Skills That Pay The Bills: Copywriting, SEO, and Blogging

by Neal Jansons on November 17, 2008

a typical office day

Hello, intrepid readers. We are going to shift gears a bit in this post and address an issue that is always near and dear to my heart: money. This is not to say that I am obsessed with wealth, but I certainly enjoy being able to live comfortably and enjoy my hobbies, which as a geek can include expensive gadgets, video games, and lots of media. So how does a writer in the modern era get paid?

Copywriting

Copywriting (also known as business writing) is the art and science of creating text that informs, attracts, and sells, all at the same time. To write good copy, you not only have to be a good writer, but you have to understand your audiences and what will drive their purchasing. Your goal is to sell something, and in order to do that you have to understand how your readers will react not just to the content of your words, but their appearance and tone.

Necessary skills:

  • Write in many tones and voices, from warm and friendly to cold and technical. You must get over the notion that you are selling your art and thus must maintain your own authentic voice. While this is true for fiction, poetry, and other creative writing, copywriters must be able to catch the tone and voice that will most effectively represent their client’s interests. Read, listen to, and watch advertisements of all kinds and you will hear many different voices; practice writing in all of them.
  • Understand visual cues. Words are visual, and by purposefully arranging how they meet the eyes  you can make certain impressions without changing a bit of your content. By creating symmetry and asymmetry in your copy (lining up your text and formatting it such that the lines “lead” the eyes of the reader to each important phrase) you can emphasize certain points over others, line up “question and answer” blocks around explanatory copy, and create a general impression of casualness, formality, friendliness, or whatever impression is needed.
  • Be a good researcher. Clients will vary, and you will often need to be able to learn a great deal about a given industry, company, product, or service with very little notice. Make sure you have resources bookmarked and ready to do research on just about anything. This includes niche sites, academic sites, and government sites; Wikipedia, for all its glory, just won’t cut it.

SEO (Search Engine Optimization)

Writing in the online world requires at least a basic understanding of the principles of SEO, including keyword research, competition evaluation, and link-building. Understand, it will seldom be your job to define and entire SEO strategy for a client, but in order to create good online content you have to know how to make sure it can be found and will compete against other similar content.

Necessary Skills:

  • Understand the principles of search. Search is a weird field, in concept and in practice. In theory, it’s just math; search engines index content and use various algorithms to return that content in reply to corresponding searches. And if language, meaning, and knowledge were a simple affair, that would be enough, but they aren’t. We categorize things, use synonyms and conditionals, come up with neologisms (new words), and generally make things very complicated (and very interesting). We teach the search engines what words mean, and in turn the search engines teach us how to ask for what we are looking for. I can’t even begin to cover the necessary knowledge to really understand search, but I will list several resources for learning the basics of search and SEO theory at the end of this post.
  • Learn how to use keywords and keyword phrases without sounding forced. Learn how to research commonly searched keywords and phrases and pepper your writing with them appropriately. Don’t stuff them, don’t use keywords unrelated to the content, and don’t just reuse the same one over and over; use synonyms and related terms.
  • Produce quality content. Realize that keyword use is just part of the battle, what we call a “necessary but insufficient condition”. You have to use well-chosen keywords, but quality content that will attract links and traffic is the rest of the equation.
  • Be generous. Link out often to other blogs and sources, and always make sure your anchor text (the text that you make the link) is actually associated with the content you link to. Try to go for deep links (links to pages inside a website rather than to the frontpage) and when you reference ideas or content from other sources, make sure to credit them.

Blogging

Blogging is big business…for a few. This money comes from advertising, direct sales, and the attraction of jobs. The decision of how to monetize your blog comes down to how much traffic you get and what your niche is. thePuckWrites is monetized by being a sort of virtual resume…I blog about how I do things so that others can learn how to do them, which showcases my knowledge and writing, while making sure a few select pieces of writing are available to show my range, plus a resume and a contact form. Since my blog is set up this way, I attract both writers who want to learn and employers who want to hire. You might also consider blogging for hire…companies may pay you to blog regularly for them, or you could join a blog network or multi-user blog that pays per post like BrightHub. These kinds of jobs can vary a great deal in price, so make sure you are getting paid what you are worth.

Necessary Skills:

  • Picking a good niche. I know a lot of bloggers, and some of them blog about things that no one would ever want to read about regularly. Some industries and subjects, no matter how necessary for society and life, will not draw an audience. Pick a niche you know about, but pick an interesting niche you know about; you might sell toilet paper, but no one wants to read about toilet paper, whether it is making, selling, or using it.
  • Writing for a wide audience. Don’t be a snob. Use language that everyone will understand and if you must use special jargon, explain what you mean without being condescending. Remember, most people do not write for a living and thus it is not their job to know all the $0.50 words. You are not special, better, or smarter because you know what deontological means or can use gerund properly in a sentence, you are just specially trained in your job like others are specially trained in their own. Don’t be an ass.
  • Discipline. You need to update regularly, research new posts, and promote your work. Quite frankly, it can be a huge pain. Depending on your revenue model, you might need to update as often as several times a day. Good scheduling and productivity is a must.

