Let's
assume you're
a writer
and you want
to make money
by writing. In
the olden
days (last year, maybe)
you would think up an article idea, hammer
a few paragraphs out,
and then check with
some editors if they
were interested
in buying
a finished product.
If
you were
lucky, you sold it. If you were
not exactly unlucky,
the editor rejected your idea
but paid you
to go
out and write something else. And
the most common response was a great big bunch of nothing.
No response. No answer. No sale.
You have
probably heard
that a writer
can make money
on the Internet, but you're probably thinking, "How
on earth is
that possible?" After all, just
about every
job offer
that comes
to writers
for Internet type stuff pays less than
even a skinflint
magazine editor would have paid ten years ago for
the same material. The big difference is
that the Internet publishers seeking writing support want their content virtually overnight
and the old-fashioned editors did not mind giving you a few weeks.
There are two ways
to make money on the Internet and they mirror the ways people make money in the brick-and-mortar business world. First, you
can sell something. Whether it's ceiling fans or candles or airline tickets, you
can make money if you have a
product that you can trade
to people for cash.
The other way you can make money online is by
selling advertising. The best models for this include
TV programs, magazines, and newspapers. Take a TV program; it's content that is offered for
free to people who want to see it. A newspaper isn't exactly free, but
it contains a lot of high-value content
from around the world and it's offered at a very nominal fee (less than it costs to print it, I bet) to just about anyone who wants it. They'll even bring it to your house every morning! Who else
will deliver for a product that does not even cost a dollar-for no extra
shipping and handling fee?
Then there are magazines. They cost more but they're still a great buy considering the content you
get, the articles, the pictures, and the sheer
volume of printed pages.
So
how do these
enterprises make money? They do it by offering content that people want and then
selling advertisement. TV shows make money because they sell some of their viewing time to advertisers who offer commercials. Newspapers and magazines do take in some subscription money, but the thing that keeps them in business is
ad revenue.
And how do advertisers manage to survive? Smart businesses know the best opportunities for their particular type of advertisements.
There's a whole science to that. If a well-placed smart commercial on a certain TV show increases sales, then everybody
wins. The company earns money because the ad draws customers; the TV show earns money because it sells time (and eyeballs) to the advertiser.
You can build a website that features lots of top-quality content and then sell advertising on that site.
Now you can't just throw up any old site (and the operative word here is "throw up") and figure that advertising will work. You
need a quality product. You also have to offer something of value.
That's where the good news comes in: you're a writer.
You can create your own online
magazine of sorts. The goal is to attract people interested in the same subject to look at your site. There's a whole science to that, too. But if you do it right, people on your site may be interested in ads on
related subjects.
The Internet is
all about niches. Let's say you want to write about dogs. Bad idea. It's
too broad for the Internet. With the Internet you have to think narrow. You could write about dog training. Or
adopting poodles from the pound. Or photographing dogs.
The idea is that your highly targeted
information will resonate with a particular
subset of readers. With billions of Internet
search a year, you
don't need to have broad appeal to get a big audience.
Then you sell advertising. Now in the traditional business model, that meant pounding the pavement, talking to
potential advertisers, and often working with them to get an ad finalized. Then you had to hound them for payment.
On the Internet, you can sign up with search providers to put ads on your site. These ads (offered by the big search engines) use electronic algorithms to automatically
match ads by content to your site so that your dog training site won't offer ads for gastric bypass surgery. You don't sell a single ad: you merely clear some room for Google or Yahoo to put ads on your site. They match the ads to your content.
In the print world of
our ancient ancestors, an advertiser paid if
his ad ran, regardless of whether anyone responded. Internat ads work on a different model; they run for free and the advertiser pays only when somebody clicks on them. This is
what is meant when they say advertisers pay for clicks.
The good news is that you can find qualified advertisers and start generating ad revenues from a website pretty quickly without ever having
direct contact with your advertisers.
You can also get advertisers the old-fashioned way by
selling space on your site to individual vendors. Those arrangements are worked
out individually.
Savvy Internet entrepreneurs can make money
either selling products (including electronic products like e-books or online courses and now even online audios) or selling advertising or a bit of both.
There are
strategies for what to use and how, but those are the basics.
So what exactly does this mean for us
writers? Writers need to start thinking about what they write not just in terms of how to tell the story, but how to best position the content in the marketplace.
If you can set up a wholesale arrangement with local or even international vendors, you can sell products using a
"shopping cart" type website, lots of
photos, and some cool product descriptions.
If you have the expertise (or can get it) and can write about how to beat a speeding ticket, land a job working on a cruise ship, or sell your home without a real estate agent, you can write electronic content (e-book, e-course, other materials that are
delivered online including audios and videos) and sell that.
First, of
course, you have to understand how these kinds of enterprises actually function. Even some off-the-wall business angles are good to study, because the same principles always apply. You target a
specific niche market, develop content to attract visitors, and then sell either advertising, products, or both.
Jo Ann LeQuang
writes for a living. If you would like to write for a living or write for a better living, find out more of what she has to say at
http://www.workingonlinewriter.com .