In memory of Robert Allen. The original version of this post was a 30-day $5,000 freelance writing challenge that Robert ran on the blog back in 2018, documenting his journey from zero clients to $9,000 in booked work. Robert passed away a few years ago, but the framework he documented — and the case studies he shared — still help freelancers find their footing today. I’ve rebuilt this post into a complete 2026 ultimate guide while preserving his most valuable lessons in his honor. — Ryan
If you’re thinking about starting a freelance writing career in 2026, the landscape has changed more in the last two years than it did in the previous decade. AI commoditized the bottom of the market. Specialist expertise pays better than ever. The middle squeezed. Income ranges shifted by tier. The business side (LLC, taxes, contracts, deliverability) matters more than ever.
This is the complete 2026 ultimate guide. I’ll cover what realistically pays now and what doesn’t, how much you can actually expect to earn (with honest ranges by experience tier), the business and tax setup most new freelance writers skip until it’s too late, and an 8-step framework to land your first paid client and grow from there.
The short version: freelance writing isn’t dead. The lazy version of it is. Pick a niche, build real expertise, and you can build a $50K-$200K+ side or full-time income within 12-24 months. Here’s how.
How AI Has Changed Freelance Writing in 2026
Let’s start with the elephant in the inbox. AI didn’t kill freelance writing, but it killed a specific tier of it — and reshaped everything around what survived.
What got commoditized
- Generic blog posts. Clients who used to pay $50-$150 for a 1,500 word general-audience blog post now generate that themselves with ChatGPT in 10 minutes. That tier of work is largely gone.
- Basic SEO content. The “10 best X for Y” listicle that powered a lot of content mills in 2018-2022 is now produced by AI at near-zero marginal cost. Google’s helpful content updates also penalized this tier specifically, so the SEO upside collapsed too.
- Volume-based generalist work. “Write 20 articles a month at $100 each” gigs essentially evaporated. The math doesn’t work when AI handles the volume.
What got more valuable
- Specialist expertise. B2B SaaS writers, healthcare copywriters, finance content specialists, technical writers, and other subject-matter experts command higher rates than ever. AI raised the floor on basic content, which made expertise the differentiator.
- Original reporting and interviews. Case studies, expert interviews, original research, and anything built on real-world conversations are what AI cannot replicate. These now command premium rates.
- Strategy and editorial direction. Content strategy, brand voice development, editorial planning, and writing that requires judgment all moved up in value because they depend on human decision-making, not just output.
- First-person experience writing. Reviews, “how I did X” pieces, lived-experience content. AI cannot fake the parts that come from actually doing the thing. Both readers and AI search engines (ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews) preferentially cite content with strong human authority signals — which is exactly what expertise-driven freelance writing produces.
The short version: becoming a freelance writer in 2026 means picking a direction. The generalist commodity tier is gone. Specialist expertise is more valuable than it’s been in a decade. The honest path forward is to specialize early, build real authority, and use AI as an accelerant for the boring parts — not as a replacement for your voice.
How Much Can a Freelance Writer Make in 2026?
The honest answer is “it depends, and the range is wider than ever.” Here are realistic 2026 income ranges by experience tier and specialization. These are the numbers I see freelance writers actually hitting — not the inflated claims you find on freelance influencer YouTube.
Beginner Freelance Writer (first 0-12 months)
- Per-word rate: $0.05 to $0.15 (yes, really — the bottom of the market collapsed)
- Per-project rate: $75 to $400 for a 1,000-1,500 word blog post in a non-specialized niche
- Monthly income (side hustle, 10-15 hours/week): $0-$1,500 for the first 3-6 months, ramping to $1,000-$3,000/month by month 9-12 once you have 2-3 repeat clients
- Reality check: The first paid client is the hardest. Most freelance writers earn under $500 total in their first three months. Don’t quit a day job based on month-1 numbers.
Mid-Tier Specialist (1-3 years in)
- Per-word rate: $0.20 to $0.75 for specialized niches (B2B SaaS, finance, healthcare, technical)
- Per-project rate: $500 to $2,500 per long-form piece in a specialty
- Monthly income (full-time, 30-40 hours/week): $4,000-$10,000/month
- Retainer rates: $2,000-$8,000/month per client for 2-4 deliverables monthly
Top-Tier Specialist / Strategy Work (3+ years)
- Per-word rate: $1.00 to $3.00+ for specialty long-form, white papers, thought leadership
- Per-project rate: $3,000-$10,000+ per white paper, case study series, or strategic content piece
- Hourly (strategy/consulting work): $150-$500/hour
- Monthly income (full-time): $10,000-$25,000+/month for top specialists with strong client books
- Annual income range: $120,000-$300,000+ for top freelance writers in specialty niches. The very top of the market (content strategy directors, name-brand B2B copywriters) earns $300K-$500K+ a year.
