Newsletter Archives |
WRITERFIND NEWS
In this issue:
* News
* Correspondence
1. New Site for NZ Writers seeking Publication
2. New Time-Saving Software for Journalists, Researchers and Bloggers
* Article: 9 Essential Secrets You Must Know Before You Sell Your Copywriting Services to
Small Local Businesses This Year! by Brian S. Konradt
* Freelance Work
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NEWS
Writerfind is currently running a special offer for freelancers: Sign up for a Writerfind
Profile ($69) by 1 Sept 2007, and get one year's subscription to the Freelance Jobs
Mailing List for free (normally $100/year).
A Writerfind Profile gives you:
* A professional-looking, easy-to-remember internet address which you can use to great
advantage in your own brochures and email at a very affordable price.
* Your own URL (www.writerfind.com/yourname.htm), including a 300-word biographical note,
a list of your published writings, your postal address, email and a link to your web-site
(if applicable).
* Links to our search pages, so that visitors can find you easily.
An example of a Writerfind Profile can be found at: www.writerfind.com/dwest.htm
The Freelance Jobs Mailing list gives you up-to-date details of jobs and assignments
delivered regularly to your email box. This information is obtained by encouraging
editors, publishers and recruiters in need of writing services to visit the site and post
assignments to the mailing list. We also scan other websites for freelance work that can
be done on a telecommuting basis from any location. Jobs include general freelance
journalism and business writing.
Sign up now at http://www.writerfind.com/profile.htm
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CORRESPONDENCE
1. New Site for NZ Writers seeking Publication
Julie Bromfield writes:
"...I thought you may wish to join us on www.publishme.co.nz Primarily, its goal is
to build a community of authors, writers, illustrators, editors, proofreaders, designers
etc... all with the common goal to be or to assist in being a published author. This means
members who have an active profile can either be asked for opinions or assistance or vice
versa. The site offers the ability to load a free bio on as an author, editor, writer and
any books or websites you are connected with. This is free promotion and so far over 360
members (published authors and self-publishers) are benefiting from their profile.
My role in PublishMe is assist new members in loading their profiles, quoting for short or
long print runs and helping prepare those nearly at the production stage of their books.
I would be happy to ensure you are made a member and would love it if you could pass on
the news to others on your website, everyone benefits from the promotion, free downloads
and expert assistance available through this site and its affiliate www.sellmybook.co.nz.
I think that you and others would be an excellent addition to a popular growing site.
Let me know your thoughts.
Have a good week.
Kind regards
Julie Bromfield
Sales Consultant
Zenith Print / PublishMe.co.nz
Phone 06 759 4699 ext 827
Fax 0800 123 0800
Telephone Sales 0800 293 648"
2. New Time-Saving Software for Journalists, Researchers and Bloggers
Shelley Grell writes:
"Interclue reclaims time for busy journalists, researchers and bloggers
Press release, 25-Jul-07, Interclue, Christchurch, NZ Interclue Ltd has invented a
new web preview tool that allows people to find what they want on the web faster and more
efficiently than ever before.
According to a Google survey we are spending more time on the web than we do with any
other activity apart from sleeping and walking. On average 41 days a year are spent
online! With Interclues speed-browsing preview tool, we can reclaim some of this
time.
By showing quick text snippets of linked pages, such as Google search results, Interclue
saves users having to download annoying images and adverts, or irrelevant large documents
before determining if the link is useful.
This free Firefox add-on is designed for frequent internet users such as journalists,
bloggers, researchers, business users and students, who need to find the information they
want well before their deadline is up.
CEO, Seth Wagoner, says Instead of unreadable images or huge full page previews,
Interclue shows the main content of a link within a discrete tooltip window when the mouse
pointer is hovered over Interclues informative icons at the end of a link. It helps
people keep on track with what they are doing by reducing mouse clicks, saving tedious
waits for links to download, and minimising the open windows and tabs that clutter up
their screen.
By bringing content into the context of the current page, Interclue also provides the best
solution to whats affectionately called The Wikipedia Problem or
Web induced ADD, where surfers find themselves clicking off into the distance
and forgetting what information they were trying to find in the first place...
About Interclue
Interclue Ltd is a privately backed New Zealand start up company housed in the Canterbury
Innovation Incubator in Christchurch. Its first product, Interclue for Firefox, provides
convenient automatic content previews in a tooltip window next to any web link. This new
Web 2.0 browser add-on is expected to fast become a must have for journalists,
bloggers, and other heavy web users.
