aprilk10 wrote:Welcome to the world of freelancing! First, I want to say that if you are thinking of quitting college to pursue a career in freelancing...don't. Even if you end up not directly using your degree, your college education will provide you with knowledge that will be used indirectly for the rest of your life.
Thanks so much April and don't worry, I don't intend to quit college. I've had some problems in the last few years and had to give up studies for one year, but I'm back now and I really want to get my degree! I'm really grateful that you included your story with your suggestions and yes, they did help me. I guess my degree can help me too and maybe I'll even get to do post grad after that. I really want to, but can't if I don't have some avenue of earning money.
I know I can't plan out my entire life and I promise I wont try

, but where I live if I can't say with confidence that given some time I'll make a decent earning from this, I'll never get the opportunity to try.
Celeste Stewart wrote:I'm with April, finish college and squeeze in writing part-time while you complete your studies. If you can also take a few courses in copywriting, Web usability, Web content development, and related topics, that would be helpful. Think about how you can blend economics with writing?
Thanks to you too Celeste. I'm writing part time now, but freelancing is definitely what I would choose to do online, if I decide to take up writing full-time. The courses would probably be a really good idea and I think I'll sign up for some online, after college gets over. I hope my knowledge in economics comes in handy too.
Celeste Stewart wrote:Also, according to CareerOneStop.org, writers in the US earn a median wage of over $25/hour or $53,900 annually (some earn over $100K).
The problem with this is that I'm not a US citizen. I'm from Calcutta, India and I find that most of the better paying writing sites are closed to me- Textbroker, wordsofworth, AssociatedContent, SEED etc. It's majorly frustrating, but I am holding out the hope that better sites will come up or I will discover a site that I haven't heard of, or examined yet. I like Constant Content already because they haven't thrown me out. Perhaps US tax laws don't scare them?
jadedragon wrote:I worked before I went to university, than took a break to work, than went back and finished my degree. I highly recommend getting a degree. I use mine every time I tackle a new project.
I read the interview and some more articles in your blog.

Really neat place you built. Also Master Dayton's blog was informative and inspirational. Thanks for them.
I'll get my degree in one more year, but the problem is that I'll be twenty three by then, when I would have passes out this year if I hadn't taken a year's break. I can't quite explain why this is a huge deal for my family, but since it is, I have to know that a career in writing online wont make me waste more years chasing a certain annual income that would be impossible to earn. The articles helped a lot, as did knowing that someone else gave up studying, worked and then went back to it.
I like writing and given all the advice you guys gave me, I suppose it'll be worth the risk to make a real go of it, after college. Thanks again, all three of you!