The honest caveats
- These numbers assume full-time freelance work after the ramp. Side hustlers working 10-15 hours a week scale proportionally — typically $1,500-$4,000/month after the first year.
- Income is rarely smooth. Most freelance writers hit a “feast or famine” cycle in years 1-2. A $10,000 month followed by a $2,000 month is normal until you have a stable retainer base.
- Taxes and benefits eat real income. Self-employment tax (15.3% in the US) plus federal/state income tax means you’re typically taking home 65-75% of your gross. Account for this when you compare freelance rates to a salaried job — a $100K/year salary is roughly equivalent to $130K-$140K freelance gross.
- The expertise premium is real. A generalist freelance writer might top out at $50K-$70K/year. A specialist in B2B SaaS, finance, or healthcare can hit $150K-$250K in the same hours. Specialization is the highest-ROI decision a new freelance writer makes.
Step 1: Pick Your Niche (the Single Biggest Decision)
If you only do one thing differently from most beginning freelance writers, it’s this: specialize from day one. The freelance writers earning $150K+ in 2026 are almost universally specialists. The ones stuck at $30K-$50K are almost universally generalists. Same hours, very different income.
The best niche for you sits at the intersection of three things:
- What you already know. Existing domain knowledge or a previous career is a huge advantage. Engineers writing for engineering companies, nurses writing for healthcare brands, finance pros writing for fintech — these are the highest-leverage starts.
- What clients pay for. B2B SaaS, fintech, cybersecurity, healthcare, legal, and finance pay 2-5x what consumer lifestyle or general-audience blog content pays.
- What you can stand to do for years. Specialization compounds — but only if you actually keep doing it. Pick something you find genuinely interesting, not just lucrative.
The 2026 niches I see paying best for freelance writers: B2B SaaS, fintech, AI/ML technical writing, cybersecurity, healthcare/medical, legal, sustainability/ESG, real estate investing, and developer content. If you have any background in those areas, that’s where to start. See my full guide on picking a niche for the deeper framework.
Step 2: Build Your Portfolio (Even Without Paying Clients)
The chicken-and-egg problem most beginning freelance writers face: you need samples to land clients, but you need clients to produce samples. The solve is to publish 5-8 strong pieces in your niche on your own, before any client asks for samples.
- Your own blog or Medium. The fastest start. Pick 5-8 specific topics in your niche and write the best version of each one you can. These become your portfolio.
- LinkedIn long-form posts. Especially good for B2B niches. Companies hiring B2B writers check your LinkedIn anyway.
- Guest posts on smaller niche sites. Lower bar to entry than mainstream publications, and the bylines build credibility fast.
- Strategic free work (limited). One or two unpaid case studies for organizations you genuinely admire can produce portfolio pieces that punch above their weight. Set a hard limit — never do open-ended free work as a tactic.
Quality matters far more than volume. Five excellent niche pieces will outperform thirty mediocre ones. Treat each portfolio sample like a paying client commissioned it — that’s the bar.
Step 3: Find Your First Clients
Most beginning freelance writers fail here. Not because they’re bad writers, but because they default to job boards and content mills — exactly the lowest-paying, hardest-to-stand-out channels in 2026. The actual best client-finding channels:
- Cold email. Still the highest-ROI outreach channel for freelance writers, but the 2026 playbook is different from 2018. AI-personalized mass outreach gets filtered as spam. Real personalization, multi-channel sequences (email + LinkedIn), and proper inbox warming win. Full playbook in my cold email templates for freelancers guide — the templates there have generated $110,000+ in client work.
- LinkedIn engagement. Comment substantively on posts from people in your target niche for 30-60 days. Real engagement (not generic “great post!” comments) builds visibility, and DMs after that warm context convert dramatically better than cold cold outreach.
- Referrals from existing clients. Once you have one or two clients, every project ends with “do you know anyone else who might need writing help?” This becomes the dominant source of new work by year 2.