Resources

Copywriting

SEO

Blogging

What Else?

These are my skills that pay the bills, what are yours?

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{ 24 comments… read them below or add one }

Mark Dykeman November 17, 2008 at 6:59 am

You've included me in a list of heavyweights, Puck. I'm going to have to up my game!

Thanks!

Reply

Neal "thePuck" Jansons November 17, 2008 at 9:14 am

@mark Consider it my way of helping you grow in your career :p That is
what I try for around here, after all. Besides, you deserve it!

Reply

Keith November 17, 2008 at 3:09 pm

Great article Puck,
I often wonder…which skills are and aren't making me any money! Need to trim down my list to the ones actually working and not start anymore “new and awesome” projects.
Keith

Reply

Neal "thePuck" Jansons November 17, 2008 at 3:15 pm

I sometimes have the same problem. Gotta just get in there and make an
honest evaluation of what is and isn't working. There is a reason
every good business plan should have an exit strategy.

Reply

GeekLad November 21, 2008 at 8:42 pm

Good stuff. I was searching around FriendFeed for good DISQUS blogs about SEO and the like, when I came across your article.

Reply

Neal "thePuck" Jansons November 21, 2008 at 9:11 pm

@Geeklad

Thanks for the feedback, I am glad you like the post.

Reply

seotest December 9, 2008 at 4:12 am

those are really inspiring post, hope you continue

Reply

Neal "thePuck" Jansons December 20, 2008 at 3:10 pm

@Busby

Hell yeah, SEOBook is an awesome site, and I highly recommend it.
Sorry I missed it this round through.

Reply

Busby SEO Test December 20, 2008 at 4:02 pm

You forgot to mention SEOBOOK.COM as the source, you should visit the site, there are tons of seo tips there

Reply

Busby SEO Test Contest December 21, 2008 at 8:08 am

How about seobook.com is it good?

Reply

Mike_at_Wanna_Develop_COM December 22, 2008 at 2:40 am

Great write up… SEO probly has the most potential for anybody who is seriously interested in making lots of money — long term… of course:)

Pictures are too funny ;)

Regards,
Mike

http://www.wannadevelop.com

Reply

Busby SEO Test!!! January 3, 2009 at 11:05 pm

those are pretty useful resources, thanks to let me know :)

Reply

noni benefits January 9, 2009 at 6:28 am

Copyrighting is the great way to avoid duplicating the content what do you say?

Thanks

Reply

Max January 9, 2009 at 8:55 am

Neal great post; gladly stumbled and thumbed up!

Reply

Busby SEO Test January 19, 2009 at 8:35 am

Wow I can't give a comment just reply ?

Reply

kampanye February 1, 2009 at 12:56 pm

thx for sharing

Reply

Kampanye Damai Pemilu February 12, 2009 at 8:25 pm

I better learn it one by one than learn it at once. Anyway thanks for great list.

Reply

Traffic Geyser February 21, 2009 at 1:27 am

In picking a certain niche, we should know whether we know a lot about the certain area we choose, also if we will enjoy doing it, it will be much easier for us to create an interesting bog.

Reply

freelife February 22, 2009 at 11:52 pm

Good post.Thanks for sharing.
SEO is very important.But i am unable to make proper use of SEO.

Reply

free slots March 7, 2009 at 11:25 pm

Make sure to have an interest in the particular niche, but also make sure
that the niche is a rewarding one. Their are some niches that will make
you 10 times more per year.. than others.

Reply

Traffic Geyser March 10, 2009 at 9:03 pm

well sometimes its hard to pick a good niche, I was offered to create a blog about something I am not familiar with but they offer a huge sum of money, but I also want to create another blog that I am interested with, but it seems like it will be on a very slow process.. still I'm not choosing what niche I'll pick.. the one I like or the one with big money.

Reply

KampanyeDamaiPemilu April 12, 2009 at 8:45 am

I've just started learning SEO, need advice, thanks for this great post :)

Reply

Neal "thePuck" Jansons April 12, 2009 at 11:25 am

If you are looking for SEO info, check out my buddy Gypsy at
http://www.huomah.com

Reply

marisol diaz June 9, 2009 at 6:44 am

I congratulate you because as researcher and aspiring and soon to be freelance writer/blogger (mother of triplets) i think you nail it. it’s a great article. Goes straight to the point, with details and being helpful.
Thanks!!

Reply

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