Unlike web-previews installed on select sites by webmasters, Interclue works on all of the
pages a user visits, including corporate intranets and other sites not indexed by search
engines. The company plans to extend the free version of Interclue to a subscriber based
service offering more features and faster results, as well as release versions of
Interclue for other popular browsers such as IE7, Safari and Opera.
- Ends -
For more information visit http://interclue.com, or contact:
Seth Wagoner
CEO Interclue Ltd
Tel. +64 3 377 4081 (10:00 17:00 NZT, 15:00 23:00 PST)
Cell +64 21 784 409
Email: seth@interclue.com
Blog: http://sethop.com
Shelley Grell
Communicate IT Ltd
Tel: +64 3 381 6656
Cell: +64 21 737 355
Email: shelley@communicateit.co.nz"
=================
ARTICLE
9 Essential Secrets You Must Know Before You Sell Your Copywriting Services to Small Local
Businesses This Year!
by Brian S. Konradt of BSK Communications and Associates
Doctors, accountants, lawyers, real estate brokers, veterinary hospitals, consultants, and
many small and home-based businesses rely on the skills and wits of freelance copywriters
to write creative and sales-clinching copy to increase their customer-base and boost
sales. But there's one small problem: very few small and home-based businesses in your
business community will admit to hiring freelance copywriters.
The majority will tell you they don't hire freelance copywriters because, well, they just
don't! So how do freelance copywriters garner small and home-based businesses as long-term
clients and receive steady, repeat work from them?
The answer is discreet: they fulfill this market's needs much differently than how
freelance copywriters fulfill the needs of corporations, ad agencies, and businesses with
sales in the multi-millions.
Here's how you can steal a piece of this proliferating and potentially-lucrative market
and make small and home-based businesses eager to work with you.
Secret #1: Don't ask for freelance work
One common mistake is to ask small and home-based businesses if there's freelance work
available of if they have use for a freelance copywriter. Adducing your question in this
context will garner numerous no's. According to Paul Murray, a copywriter who writes for
small businesses in the Atlanta, GA area, "...most small and home-based businesses
don't actively seek freelance writers." For this reason, says Murray, "they
rarely have freelance work to hand out." The remedy: "Asking for freelance work
does not work-you must create it," says Murray.
Secret #2: The "secret" selling strategy you must harness
Corporations, ad agencies, manufacturers and other large businesses usually knock at your
door with freelance work and tell you-in some cases-exactly what needs to be done. But
selling to small and home-based businesses is different: they won't knock at your door
with freelance work or tell you what needs to be done. Instead, you must knock at their
door with freelance work and tell them how it's going to be done.
Small and home-based businesses usually rely solely on staff employees to produce their
newsletters and brochures. Or worse, the client or owner of the business writes the copy
himself to save money. But this is often met with devastating results. Their print
materials contain embarrassing grammatical errors and boring copy that kills business and
projects a negative image.
Approaching small and home-based businesses with freelance work requires you to create a
need for your services. This can be accomplished by emphasizing the benefits of hiring you
and showing the owner how your copywriting skills can exceedingly improve their existing
print materials and/or create print materials that can boost sales.
The best way to create freelance work, says Murray, is to "look for missing print
materials that many businesses use but [this particular] business lacks."
For instance, Murray discovered that his local veterinary hospital lacked a regular
newsletter because the owner didn't understand how his hospital could benefit from one on
a repeated basis. "It wasn't because the owner couldn't afford a copywriter or he had
other print materials that substituted a newsletter," says Murray, "it was
because he was uneducated as to how a newsletter could positively contribute to his
business."
Murray's selling strategy is simple: he showed the owner how hiring him to write and
produce a monthly newsletter would convert initial customers into repeat clients, bring in
more referrals, sell more products such as flea control and prays, and enhance the
hospital's image.
The bottom line, says Murray, is "the newsletter would boost the hospital's
sales...that's what the owner really wanted to hear."
Once the owner realized the need to hire a freelance copywriter to write and produce a
regular newsletter (and many other types of promotional and informational material),
Murray got the job.