- SolidGigs and similar curated job boards. Higher-quality than Upwork or Fiverr, with vetted opportunities delivered weekly. SolidGigs is the one I’ve recommended for years.
- Specialty job boards. Superpath (B2B content), Peak Freelance, ProBlogger Jobs, and niche-specific boards (e.g., Built In for tech, AngelList for startups) tend to have better fits than general freelance marketplaces.
Case study: The Facebook comment that turned into a $1,500 client
One of the best examples in this guide comes from Robert Allen’s original 2018 challenge documented on this blog. Robert was scrolling Facebook when he saw a successful entrepreneur comment about needing help fixing his webinar funnels. Most freelancers would scroll past. Robert sent a personalized email with the subject line “Need webinar funnel help?” — referencing the specific Facebook comment, demonstrating relevant expertise (he used the term “PLF” — Product Launch Formula — to signal industry familiarity), and offering to hop on a 5-minute call.
The response came the next day. Before the call, Robert opted into every webinar funnel on the prospect’s site so he had hands-on familiarity with what they were actually running. He went into the call prepared, asked sharp questions, and followed up with a hyper-specific proposal broken down week-by-week — including a confident price (“For a project like this, I’d be honored to let you test me out for $1,500”). No haggling. The client accepted as-is.
The principle that mattered: real personalization, real preparation, and a confident proposal beat volume-based outreach every time — and it’s even more true in 2026, when AI-personalized mass outreach is everywhere and easy to spot. Robert’s technique still works because it’s built on doing the work most freelancers skip.
Step 4: Pitch & Close the Deal
Once a prospect responds to your outreach, the pitch process matters more than most beginners realize. Three principles that consistently land paid work:
- Do real work before the call. If they have a podcast, listen to two episodes. If they have a blog, read their last 5 posts. If they have a webinar funnel, opt into it. Going into a sales call with specific, concrete observations about what they’re doing well and where they could improve separates you from 95% of freelance writers.
- Send a proposal within 24 hours of the call. The longer you wait, the colder the prospect gets. A 24-hour turnaround signals professionalism and momentum.
- Price confidently, not hourly. “For a project like this, my fee is $X” closes better than “I charge $Y per hour.” Project-based pricing also lets you capture the value of expertise instead of trading time for money.
The proposal itself should be short (1-2 pages), specific (week-by-week deliverables), and end with a clear next step (signature, deposit, kickoff date). Avoid the temptation to over-explain or add long bios — the client already knows you’re qualified or they wouldn’t be reading the proposal.
Step 5: Do the Work (Workflow + AI Integration)
Once you’ve landed a client, the work itself becomes the foundation of everything that follows — referrals, repeat business, rate increases. Most freelance writers underestimate how much workflow systems matter compared to raw writing talent.
The 2026 freelance writing workflow
- Brief and align first. Get a clear brief in writing before you start drafting. Target word count, outline, key sources, success criteria. Misalignment at the brief stage causes 80% of client friction.
- Research deeply. Real research is the differentiator in the AI era. Interviews, original data, niche-specific examples — these are what AI cannot replicate and what clients pay for.
- Outline before drafting. A solid outline cuts draft time in half and prevents the structural problems that trigger heavy revisions.
- Draft in your own voice. Do not let AI draft for you. Clients in 2026 are increasingly skilled at spotting AI tells, and you’re being paid for the parts AI can’t produce — voice, opinion, real expertise.
- Edit ruthlessly. Self-edit pass first, then run through a tool like my free grammar fixer or paraphrase tool for polish, then a final human read. AI is great for editing, not drafting.
Where AI actually helps
- Research summarization. Feeding a long source document into ChatGPT or Claude and asking for a structured summary saves real time. Verify the facts yourself before using them.
- Outlining and structure. AI can produce a serviceable outline you then heavily edit. Useful when you’re staring at a blank page.
- Editing and polish. Tools like my grammar fixer, paraphrase tool, and RightBlogger are tuned to clean drafts without flattening voice.
- Brainstorming subject lines, headlines, alternate framings. AI is good at producing 20 options quickly, even if you only use one.
The rule: use AI to do more of your work faster — never to replace yourself. The freelance writers winning in 2026 produce more, better work using AI as an accelerant. The ones being replaced are the ones who tried to outsource their voice to a chatbot.
