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Writing Home Business - Five Tips To Turn Your Writing
Into A Business
by Angela Booth
More Home Business articles

Published on this site: January 23rd, 2009 - See
more articles from this month

Writing can become an extremely successful home business for
you, if you take the "business" aspect seriously. Writers who do
take it seriously earn six-figure incomes, because they know how
valuable their writing skills are to the business community.
Considering your writing as a home BUSINESS is a mindset. Let's
look at how you can develop that mindset, and develop your
writing into a thriving business.
I've chosen the following five tips because they're essential,
and they're the things I see many of my writing students
overlook.
- Create a business plan
The first and best tip I can give you is to develop a business
plan for your writing. You must know how much capital you have
to invest in your business, how much money you will make in the
first year, and how you will make that money.
If you've yet to make your first sale as a writer, make some
sales first, so you get an idea of the marketplace. The writing
profession is filled with hobbyist writers, who have no idea how
to position themselves, price their services, and promote their
services, so this tends to skew prices at the lower end of the
market.
- Treat your business as a business - work as hard for
yourself as you would for a boss
Since you're writing from home, your daily commute is the short
trip to your home office, so you save commuting time, which will
be at least an hour a day, even if you have a short commute.
You can spend that "free" hour or more in any way you choose,
but it's vital that you spend a solid eight hours writing and
working in your business. So treat your writing as seriously as
you would a job.
(This isn't a problem for most home business writers, who tend
to over-work, but that's another story.)
- Invest in your business - but don't go into debt for your
business
When your writing is your business, invest in it. Buy the
computers, software, and the communications equipment you need.
Invest in training, too. No training you do will ever be wasted,
and it's essential so you become a business person as well as a
writer.
However, don't go into debt. Fund your purchases from your
writing sales.
- Ask for a retainer from your writing clients - at least 50
per cent in advance
You must ask for a retainer - a payment up front - from your
clients. Since magazines and newspapers fight this, writing for
them should only be a minor part of your writing income, because
you're making them unsecured loans.
Businesses and Web sites expect to pay some portion of your fee
in advance, so they're your preferred clients. The up-front
retainer is 50 per cent. On long projects, you can accept
payment at specific milestones - a third up front, a third on
delivery of half the project, and so on.
- Keep your deadlines and over-deliver
The writing profession is an amazingly small world. Word gets
around. So always keep your deadlines. The only possible excuse
for missing a deadline is is that you're in hospital.
So there you have five tips for turning your writing into a
home business. As a professional writer, you have the potential
to make an unlimited income: enjoy your writing, but treat it as
the business it is too.

Angela Booth: Discover how easy it is to make money as a
Web writer with Angela Booth's "Sell Your Writing Online NOW"
Training Program at http://sellwritingnow.com/Home/training.html. The program is fun and profitable too. There's a full year of
lessons and assignments in "Sell Your Writing Online NOW".


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