05 May
Posted by Thursday as Writing Skills
The web has opened up many opportunities for writers, and I’m not just talking about finding clients to write for. Because of the relative ease of publishing online in formats ranging from blogs to ebooks, writers have significantly more opportunities to build up income sources of our own than we did a couple of decades ago.
These opportunities can work ideally with freelancing careers. An ebook or another project is not absolutely passive income, of course — you have to put together a product people want to pay for and then you have to market the heck out of it. Just the same, it doesn’t have the day-in-day-out grind of pitching new clients. When you add in the fact that most of us freelance writers experience good months and bad months — feasts and famines — you can see how building up at least a small source of alternative income can be beneficial.
That’s lead me, personally, to explore the passive income sources I could add to my freelancing income. Ebooks, niche sites, blogs… I’ve tried out many options and successfully created a few different sources of income. I’ve also collected huge amounts of information and talked to many other freelance writers. All that information is now available to you, in the format of my new ebook: The Freelance Writer’s Guide to Passive Income.
If you’re a freelance writer who would like to add a passive income source to your freelancing gigs, this ebook includes not only information on a whole list of different passive income projects, but also information on how to plan, create and market the projects you have in mind. (If you’ve already launched a few projects, maybe written an ebook of your own, this probably isn’t the best resource for you — just so you know.
The Freelance Writer’s Guide to Passive Income is 80 pages jam-packed with information. The price is $27 and, if you aren’t entirely satisfied, I’m happy to offer a full refund (within 30 days of purchase).
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