Step 6: Set Your Rates (Per-Word, Per-Project, Retainer)
Pricing is where new freelance writers leave the most money on the table. Three pricing models, and when to use each:
Per-word pricing
Simple, transparent, easy to compare. Best for one-off pieces with clear word counts. The downside: it caps your earnings at time spent. Range in 2026: $0.05-$3.00+ per word depending on niche and experience tier (see income ranges section above).
Per-project pricing
Better for capturing the value of expertise. A specialist can produce a tight 1,200-word B2B post in 4 hours that delivers more value than a generalist’s 3,000-word post in 10 hours — and per-project pricing reflects that. Always price projects, not hours, once you have 1-2 specialty references.
Retainer pricing
The end goal. A monthly retainer for 2-4 deliverables means predictable income and far less time spent on sales. Mid-tier specialists charge $2,000-$8,000/month per retainer client. Top-tier specialists charge $8,000-$20,000/month. Two or three solid retainers is the path to stable full-time freelance income.
Raising rates
Raise rates annually with existing clients, and bake the increase into new client pricing first. The conversation: “Starting [next quarter], my rate for new work will be $X — I wanted to give you notice in advance.” Most good clients accept this without pushback. The ones who fight every raise are usually the ones not worth keeping anyway.
Step 7: Run the Business Side (LLC, Taxes, Contracts, Accounting)
Most freelance writing guides skip this section. That’s a mistake — the business side is what separates a serious freelance career from a perpetual side hustle that never quite works out. Here’s the realistic 2026 setup.
Sole proprietor vs. LLC
Sole proprietor is the default and totally fine for the first year while you’re testing the waters. No paperwork required, just report income on Schedule C of your personal taxes. The downside: no liability protection between your personal assets and your business.
An LLC (single-member or multi-member) becomes worth it once you’re earning consistent income (~$30K+/year), working with larger clients, or want personal asset protection. Costs roughly $50-$500 to file depending on your state, plus annual reporting fees. Most freelance writers I know form an LLC in year 2.
S-Corp election (a tax classification, not a separate entity) becomes worth considering at around $80K-$100K+ in annual freelance income. It can reduce self-employment tax meaningfully, but adds payroll and accounting complexity. Talk to a CPA before electing — the breakeven point varies by state and personal situation.
Taxes (the part nobody warns you about)
- Self-employment tax is 15.3%. This is on top of regular income tax. It covers Social Security and Medicare — you’re paying both the employee and employer portions yourself.
- Quarterly estimated taxes. The IRS expects you to pay taxes throughout the year, not just at filing. Set aside 25-30% of every payment for taxes immediately, and pay quarterly. Missing this is the #1 mistake new freelance writers make.
- Deductible expenses. Home office (square footage method), business software, internet and phone (business-use portion), professional development, business travel, and health insurance premiums are all deductible. Track these all year, not just at tax time.
- Hire a CPA at $30K+/year. A good freelance-savvy CPA pays for themselves several times over once your income is real. Don’t DIY freelance taxes past the first year or two.
Contracts (don’t skip these)
Every paid project should have a signed contract or statement of work. The basics that matter:
- Scope. What you’re delivering, word count, format, revisions included.
- Payment terms. 50% upfront for projects over $1,000 is standard. Net 15 or net 30 for retainers. Late fees if you want them (they help).
- Kill fee. What you get paid if the client cancels mid-project. 50% is standard if work has started.
- Ownership and rights. When the client owns the work (usually on full payment). Whether you can use the piece in your portfolio.
- Revisions. How many included, what counts as a revision vs. a rewrite. This is where most scope creep happens.
Templates like Bonsai, AND.CO, or HelloSign make this fast. There’s also good free freelance contract templates available — see my freelance contract guide for the full breakdown.
Invoicing and getting paid
- Use real invoicing software. FreshBooks, Bonsai, Wave (free), or QuickBooks Self-Employed. Word doc invoices look amateurish and get lost.
- Net 15 or net 30 payment terms. Net 60 is fine for enterprise clients but cash-flow-deadly for new freelancers. Don’t accept net 60 unless the rate makes up for it.
- Late fees. 1.5% per month on overdue invoices is standard. Most clients pay faster when this is in the contract.
- Always follow up. Don’t assume an unpaid invoice is in the mail. A polite “checking in on this invoice” email the day after due date works. So does a more direct one a week later.