Remember you have a benevolent advantage as a copywriter seeking freelance work in your
business community: you're familiar with the businesses around you and you have a sense or
can find out quickly their needs. Once you debunk these businesses' needs, you can create
a plan to fulfill them...which leads to securing work.
Secret #3: Never sell your services-always sell solutions
"Boosting sales" is the magic phrase that all small and home-based business
owners want to hear in your sales letter or over the phone when you speak one-on-one with
the owner. They care less if you write better copy than another copywriter or you offer
more diverse services or you brandish a bigger client list. If you can't help them boost
sales, why should they bother hiring you?
A common mistake is to pitch yourself as a freelance writer offering copywriting services.
According to Murray, "This is one reason why small and home-based businesses are
hesitant to hire freelance copywriters: they don't just want a writer to write fancy copy.
They want a writer who can write copy that increases sales. Period."
If you write newsletters, you better know how your newsletter can predominantly boost your
clients' sales. You also must know how your copywriting a newsletter can benefit the
client's business; e.g., you can tell the client your newsletter can increase referrals,
turn first-time customers into repeat clients, increase product sales, enhance the
company's image, etc.
When Murray discovered his local veterinary hospital lacked a newsletter, he saw this as a
potential problem that the owner did not realize. What was the problem? Without a
newsletter, the hospital was losing sales. The solution: produce a newsletter as a way to
boost sales, project a positive image, increase referrals, and sell more products. Murray
then pitched himself as a copywriter with the solution.
(I've hit on something that all copywriters must learn: you are in business to sell
solutions-not services. Clients hire copywriters to solve their problems, whatever they
are. Sales, whether low or high, are always a "problem"-or a potential
problem-since sales can be indefinitely increased. Clients of small and home-based
businesses are no different: they rely on sales as a major "emotional" concern
as any business does.)
Secret #4: You must penetrate their budgets
Small and home-based businesses have calculated annual budgets that they abide by. Murray
says, "Their budgets are often severe [i.e. small] and unyielding...and their budgets
often don't include you"-the freelance copywriter.
Convincing prospective clients to make room in their budgets is a matter of identifying
their problems (or potential problems), pitching yourself as the copywriter who has the
solution(s), and then showing the decision-maker how you'll Achieve this outcome.
Make sure you also stress the fact that you're a writer who intends to boost their sales
with your copywriting, not just to provide professional print materials.
Secret #5: Educate to eliminate ambiguity
Many small and home-based businesses are unfamiliar with how freelance copywriters work
and need to be schooled with the particulars. Take the initiative. Educate these small and
home-based businesses with how you work, what they will get by hiring you, what you charge
and when you demand payment, and what you will deliver.
Educating will eliminate the ambiguity that often shrouds the decision-making-process-why
should the prospect hire you? When an owner understands what you do and what type of role
you play in helping his business flourish and grow, he'll be more inclined to hire you.
Consider creating an "educational section" of your direct mail package or
include an educational section of your promotional materials. For example, you might
enclose a Q&A section that will eliminate ambiguity as to how you work and what your
role is and answer many first-time clients' questions.
Secret #6: Charge project rates-not hourly rates
If you tell small and home-based businesses that you charge $50 an hour, they may balk,
scream, or simply look at you drop-jawed. They'll try to persuade you to charge much
less-but every professional copywriter knows dropping pay rates to accommodate low-paying
"flea-market" clients is bad business practice.
Owners of small and home-based businesses are usually not educated with standard pay rates
of commercial copywriters. Instead, they may "accidentally" look upon you as a
typist or a writer who sells your words for pennies-"or a writer who is only going to
write copy, not copy that's going to boost sales," says Murray.
The other problem is that the owner may equate what he pays a staff employer with what
you're asking, which may be three to four times higher. Your job is to convince the owner
otherwise.
Again, we're back to the educational process. You must educate owners so they're aware of
your pay rate, what your role is, why hire a copywriter versus a staff employees, what you
will provide, and emphasize the fact that you're a writer who intends to help them boost
sales.
Another way not to have owners gape skeptically at your pay rate is to charge project
rates, instead of hourly rates. Owners of small and home-based businesses seem more
acceptable to paying a fixed project sum (Pay me $500 to produce this newsletter")
instead of an hourly rate ("Pay me $50 an hour to produce this newsletter.").
The reason is paradoxical: hourly rates seem to create a negative feeling in which the
client will be paying you per hour while you work on the newsletter, whereas the project
rate assures the client will be paying you a fixed sum and nothing more.
