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Seven more sites
These may well be the glory days for freelance writing on the Web,
with dozens of sites paying rates that compare favorably to print
publications. For both veteran journalists and aspiring writers, the
Internet has opened up potentially lucrative new markets.
A new online service devoted to just that notion will debut later this
month. Content
Exchange, created by Editor & Publisher columnist Steve Outing and
freelance writer Amy Gahran, will bring together those who create
content for online media and those who buy content.
"Content Exchange is in large part about helping freelance
writers and other content professionals find paying online
venues Web content sites, e-mail newsletters, corporate intranets,
associations, distance learning, etc.," Outing says by e-mail. "The
opportunities
for content producers to find paying work online are growing
incredibly fast, and we aim to help content professionals
take advantage of the situation."
Wisely, Outing and Gahran define content broadly, aiming the service
not just to journalists but also to fiction writers, editors,
proofreaders, researchers, designers,
artists, cartoonists, photographers, indexers, audio and video
specialists,
translators, interactive tool developers and others. Searches will be
free at first, but eventually the enterprise will charge a fee to
search the database. Venues seeking content also will be able to place
free listings initially.
The enterprise sounds like a valuable endeavor.
Here are seven Web sites that rely on original content from freelance
writers.
(Part one of this feature, with seven other sites, appeared Jan. 26, 1999.)
Type of publication: General interest magazine
Headquarters: Columbia, Missouri
Description:Impression magazine, an online magazine funded
by the University of Missouri School of Journalism, features work from
new and established writers and critics. Published every two weeks,
the zine runs everything from personal essays and science stories to
author interviews, book reviews and short stories, says editor Andy
Wang. "More than half of the work is done by freelancers," he says.
Past stories include a look at Woody Allen's resurgence, a mother's
battle to keep her HIV-positive son off of toxic AIDS drugs, and a
comparison of the lives of Bill Clinton and Mick Jagger.
Pay: $50-$500 for columns, and up to 75 cents a word for
assigned feature
stories.
Contact: Andy
Wang
Type of publication: Opinion and culture journal
Headquarters: New York
Description: Feed magazine is one of a handful of zines
that is still fighting the good fight: publishing thoughtful,
sometimes biting analysis and opinion and slowly building an audience
among the digerati. It runs essays, criticism and reported pieces on
culture, technology and politics. Says senior editor Sam Lipsyte: "We
want smart and irreverent, cautiously optimistic or wildly
pessimistic pieces by media-savvy writers. This magazine is online
only, so know the Web, but more importantly, know our formats." He suggests
that prospective writers "read Feed, become familiar with our style
and world view, post in the
Loop and pitch persistently."
Pay: "Anywhere from 40 cents to a dollar a word, depending
on the piece and
the writer," Lipsyte says.
Contact: Sam
Lipsyte
Headquarters: Redmond, Washington
Description: MSNBC's Travel section relies on travel
features with a strong news peg. "I'm usually looking for 800 to
1,200 words, which includes a sidebar on how the reader can repeat the
travel experience how to fly there, where to stay, where
to eat, what to avoid like the plague," says Travel editor and
producer Robin Dalmas by e-mail. Recent stories include a new $800
million resort in the Bahamas; skiing in Utah before the 2002 Winter
Olympics crowds descend and Fiji's preparations to greet the
millennium (it's just across the International Dateline).
"My advice to freelancers who wish to write for MSNBC's Travel
section? Study travel magazines, newspapers and online news
publications so
you're up on the news, then make story pitches accordingly. Study the
Travel
Industry Association of America's Web site to be abreast of
travel trends. I'm thrilled when a writer sends me a unique, original
travel
story pitch that spins off the news. I hardly ever get these kinds of
queries, yet they are exactly what I'm looking for."
Note: MSNBC's Sports, Opinions, Business, Health and Technology
sections may also accept freelance.
Pay: $300-$800 for a travel feature, depending on experience;
MSNBC does not pay for travel expenses.
Contact: Robin
Dalmas
Type of publication: Technology news
Headquarters: San Francisco
Description: Wired News the Web site, not the
magazine is a must-read for the latest information and commentary
on the fast-changing digital
landscape. Culture section editor Judy Bryan suggests: "Let me know
that you read Wired News, and that you read it
thoughtfully. I'd love to hear your thoughts on stories in my section:
'I
noticed you ran a piece about X, so I'm sure you'll be interested in
my
story on Y.' " Bryan asks prospective writers to send her story
pitches along with URLs to past stories written for other tech
publications.
Pay: $25-$300, depending on length and the writer's
experience.
Contact: Judy Bryan
Other sections: The Politics section accepts freelance news
stories that generally run 650-700 words, says news editor James
Glave. He asks writers to relay their areas of special interest, such
as crypto policy or First Amendment issues in cyberspace. And he
suggests that freelancers point to past stories they've written online
and study the Politics section to get a feel for it. Pay is 50 cents a
word. Contact Glave.
The Business section relies heavily on freelance stories, says
business editor Kourosh Karimkhany. Freelancers should make story
pitches and follow the Wired tone and voice. Pay starts out "at about
40 cents a word" and may increase "once we gain confidence in the
writer's ability." Karimkhany says he's especially interested in hearing pitches about the online porn business. E-mail Karimkhany directly.
Type of publication: Finance and technology
Headquarters: New York
Description: While Forbes Digital Tool is a magazine that
publishes every other week, the Digital Tool Web site appears weekly.
Its coverage is technology-focused with a strong financial component.
Stephen Johnson, managing editor for Forbes Digital Media, says, "I'm
looking for coverage on large-cap stocks' earnings, skeptical
contrarian pieces, articles on whether there's a shakeout coming,
geeky-type pieces for our readers who want to find out how many data
packets you can put on the end of a pin any compelling story that
we haven't seen in the Wall Street Journal."
Subjects covered include start-ups, electronic business, personal
finance and convergence. Johnson says he has "a reasonable budget" for
freelance and will run such pieces "as often as I can." He warns that
typically he sends articles back to the writer for reworking.
Pay: A typical fee is a flat rate of $1,000 for 1,500
words.
Contact: Stephen
Johnson
Type of publication: Finance
Headquarters: New York
Description: With some 50 staff reporters and editors,
TheStreet.com relies chiefly on its staff for news coverage, but it's
won a wide following for its hard-hitting commentary and analysis that
challenges the conventional wisdom. "It's hard to find experienced
freelancers who can make a quote sing and make complex stories
understandable and get interview subjects to reveal information
without burning them," says Cory Johnson, West Coast bureau chief for
TheStreet.com. But he poses this question to prospective writers: "Do
you want to write about the stock market? Are you jazzed about
traders? Do you know how bad CNNfn is, or how good CNBC is? Did you
ever read 'Liar's Poker'?" He suggests studying the site in detail
before pitching a story.
Pay: $300-$500 for articles and commentaries that typically run
750 words.
Contact: Cory
Johnson
Type of publication: Business and finance
Headquarters: San Francisco
Description: Launched 15 months ago, CBS MarketWatch takes
advantage of CBS News' reporting expertise and the online savvy of
Data Broadcasting Corp. "We look for financial journalists who can
write stories that make
and save people money," says editor in chief Thom Calandra. "We love
company stories with real people
talking in them, mainly stockholders rather than analysts." Most of
the site's content is produced by full-time staff, but Calandra says,
"We're always on the lookout for financial journalists who can write
stories that make and save people money." He has this tip for would-be
writers: "We're a real time news service, so anything that happened a
minute
ago is fair game."
Pay: $200-$300 per article, and more for "something
especially striking."
Contact: Thom
Calandra |