Health insurance, retirement, and the safety net
The least sexy but most important part of going full-time freelance. ACA marketplace plans are the default option for individual coverage. Solo 401(k) or SEP-IRA accounts let you set aside significant retirement savings (often $30K-$60K+/year) and reduce taxable income at the same time. Emergency fund of 6-12 months of expenses is the freelance equivalent of job security.
None of this is exciting. All of it is what separates freelance writing as a stable career from freelance writing as a fragile gig that crashes the first slow month.
Step 8: Scale Beyond Your First Clients
Once you have 2-3 paying clients and a stable income floor, the game shifts from finding clients to choosing better ones. Three moves that compound over time:
- Ask every client for referrals. Not in a desperate way — just at natural moments. “I’m looking to take on one or two more clients like you. Anyone come to mind?” This becomes the dominant lead source by year 2.
- Raise rates annually. Existing clients accept reasonable increases. Use the increase to either earn more or work less for the same income.
- Build owned audience channels. A newsletter, a podcast, a blog under your own name. Even modest reach (a few thousand subscribers) shifts the dynamic — clients start coming to you. See my full guide on starting a blog for the foundation.
- Fire your worst clients. Once you’re full, replace your bottom 20% with better work. Most freelance writers don’t do this and stay capped at the rate their worst client pays.
- Productize where you can. Templates, courses, consulting packages, retainer products — turning your expertise into something you can sell repeatedly is how you eventually break the time-for-money ceiling.
Tools of the Trade in 2026
You don’t need much to freelance. A laptop, decent internet, and the discipline to show up. That said, a handful of tools genuinely make the work easier:
- Google Workspace. Docs, Drive, Calendar. Free up to a point, $6/month for the business tier. Sharing documents with clients is the default; Word docs feel dated.
- Grammarly or my free grammar fixer. Catches the small errors that erode trust.
- RightBlogger. The AI writing platform I co-founded for bloggers and freelance writers — research, outlining, drafting assistance, editing, and SEO tools in one place. Tuned to produce drafts that don’t look AI-generated, so it’s safe for client work in the AI era.
- Zoom or Google Meet. Client calls. Zoom’s recording feature is useful for capturing notes on briefs.
- FreshBooks, Bonsai, or Wave. Invoicing and basic accounting. Bonsai also handles contracts.
- Notion or Obsidian. Personal knowledge management — research notes, client briefs, idea capture. The freelance writers with serious portfolios all have some version of this system.
- SolidGigs. Curated freelance job board. Sends a vetted weekly list so you don’t spend hours sifting Upwork.
- A real CRM like Close or HubSpot. Once you’re juggling 5+ active conversations, a CRM keeps the pipeline clean.
- LastPass or 1Password. You will accumulate dozens of client logins. Password manager is non-negotiable.
Freelance Writing FAQ
Is freelance writing still viable as a career in 2026?
Yes — but in a more specialized form than it was even a few years ago. Generic blog writing has been commoditized by AI, while specialist expertise (B2B SaaS, finance, healthcare, technical, strategy) pays better than ever. The freelance writers earning $100K-$300K+/year in 2026 are almost all specialists in a specific niche. The ones stuck at $30K-$50K are usually trying to be generalists.
How long until I can make a full-time income from freelance writing?
Realistically 12-24 months of consistent work to replace a full-time salary, assuming you’re starting from zero clients and zero published portfolio pieces. Specialists with existing domain expertise (engineers, nurses, finance pros switching to freelance writing in their field) often compress that to 6-12 months because they skip the “build basic credibility” phase. The first paid client is the hardest milestone — referrals and repeat work start compounding from there.
Should I use AI to write client work?
For research, outlining, and editing — yes (with disclosure if the client asks). For producing the actual draft from scratch — no, almost never. Clients in 2026 are increasingly skilled at spotting AI-generated content, and you’re being paid for the parts AI can’t produce. Tools like my free grammar fixer, paraphrase tool, and RightBlogger are designed for the supportive role AI should play in a freelance writer’s workflow.
Do I need an LLC to freelance write?
Not in year 1. Sole proprietor (no paperwork, file Schedule C with personal taxes) is fine while you’re proving the income is real. Form an LLC in year 2 if your annual income hits $30K+ — it’s cheap insurance for personal asset protection. Consider S-Corp election around $80K-$100K+ in annual freelance income for the self-employment tax savings, but talk to a CPA first because the math varies by state.
What’s the best niche for new freelance writers in 2026?
