Being paid to write! How much should I charge?
-
Hi Everyone,
I just got my first offer to get paid to write for a small company in the USA! My question is; How much should I charge? The company asked me to define a "rate per word". I have been published in the following locations. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated
- Moz - Main Blog - http://moz.com/blog/parallax-scrolling-websites-and-seo-a-collection-of-solutions-and-examples
- Moz - Youmoz - moz.com/ugc/website-design-wars-seo-agencies-vs-web-design-agencies-worldwide-trends
- Template Monster Blog - http://blog.templatemonster.com/2014/03/25/seo-as-a-part-of-web-design-process/
- InfoBAE (Spanish Newspaper - I have my own column) - http://blogs.infobae.com/seo-sem/
Thanks!
Carla
-
Hi Egol,
Thank you so much for taking the time to write such a clear and informative answer. This is exactly what I was looking for. The company that made me the offer is not big and your comments regarding "who is paying me" are important. The ranges you posted are extremely helpful
Thanks
Carla
-
Carla, I understand what you are saying. It is hard to decide how much to charge.
I think that how much to charge is also determined in part by who is paying you.
You have probably seen lots of people here at Moz or on other forums looking to buy 500 word articles for $10. They are simply looking for filler.
When I have hired writers they are usually paid about $500 for an article of about 2000 words. That is not a standard rate, it is just what is agreed after discussion.
Some higher profile websites might pay a few thousand dollars for an article and include a travel budget with that. Some of the original exclusive articles on a site like National Geographic might costs many thousands of dollars.
So, you can see some people buying filler for 2 cents per word, me buying expert content at 25 cents, and top content buyers paying over $1.00 per word.
Where does your topic level expertise and salary requirement best match the buyer's expectations?
People who write for me usually have a at least a bachelors degree in an industry-related field and experience as an industry professional. Most have a reputation for being an expert for the topics that they write about and a lot of previously published work that I can look at to see if I might be happy with their product. We talk about the article, what will be covered, what photos or art are needed (which will be done here or we pay them extra to provide). Then I tell them what I can pay for it and they decide if they can do it for the price.
The amount that I can offer depends upon my perceived value of the content for pulling in search traffic, pulling in social traffic, and getting views from people already on the site. The value of the advertising that might appear on that page is also considered. It is a calculation of estimated pageviews multiplied by an ad rate. I gotta make back the money that I pay them, pay for publishing costs here and still make a profit.
What the publisher is able to do with the content is a big factor in determining what they can pay - at least for editorial content for public consumption.
Rates and expectations are different for retail product descriptions, blog posts for low-traffic corporate sites and other types of writing.
-
Hi Egol,
I appreciate your view on this issue especially since I know you are so active in the community. I would be writing as an expert on a site that is dedicated to my field. Unfortunately paying the bills is clouding my judgement and therefore I am actually considering the idea of being paid to write.
Thanks
Carla
-
Hi
I totally agree with your ideas unfortunately I do not even know what the basic market price is. I wanted to start the thought process by knowing market value. Any ideas on a base price?
Thanks!
Carla
-
I write a lot every day. Have been doing that for a long time.
I write for sites that get lots of expert traffic where the visitors will immediately smell a noob author and complain about it. Those articles need to be tightly worded and to do that you have to do a lot of research even if you already know a lot about the topic.
I also write for a hobbyist site where the demands are a lot less. I can produce 1000 words for the hobbyist site in an afternoon and have one of the best articles for the subject. But, on the site with the expert traffic I can spend several full days on an article of same length.
Writing for the hobbyist site does not require a lot of background education. Writing for the site with the expert visitor can be a challenge for a person with a PhD and decades in the industry.
Just saying, I would not want to be paid by the word if I am writing certain types of content.
Good writing should not be purchased and sold like it is a commodity.
-
My answer is simple - as much as you feel your time is worth.
Thing about things like:
- how much time am I going to have to spend to research
- how much work is involved
- Is this a one off / or continual (you may wanna charge less for more work)
Give them a price you would be happy to work for and see what happens, if they say no either negotiate or find another client.
Sorry to say, but this is how more of a personal question on how much you think your time is worth / how much you need the additional income, there is not a correct answer.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
When to re-write and redirect a blog url?
What are best practices for rewriting (and then redirecting) blog URLs? I refresh old blog posts on our blog every month and many of them have URLs that are too long or could be improved. However, many of them also already get decent organic traffic and I don't want to lose traffic due to a URL redirect. Are there any best practices or "rules" I can follow when deciding whether to re-write and redirect blog URLs?
