Forum Moderators: not2easy
I have been getting 300 word articles written and 600-700 word articles written.
Please tell me what a fair rate is?
The writer I have actually writes great and I am very pleased just trying to figure out if I am overpaying, underpaying or on target.
Any advice?
There seems to be an explosion of article writing lately so it'll be interesting to see what people think now.
The writer I use is writing 800 word articles for $15 per article as long as I send him the research material - it seems that's pretty inexpensive from what other people were posting. I found someone even cheaper but they were non-English speaking and you can tell in the writing. The guy for $15 is much better than the writer I was paying $50 per article for a year ago - trying to guage now what the prices are.
When I need well researched articles I usually turn to a writer who worked for me in the past, explain the situation and requirements and make a new deal.
For those articles I usually pay somewhere between $10 and $25.
I think its a learning process as well. Track your investment and the return on your investment.
For me a $5 article usually breaks even in two to three month. The better articles can take a bit longer, but have the added benefit of attracting on target incoming links.
In fact the whole thing is a numbers game. Be careful with writers who have english as their second lanquage. (like me :-)) In fact I usually go for Canedian or American writers. I had some very bad experiences with Romenian and Indian writers.
Hans
Here's another question - how do you handle it when you run out of work for a period of time but you dont want to lose the writer to other projects - does that make sense or do you think there are enough good writers out there that you run the risk?
how do you handle it when you run out of work for a period of time but you dont want to lose the writer to other projects?
If you're worried about a writer drifting away, just keep in touch. Get to know your writer, where they're at and how much work they are handling (in general terms, of course).
Keeping tabs is a good starting point. If you find out you might be about to lose a good writer, it's time to negotiate, figure out what it's gonna take to get them back for your next project when it comes up.
But staying in touch is key. Freelancers appreciate a client they can rely on for occasional projects, and it helps when they remember who you are.
That you are capable of delivering quality content does not require the requestor to be impressed, or to even be seeking quality content.
Electing to not work at an unacceptable rate is a choice, and frequently it is a right fine choice. Turning down someone who can't or won't pay for your experience foregoes a minimal level of income, but leaves you free to pursue a more appropriate paying contract. It's all good in the end. Good luck to you.
The writer I use does an hourly rate, so it comes out much cheaper, he said his clients benefit from him writing fast (he turned around 15 articles of 300 words in a few hours, all of which I liked). So for him he can offer much lower "per word" rates if you converted. But other writers seem to prefer to be paid by the word which makes sense too.
I don't agree with someone being "insulted" by a job offer since let's face it there is a strong market of providers willing to work at low rates and some of them are excellent writers who write fast. But I do agree that if it's not worth the writer's time they should decline the job and find one that pays better and is in line with what they wish to charge.
This is an educational board for sure - I hope more people respond to this posting.