Besides, project rates can be profitable versus hourly rates. If you write faster and use
your time wisely, you may be able to produce the project in less time, thus increasing
your overall profit.
Secret #7: Copy to completion is a plus-and a must
Small and home-based businesses "don't want a writer to write a bunch of words,"
says Murray. "They want a writer who'll write the copy, get a designer to design it,
and then take it to the printers to produce the finished piece."
If you copywrite newsletters, small businesses also expect you to do the layout, design it
and work with a printer to print it-or hire other freelancers to fill in where your skills
lack.
Instead of pitching yourself as a copywriter who writes newsletters, pitch yourself as a
copywriter who produces newsletters from "copy to completion." This means you
not only write the newsletter, but you also deliver the finished product.
Small and home-based businesses usually won't settle for a copywriter who only provides
copy."[Small and home-based businesses] don't have the time or knowledge to
coordinate the project themselves, locate other freelancers to complete the newsletter or
work with a printer to produce it," says Murray. "They'd rather have a single
person do everything."
The other point: when you approach businesses with freelance work, it only makes sense
that you deliver a finished product, not a piece of the product.
Besides, pairing of skills is becoming commonplace. Freelancers are teaming up with one
another to deliver a better, finished product for their clients. Start you own
"resource file" in which you retain background and work experience information
on other freelancers, such as illustrators, graphic designers, printers, and
photographers. When a small or home-based business owner relies on you to produce a
newsletter, you can tap into your resource file and pull out freelancers who most qualify
to assist with your newsletter project.
Becoming Project Coordinator (i.e. a copywriter who manages a project from copy to
completion) means you may be spending more time on completing the project-so make sure you
get compensated. Add 10-20% of your pay rate to indemnify your time coordinating the
project and delivering a finished product.
Secret #8: Always meet with the prospective client
Writing for small and home-based businesses in your local community gives you an
advantage: locality.
Your marketing efforts, advises Murray, should be focused on establishing an initial
meeting with the prospective client to discuss how you can play a major role in boosting
his sales.
When Murray set up an initial meeting with the owner of the veterinary hospital, his aims
were to alert the owner of a "potential problem"-the hospital was lacking a
newsletter that could effectively boost sales, while increasing referrals, turning initial
customers into repeat clients, enhancing the hospital's image, and increasing product and
pharmaceutical sales. Murray then sold himself as the copywriter who had the solution. And
he got the job.
"Also use the first meeting as a networking session," says Murray. "Your
aims should also be to find out his [the prospect's] needs, his other problems [or
potential problems], and propose how you can solve these problems."
By actively listening and asking questions, Murray discovered several "hidden"
events developing at the hospital. For one, the hospital was adding a new ICU (intensive
care unit); secondly, a new echocardiogram room was being built; and thirdly, a Web site
was being produced. Without an initial meeting with the owner, Murray never would have
been aware of these events. Murray, of course, saw the opportunity to provide
"future" copywriting services for these events.
An initial meeting also has the greatest potency to establish rapport and build a
relationship with the prospective client, which increases the chances of getting the work.
Here's some key points to make your initial meeting with a prospect more effective:
*Discuss how your copywriting can, essentially, boost sales. Thoroughly and visually show
the prospect how his business can benefit from a newsletter (or any other service you're
providing)-and also explain the disadvantages of not having one (this is suppose to create
negative feelings of fear and pain). "Creating visual pictures are essential,"
says Murray. "You want the prospect to share in your vision...and your goals. You
want him to be an active participant in your ideas."
*Show some of your samples and explain how some of your samples achieved results for your
other satisfied clients.
*Show samples of what the prospect's competitors are using. "Along with my samples, I
brought some newsletters that other hospitals were using and told the owner, 'This is what
your competitors are using'," says Murray. "When I alerted the owner about what
his competitors were using and he wasn't, I created a negative visual picture in his mind
that he wasn't keeping up with his competition and that he was lagging behind."
*Also at your initial meeting, if you can't close the sale or the owner needs more time to
decide, give the owner three business cards (one to put in his wallet, the other to tack
up on his bulletin board or put in his Rolodex, and the third, in case he loses both of
them) and tell him you'll call tomorrow to discuss his decision.
