I still remember the day in 2014 when I wrote my very first client email pitch (after my horrible stint with content mills).
I still remember the day in 2014 when I wrote my very first client email pitch (after my horrible stint with content mills).
When I first started freelance writing, I spent way too much time worrying about my logo and brand colors.
As much as I’d love for clients to read my portfolio, look at my samples, and immediately say, “Perfect — you’re hired,” that’s not always what happens.
When I saw Karolina Assi’s post on LinkedIn, I was a bit surprised but not really though.
I’ve freelanced for more than a decade now, and I can still remember the first time I had to follow up on an unpaid invoice.
I’ve been freelance writing for a decade and during this time my work office set up has changed…drastically.
I started writing in a tiny closet, then in the kitchen, then I developed hand pain from typing on the couch.
If you’re working as a freelance writer long enough, you’re going to run into a bad client.
You’ve decided to go after freelance writing but you have no idea how to land writing jobs that actually pay.