Content Development | | Emily.R.Monrovia
Thanks!0 -
How much do I have to differentiate syndicated content, exactly?
We have about 15-20 articles we'll repurpose on a partner domain (think: media outlet). To avoid duplicate content suspicion, how much exactly do we need to differentiate the content on the second domain? Yea, this is assuming we can't obtain a canonical for whatever reason. I've found some good advice here, but am looking for some quantification. Like: "A sentence/paragraph of introduction at the top of the piece, plus a link back to the original at the end of said introduction ought to do it." Any help is appreciated. Thanks! Tim
Content Development | | Jen_Floyd0 -
Outsource Content Writing Services - Who Is The Best?
Hello fellow Mozers! We are currently in the process of hiring an additional content developer but he doesn’t start for a couple weeks. We have some work that is piling up and I am considering outsourcing some content development until the new hire gets here. I have looked into Scripted, TextMaster, CrowdContent and a few others. I stay away from sites like UpWork and Fiverr because I abuse them in the past and I don’t get quality work. Is there any company that you have used in the past that you really trust and who are familiar with SEO? Thank you in advance for all of your recommendations
Content Development | | InfinityDigital1 -
How to rank highly without much content?
Many pages on the web rank highly - even though they have no keyworded text. They might have listings, or just images. How do they achieve such high rankings? Is it just by getting lots of inbound links?
Content Development | | GayWelcome0 -
Under the million at Alexa Global: 947,374 after 49 days, thank you so much guys.
My small new blog today broke the Alexa million after 49 days. It's like you've a child that growing up between your hands. And you see it achieve Goal after goal even at his/her startup with basic skills which need some improvements. And at this point I feel like I'm not good enough because, after all, I'm not giving it what it deserves really (only 12 posts, some of them less than 200 words). I would like to thank my god, I do believe in him. Also, I would like to thank these authors and bloggers who techs me for four years about the value and the content and all this things. I read a lot of articles and posts. I remember that I read an article about the first rule which say write for someone not for something. I'm speaking to you directly and I think this is the point. I and you in one place and I speaking to you face to face. I received an advice from one of my reader in a comment and this mean a lot to me. What means there's a connection between us. What I've achieved is not a lot. But, I'm so happy with, as for a start up. What happened for now teaches me something and that's why I'm writing this post here. To tell something, that may help someone. From the day I entered here I've got a lot of help. I asked for thing and people helped me. I can say name, EGOL, Andy, Matt, Antonio, Donford, Dirk, Ross, Vic and Favilli. Thank you so much. In the next days maybe I'm going to leave Moz. I'm so confused about it really. Perhaps it's so early time to join. I've used nothing from Moz tools as I remember. Just the backlinks checker tool what gave me nothing and I sent a message to the help center and I got a useful reply for explaining the case but not helpful for the case itself. The case for me is, I've entered the supermarket searching for a specific android mobile phone and the supermarket got a very useful stuff, different mobiles types, laptops and other very helpful stuff. But, they don't have the specific android phone for me. So, I want to see what they got but, I've a primary need first. hmmmm, I don't know .. maybe. The most thing I loved at Moz is the community, you are really elite people guys and there's a girl I spoke with and I loved her really :D. Thank you for everything, you are the best.
Content Development | | Eslam-yosef1 -
What platform is it better to write my blogs
In a nutshell, I have a website and on the web site I have a rolling blog updated regularly with informative ,interesting and non pushy original material. However . I notice that my website blog has a lower page and domain Authority than my original platform which is on Googles very own platform "blogger" . Should I use Blogger or the website ? or would it be better to promote the website blog on blogger ? or am I over thinking this ?
Content Development | | weddingshoesandaccessories0 -
How "much" schema.org is "too much"?
In terms of adding schema.org information to web pages, how critical is it for SERP? Can anyone recommend a model of what to tag? For example, on a single blog post I could tag the "article" and the "author", but I could also tag the logo that's in the header on every page. How much is "enough"? What is the relationship between schema.org and rel="author" tags? Thank you!
Content Development | | Titan5520 -
How often should I write a blog post?
I'm sure this has been asked before but I've searched for it in the Q&A Forum and couldn't find any relevant answer. I was thinking that a weekly post would suffice for my blog because the audience isn't one which would be checking frequently + there aren't very many new developments in the industry I'm in that would necessitate more than that. However, I was told that if I can't blog consistently 2-3 times per week, I really shouldn't start a blog, as it would need that much posting. Thoughts on this?
Content Development | | NiallTom0