The best niche is one you already have domain knowledge in. Engineers writing for engineering companies, healthcare workers writing for medical brands, finance pros writing fintech content — these specialists earn 2-5x what generalists earn. If you don’t have an existing specialty, the highest-paying B2B niches in 2026 are SaaS, fintech, cybersecurity, AI/ML technical writing, healthcare, legal, and sustainability/ESG. Avoid generic lifestyle, parenting, and travel blog content — those segments have been most heavily commoditized by AI.
How do I find my first paid freelance writing client?
Cold email remains the highest-ROI channel for finding your first paid client. The 2026 playbook is different from 2018 — AI-personalized mass outreach gets filtered as spam now, so real personalization, proper inbox warming, and multi-channel sequences (email + LinkedIn) win. The full updated playbook is in my cold email templates for freelancers guide, including the templates that have generated $110,000+ in actual client work.
How much should I charge as a beginner freelance writer?
Beginner freelance writers in 2026 typically charge $0.05-$0.15 per word for general niches and $0.10-$0.30 per word for specialty niches. Per-project rates run $75-$400 for a 1,000-1,500 word post in a non-specialty, $300-$1,000+ in a specialty. Don’t go below these floors — work at $0.02-$0.04 per word usually loses money once you account for unpaid time. Raise rates after every 5-10 finished projects.
Final Thoughts
Freelance writing in 2026 is harder to start than it was a decade ago and more lucrative once you’re in. The bar got higher — generic content has been commoditized by AI, and the days of “anyone can write a blog post for $50” are gone. But specialist expertise, original reporting, and real authority have all become more valuable, not less. If you’re willing to specialize, do the business-side work most freelance writers skip, and put in the 12-24 months it takes to build real momentum, freelance writing is still one of the highest-leverage careers you can start on the side.
If you want the next steps: the cold email templates for freelancers guide covers the outreach playbook in detail (those templates have generated $110,000+ in real freelance work). The how to become a freelance writer guide goes deeper on the early-stage process. For the tools side, my free grammar fixer and paraphrase tool handle the editing pass, and RightBlogger is the full AI writing platform I built for freelance writers and bloggers who want to use AI as an accelerant without sacrificing voice.
One last note. The original $5,000 Freelance Writing Challenge that this post was built around in 2018 was Robert Allen’s — a friend, a sharp copywriter, and someone whose work helped a lot of new freelance writers find their footing. Robert passed away a few years ago. The case study in this guide (the Facebook comment that turned into a $1,500 client) is preserved from his original challenge. Thanks for everything, Robert.
Ready to Start Your Freelance Writing Career?
Check out my cold email templates for freelancers guide for the outreach playbook that landed $110,000+ in client work.
317 replies to “How to Start a Freelance Writing Career in 2026: The Ultimate Guide”
Hi Rob,
This sounds interesting and insightful. My main challenge has been finding clients -I find myself with a lot of work every day but from low paying clients.
Totally get that. I used to be in the same boat. I’ll show you some very subtle, but hopefully very powerful decisions I made to get out of that.
Finding clients. Know I can do the work when I get it. Ideally this would be outreach contact letters/emails/phone calls and how to find and convince appropriate prospects.
Mike, I know the pain all too well. I’ll be providing the actual scripts I use and templates for you guys. But more importantly, the mindset I use to write those scripts and who I reach out to.
So I think you’ll get a lot of value out of that.
Thanks for your comment!
Hello Robert,
This is amazing. I’m Jessica and to answer your question, finding clients is the one thing I need to most help with.
Thank you.
Hey Jessica! Don’t worry – I got your back on this one!
Hi Robert
Thanks for taking on this challenge.
I’m very impressed that you got to write with Ramit. What an amazing experience.
My number one struggle is the process of finding clients e.g. does the wording in the subject line matter so much and if so what is the best wording to use?
How to word the follow up emails
How to charge what what I am worth / deserve
How to stick with the pitching when one gets no response.
Thanks for your help. I look forward to hearing how you proceed. I’ll be doing my own challenge of this nature along with you.
Shoshanah
Shoshanah, Nice! Thanks for the note. You’ll see a lot of that pop up during the challenge no doubt.
My biggest challenge is finding clients. I have one agency I provide articles for roughly 3 times a week, which is awesome. I just stumbled across them on a job site though and I don’t know how to find other clients like that, who are looking for steady work and are willing to pay decent rates.
