Work in the Freelance Work Marketplace
By: Lorraine Cote
http://www.Thewritetouch4U.com
There are many ways to find freelance writing
work on the net. The most popular method
is by signing up to one or more of the many
freelance work sites available. There are
a ton of them to choose from. Take Elance.com
for instance, it is the site that I am known
as a "service provider" and it's where I
get most of my writing projects. While I
do also have offline clients, mostly corporations,
Elance is a good supplement to my writing
business.
However, there are some things that you
should be aware of before you go rushing
off to sign up to one of these sites. Take
a look! (I will use Elance as an example
because it is the one I am most familiar
with).
Costs: Many of these sites don't charge
a signup fee, however, many charge either
a monthly fee (can be quite steep like Elance,
writing category, $75 per month for select
provider status), or they charge a transaction
fee for each project you accept. Many charge
both (again Elance does this, 8.5% of total
project amount).
Categories: Many of these sites break out
their projects into levels such as basic
level, where basic providers can bid on
basic projects and select providers, where
select providers can bid on any job, basic,
or select. They also have a category in
writing called professional for $40 per
month where you can bid only on basic projects
as well. Of course, as you may have guessed,
you pay a higher price for select as you
are looked at as an expert in the field,
whether you are or not. Elance doesn't check,
so if you are willing to shell out the $75
per month, you too can be a select provider.
Bidding: Now this is where it really gets
competitive, the real dog-eat-dog stuff.
The reason is that, say for instance that
you are paying $75 per month to bid on projects
plus an 8.5% transaction fee for each project
you bid on, then along comes a provider
that underbids you and gets the project,
regardless of your skill level, portfolio
or client references. It is disheartening
and frustrating. You've just been passed
over for what is known as a "low-baller."
Low-balling is a frequent practice on these
sites, especially from foreign providers
whose cost of living is a lot lest than
the US. Also, you will find "newbies who
have no experience, portfolio or references
stoop to this to get the project to build
these things.
You may be thinking that this may be understandable
in some cases because everyone has to start
somewhere, right? Wrong! Actions like this
devalues our skills as a writer and says
to prospective clients I work cheap, use
me like slave labor!
Additionally, you will always find providers
who will underbid you simply because they
outsource the work and get a percentage.
So they can make money without ever doing
the work themselves. They can afford to
bid less because a piece of the pie, which
is better than none at all.
This also undermines the skills of writers
trying to make a living off writing. They
are basically deceiving the client by not
disclosing that they have a "team" or writers
that the work will be outsourced to. Again,
this prevents you from getting work. My
personal belief is that if you have a team
of writers and you are a legitimate business,
then you owe it to the client to disclose
it. It will also help the other providers
bidding against you to swallow it better.
It becomes more of a way of doing business
and less of a sneaky tactic.
To top it all off, a lot has to do with
the way the contracted work site markets
itself. Elance, one of the largest freelance
work marketplaces on the net, markets themselves
as basically a place where customers can
get "cheap labor." This prevents providers
from being able to place a bid based on
what they are worth in terms of skills,
experience and expertise. They basically
have to bid what the Elance marketplace
will bear, which in most cases is peanuts
in comparison to what writers in the real
world make. Providers on Elance are literally
at the mercy of customers because they flock
to Elance to get a 500-word article written
for $5 or a 100 page ebook for $300. Both
absurd prices by the way and a fraction
of what writers in the real world get. This
type of marketing makes it so hard for more
seasoned writers to bid higher, because
so many providers on Elance are willing
to offer these ridiculous prices.
There are times when you will come across
a potential client that is willing to meet
your price, but it doesn't happen as often
as you think. It would be great if this
continued and clients would wake up to the
fact that they "get what they pay for."
Many have found the cheap labor source to
be unreliable in terms of content and delivery.
I have been contacted many times by Elance
customers who paid one provider their low
fee to write something, only to ask me to
rewrite it at a higher price (I won't bend
on my prices, work or no work) because the
provider either:
Took a down payment for the work, did half
of it and disappeared, or
Plagiarized entire work, word for word,
or
Just did shoddy work.
It appears on these sites that customers
have to learn the hard way sometimes. So
when they contact me for a rewrite, I charge
my going fee, and you know what? They pay
it without blinking an eye and you can bet
they learned a valuable lesson the hard
way.
Unfortunately these kinds of actions on
the part of the providers give good quality
writers a "black eye." It causes customers
to be skeptical and leery of what we say
we can provide them in terms of our skills
and expertise. So it makes the bidding and
negotiation process that much more difficult.
Unfortunately I am only familiar with Elance,
however, I do believe that the actions that
I have described here, do exist on other
sites as well. You can visit any one of
them and see how low the bids are for various
writing jobs. It appears to be the norm
out there.
Signing up? Take a look for yourself, visit
these sites and learn all you can about
them before making a decision to fork over
your hard-earned money on a subscription.
It may be quite awhile before you will even
see a small return on your investment!
Elance.com
Guru.com
Getafreelancer.com
Freelanceyourproject.com
Contractedwork.com
Rentacoder.com
Now, luckily I have been with Elance since
2001 and have built up a portfolio, a long
list of client references and even made
some decent money. But it hasn't been easy
and I would hate to see anyone else jump
in thinking that their troubles are over
and the money will start rolling in. I have
branched out and obtained corporate clients
that have become long-term clients.
You may not be so lucky or it may take you
just as long if not longer to get to that
stage. So keep in mind before you shell
out high monthly fees coupled with a percentage
of the project amount that trying to eke
out a living as a freelance writer on these
contracted work sites is rocky going at
best. It may take months before you are
awarded your first project from a client.
Don't quit your day job just yet! Good luck
in your writing endeavors!
Copyright 2005 Lorraine Cote
This article may be freely reprinted as
long as the author's information and copyright
notice remain intact.
About the author:
Lorraine Cote is the CEO and Owner of The
Write Touch 4U, Copywriting Service. She
is also a published freelance writer who
has written over 100 ebooks on various topics
for clients as well as all types of other
written materials. She also has 16 years
experience in the corporate world as a Trainer
and Business Writer and is an Internet Marketer
as well. Visit her at http://www.thewritetouch4u.comor
visit her blog at http://writetouch4u.blogspot.com
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