Secret #9: Proposals are gems: Use them to multiply work
All small and home-based businesses need them-but few of these businesses will ask for
them (because they don't know they exist): proposals.
If you can craft an effective proposal, "seven times out of ten you can get yourself
the work...including repeat work from the same client," says Murray.
Murray began using proposals in his second year of business when he realized why many
businesses were declining his services. "The owners did not see how I fit in or what
type of benefits I could bring to their businesses...Even at meetings, I think my words
went through his [the client's] ear and out the other."
A proposal provides an inclusive tangible blueprint as to how you will help the business
increase sales. It elucidates how you fit in as a copywriter, what you will provide, the
benefits of your services and your product(s) (i.e. newsletters, brochure, etc.), and
explains how-providing specific steps-you intend to increase sales.
Because Murray writes newsletters for various veterinary and dental practices, he has his
own "Newsletter Proposal" template which he uses to secure newsletter projects.
His Newsletter Proposal specifically outlines what his role is, the benefits and solutions
to using a newsletter, and explains how hiring him to produce a monthly newsletter can
increase the client's sales.
To make his meetings more productive and to procure a definite direction, Murray uses
proposals as centerpieces for in-depth discussions, instead of meeting with the prospect
to engage in a mundane Q&A session. "You can sit with the prospect and take him
through all the details on how you're going to increase his sales, step-by-step. Instead
of a listener, he suddenly becomes an active participant in your ideas."
Murray also uses proposals to make an impression. "Proposals make you look
professional, resourceful and knowledgeable. Everything the prospect wants to know is
organized and packaged for easy, quick reading [in a proposal]."
The other advantage: proposals are tangible items that allow prospects to touch your
thoughts and ideas. "They also [continue to] sell after the meeting," says
Murray, who recommends you leave your proposal with the prospect so he can read and
re-read it at his leisure.
However, Murray warns: "Don't give away your secrets. Your proposal should explain
how you're going to increase sales, not show how it's going to be done."
When Murray discovered the opportunities developing at the veterinary hospital, he created
and submitted a proposal, which essentially, laid out in detail how he could increase the
hospital's sales by publicizing the new ICU, echocardiogram room, and Web site, using
various forms of informational and promotional materials and PR and marketing strategies.
"My proposal convinced the owner that increasing his budget to hire me to write and
produce promotional materials would, in the end, increase his sales," says Murray,
who recommends the primary function of a proposal should convince the owner that "he
has nothing to lose by hiring you, and so much to gain."
Armed with these nine secrets, you're now ready to locate and secure clients of small and
home-based businesses in your local community. Take particular interest to new start-up
businesses and businesses offering new products or services to the community. You can
generate dozens upon dozens of ideas to provide copywriting services to these businesses,
while showing the owners how you can help increase their sales.
Brian Konradt is the owner and operator of FreelanceWriting.com, a Web site dedicated to
help writers master the business and creative sides of freelance writing. Mr. Konradt is
also the principal of BSK Communications & Associates, a communications/publishing
business in New Jersey, which he established in 1992.
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Freelance Work
Work currently posted on our public job board, www.writerfind.com/freelance_jobs,
includes:
The City Scene writer will produce accurate, high-quality material for City Scene and work
on other projects as directed
(Posted to job board, 1 Aug. Location Auckland New Zealand)
We are looking for a calendar editor with a passion for parenting and an eye for detail to
join the Sydney's Child team.
(Posted to job board, 30 July. Location Sydney Australia)
A challenging position as trainee Editor is available for our website on investing in
emerging economies: www.emerging-market.org.
(Posted to job board, 30 July. Location anywhere.)
www.viaarena.com, which is run from Melbourne, is looking to build a team of freelance
writers to substantially increase content.
I am looking for a freelance writer who is familiar with European occupational safety and
health standards who is interested in writing a 1,500-word article
on upcoming standards or topics of interest in Europe in the field of occupational safety
and health.
I am in need of an experienced legal ghostwriter(s) with a background in intellectual
property and Internet law, real estate and commercial/corporate law.
(Posted to job board, 7 July. Location USA)
Writers and editors: Please remember to check the job board regularly, and note also that
to get timely access the full range of jobs posted at Writerfind you will need to sign up
for our fee-based mailing list service.
Jobs are posted to members of this mailing list immediately they come in. You can sign up
at www.writerfind.com/premiumjobs.htm
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