Finding clients. I just launched my freelance writing website a couple weeks ago and have yet to land a client… So I’m REALLY excited about this and will likely be doing the challenge right alongside you!
Nice! Let’s do this!
Hi Rob,
I like your one month challenge and wish you all the best. I am already into freelancing writing for a US education company. I am very much excited to learn from your experience, and this will be a good source of inspiration for others also. Keep it up !!
Ashutosh, great niche! Thank you!
My biggest challenge is having the confidence to charge for writing as a service. This is a great concept and I’m really looking forward to following your progress.
Yes! That’s a big one. Noted and will make sure to include some of my thoughts on this. Thanks Mike!
Finding clients…I spend way too much time researching potential clients to reach out to. Then ultimately deciding they’re way over my head or level of talent. So, confidence is lacking, but there has to be a better way to figure out who to reach out to.
Good one Tabitha! Thanks for the idea.
This is very very noble of you! I will be following with great interest!
Hi Robert,
This is an exciting challenge, and I’m glad to be able to witness (and participate) in it. My biggest challenge is charging what I deserve. I am very involved in my town’s non-profit community, so I find plenty of opportunities to use my skills. The problem is that I don’t charge – or charge very little – for my time. I know it’s both a mindset issue (believing that I’m worthy of my rate) and a skill issue (how to approach the conversation, stand my ground, and close the deal). I’d love to hear how you handled this!
Got it Krystal! YES! This is a really important point. But the good news is, it’s a really good problem to have once you see how you can fix it 🙂
Hi Robert
One thing I need help is how to research topics to write articles. I notice some great writers can write an article on any topic. How do they do it?
There’s likely a lot going on behind the scenes. But the simple answer is they’ve probably developed some templates for writing and then they can go out and just fit their research into those templates pretty quickly.
I’m not sure how much diversity of article writing I’ll do, but I’ll say for newer writers, niching down can be the biggest needle mover.
So if you’re spreading yourself thin on a lot of topics, try to focus on one niche for now.
I’ll show you more about this in the challenge. Because my skillset is pretty narrow. I rarely venture out of it for clients.
Looking forward for this challenge
🙂 Thanks for your support!
Comment * Hi, finding clients is the challenge.Happy to be helped.
I`m a talented writer and my greatest challenge is finding good clients. Those that are respectful and reasonable. Luckily, based on the laid out challenge I believe I will learn more tips on the same. Quick question though, why not make a daily update rather than a weekly one? I mean, I want to join you in the challenge and see how far I will have scaled by the end of the 30 days (following your tips) and thus feel if the updates were as frequent it will be way easier.
That’s a good point Patience. I’m doing it weekly just because it’s easier to carve out a chunk of time to write up what happened during the week on one day than to break it up through out the week.
But you’re welcome to follow along with me on the instagram I created for this challenge (instagram.com/freelancerob)
There I’m planning to give more live updates in the stories!
Let me know what you think of the first week update though. I’m open to posting more frequently if that gives you more value!
Hi Robert Allen,
Thanks for this article. The article is very helpful and timely.
The most of all my challenges is the writing process. How to come up with a great article, plagiarism free content, how to get the right keywords for ranking purpose, etc.
I look forward to your response.
Thank you.
You got it Sunny! I’ll show you my entire process from start to finish. Actually, I might even record myself working on a project on video. Do you think that would be helpful?
Hi Robert,
I think the most challenging part for me is getting paid what I believe I deserve. Unfortunately, on those freelancing websites, you have to start small and earn peanuts to get your reviews up – not enough cash to get the bills paid.
All the best with your project, you can do it!
Kind regards,
Tamsyn (South Africa)
Tamsyn! I agree. I don’t like to use many of the common freelancing websites any more. I’ll show you why in the challenge. But the simple fact is there are just a lot better places to find clients.
Great challenge Robert!
…and thanks to you and Ryan for your transparency.
It would be great to see the intricacies of the planning process;
1. How you get round to pinning down what sort of content will be chosen
2. What type of client would be targeted with that content
3. The initial correspondence to your chosen client
4. The initial response from your chosen client and the interactions there after
Quite exciting for sure!
Tim
Yes! Thanks Tim — we’ll be posting screenshots and breakdowns of all of this.
Hello Robert,
thank you, finding clients, creating a website, and much more I want to learn.
Maja
Noted! Thanks Maja
Finding the clients.