Posts Tagged ‘beginner’

11 tips on filling out your profile

Friday, June 12th, 2009

Your profile is a thing that must be taken very seriously. A good filled profile gives the client not only information about your working skills, it can also show that you are responsible, accurate and that you are basically the man for the job! So in this article we will present eleven tips about how to fill a good profile.

  1. Examine the rules of the website concerning the profile and the profiles of the top freelancers in your field. This will help you with some basics of how a good profile must look on this website.
  2. If you already have a resume use it as a basis, if not take some time and make a document with your complete work experience and skills. It is important to remember all your previous work experience before filling out your profile.
  3. Try to choose a general strategy of yourself as a freelancer. For example if you are good in SEO focus the first lines and words of your resume on SEO skills and experience. Try not to present yourself as a do-all guy.
  4. Try to highlight your main skills in the description and make sure that the client will immediately see these skills when he goes to your profile. There is no need to mention all the programming languages you know if you use only PHP or JAVA. You can make a list of these languages in some secondary information fields.
  5. Avoid bright colored elements and any additional creative stuff, focus on the main thing – presenting information to the client.
  6. Post samples of your projects if you have done some outside the website that you are working on. It is also good to post the offline working experience, especially if you worked for some serious companies.
  7. Check the project sample links from time to time, especially if you are in search of new projects. It might happen that the website with your work is down or the URLs were changed. Also be honest about your work, if the work was done some time ago and it was done not very well, better drop the link from your resume.
  8. Be sure to have everything clear with the copyrights of the work that you’ve done. If you are not listed as a developer it is better not to present the project in your portfolio. It can lead to some misunderstanding with your previous clients.
  9. The best thing in a profile is a list of projects already done on the website. So if you are a newcomer try to get three-five properly done projects, it will show that you are a trustworthy person.
  10. If you are a writer – get a blog. If you are a web-developer or a SEO guy – get a website. And give your best effort to keep this website good looking and properly coded. Be sure that it presents you as a professional.
  11. Make a small downloadable and printable version of you portfolio.

That’s all for today, folks :)

Hints for a freelance article writer part one

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

With this article we will start a series of publications with hints for article writers.

There is one thing that most of the beginner writers don’t want to accept — more work, less creativity! You need to be creative only if you are asked to. 99% (okay maybe 90%) of the buyers actually don’t need imagination. If you need to write a large number of articles most probably the ideas will be borrowed from other websites. The buyer sees something he likes and he needs to get a similar article for his website. So there is no need to bother with inventing something new. The facts will always be the same: this law is specified in this part of the Criminal Code, this car has this air conditioning installed and this hotel is rated with five stars. Everything you need is to spice up the existing document and facts. Before you start writing an article it is better to search the web for some similar articles. This will help you with choosing the style for your article and definitely help you with some additional ideas. Your best friend in most of the cases will be Wikipedia. Usually my articles consist of 40-70% original article + 20-50% Wikipedia facts and related ideas + 10% of my own ideas and thoughts about the subject. The result — an article where buyer sees the facts, something he liked in the previous article and most important some new thoughts. Of course this strategy helps not in every case, but it works for any large project. And… oh yeah this article is completely original.

Another common problem is the level of English. The best solution is to write simple. A large part of the web comes from non-English speaking countries, so it is best to focus on some plain and understandable English if possible. Try to avoid some complex sentence structures and if there is a choice between a simple word and a specific term choose the simple word. Of course it doesn’t mean that you need to write in monkey English.

As for the large projects, there is a thing that beginners usually don’t believe in: it is actually very hard to write big amounts of articles. So if you are negotiating a big project don’t be a hero and promise to finish everything in one day, better take some more time. I manage to write not more than 8-10 500 word articles (this article is a 500 word one) per day and this is very hard. It is hard to maintain a good writing tempo; it is hard to generate new ideas and thoughts starting from like article number six; it is hard to avoid mistakes when you are tired. If you can write a 500 word article in 30 minutes, it doesn’t mean that you will be able to handle 10 articles in 5 hours. It will most probably take like 10-12 hours with breaks. So in every case it is always better to split large projects into smaller parts.