Casting Calls and Expectations
Posted: Tue Oct 03, 2017 6:29 am
Not sure if this is okay to post about here, but I wanted to vent about some of the casting calls (this was set off by one that just came out where the requester is asking for a long article with fairly specialized academic info and analysis of a specific book (which I assume you would have to have read or would need to read in order to write about it), at a rate that comes out to 3.75-5 cents per word.)
I haven't seen a casting call or an article request/writing pool request that I've been the least bit tempted to reply to for ages, because the offered rates are so low. It makes me wonder if they do find writers or get radio silence and give up and go elsewhere.
In the past I've done some writing pool stuff even though the rates offered were on the low side, when the articles were fast and easy to write and I wanted some guaranteed income for the pay period. Most of the time the disparity between what is requested and what is offered in pay is laughably huge -- figuring out how to add links/references so that the article isn't rejected by the CC editors takes time and is a headache, and don't get me started on requests/demands for photos to illustrate the article.
In addition, the two times I responded to a casting call and got accepted, the requester looking for "lots of articles on a topic" or "articles on a regular basis for a blog" bought 1 or 2 articles from me, then disappeared. I'm willing to consider a lower rate per article if I'm really going to be writing for someone on a regular basis (and again, if the amount of work the article requires isn't ridiculous at the rate of pay) but only if that steady work is really going to happen.
Disappointing experiences in the past and terrible pay rates have turned me off to applying to any of these "opportunities" and from what I gather here, plenty of others of the better authors on the site. Does CC have guidelines and suggestions about what to ask for and how much to offer?
On the other side of the coin, I keep nudging up my rates on my catalog articles when I list them, and I get what I ask for often enough that it's been encouraging me to write and list more articles here than I have in the past. Getting those "Sold!" emails is a great motivator!
Happy writing, happy October!
Colleen
I haven't seen a casting call or an article request/writing pool request that I've been the least bit tempted to reply to for ages, because the offered rates are so low. It makes me wonder if they do find writers or get radio silence and give up and go elsewhere.
In the past I've done some writing pool stuff even though the rates offered were on the low side, when the articles were fast and easy to write and I wanted some guaranteed income for the pay period. Most of the time the disparity between what is requested and what is offered in pay is laughably huge -- figuring out how to add links/references so that the article isn't rejected by the CC editors takes time and is a headache, and don't get me started on requests/demands for photos to illustrate the article.
In addition, the two times I responded to a casting call and got accepted, the requester looking for "lots of articles on a topic" or "articles on a regular basis for a blog" bought 1 or 2 articles from me, then disappeared. I'm willing to consider a lower rate per article if I'm really going to be writing for someone on a regular basis (and again, if the amount of work the article requires isn't ridiculous at the rate of pay) but only if that steady work is really going to happen.
Disappointing experiences in the past and terrible pay rates have turned me off to applying to any of these "opportunities" and from what I gather here, plenty of others of the better authors on the site. Does CC have guidelines and suggestions about what to ask for and how much to offer?
On the other side of the coin, I keep nudging up my rates on my catalog articles when I list them, and I get what I ask for often enough that it's been encouraging me to write and list more articles here than I have in the past. Getting those "Sold!" emails is a great motivator!
Happy writing, happy October!
Colleen