KASIA RADZKA

Romantic Suspense and Thriller Author

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The Olympic Challenge: Where Have You Been? Where Are You Going?

The Olympic Challenge: Where Have You Been? Where Are You Going?

If you listen to Joanna Penn’s The Creative Penn podcast (highly recommended!) then in the last one (29/8/16) you would have heard her talking about measuring her writing life/career in Olympic periods which is an interesting way to look at things. It’s well known that we overestimate what can be achieved in one year but underestimate what we can do in four.

Our Olympians manage incredible feats by committing themselves to hard work and no excuses. They did an awesome job once again this. I thought, why not take on the challenge and think about my own life/writing career since the 2008 Beijing Games.

Much has changed. Much has stayed the same.

Either way, it has all come down to my actions, my decisions, my choices.

So here goes.

The Olympic Challenge?

Beijing 2008

I was in Warsaw, Poland teaching English as a foreign language, writing for content mills (Helium), dabbling in freelance writing, trying to finish the upteenth novel that would probably be trashed, and not doing enough travelling. I’m not sure how I feel about this time in my life but if I were to go back I would certainly do things differently. We live and learn. Had anyone told me a year earlier that I’d be living in Poland (I was born there but moved to Australia when I was 8), I would have laughed out loud and told them they were crazy. Well, life happens. Somehow I ended up going on holiday and stayed for 3.5 years. The upside: I got to meet more of my extended family and spend time with my grandparents.

One constant was that I wanted to write for a living. The dream of being an author was still alive. I just wasn’t aware of the Amazon’s abilities. I had heard of Matthew Reilly’s success at self-publishing (he’s now a multimillion traditional published author), but I didn’t really want to hand-sell 10,000 copies and hustle from bookshop to bookshop begging them to stock my books in hopes of a traditional publisher noticing me.

I probably should have done more research towards the self-publishing route. Hmm.

Let’s teleport to the next Games…

London 2012

Back in Australia. Yay. This is home. Ok, I feel at home everywhere but Australia is my base. Comfort and safety. No matter where I end up, this is where I always want to return.

Writing wise I was in a bit of a jam. There were several blogs I started and stopped. My confidence had plummeted for various reasons. I wasn’t sure what I was doing or what I wanted. I was working lots, commuting lots and training for marathons and triathlons. I was still writing, there was a book I was working on that I kept telling myself that it would be published, but I wasn’t taking myself seriously enough.

Fast forward another four years…

Rio, 2016

I have two novellas and a novel on the market. I finally self-published in 2015 and have set hefty goals for the years to come.

I’m an author.

Finally. After twenty years of dreaming about it, it’s happened. I’m still working in the financial services industry and I enjoy it for the most part. I actually worry that if I don’t have the commute I won’t have time to write! But I’d love to write full time eventually.

On a more personal note, I’m now a mum to a toddler who takes up a large chunk of my free time. He is awesome. But I’m bias because he’s mine! Maybe that’s why the commute is so productive!

Look into the future…

Tokyo, 2020

It’s easy to say, hey this is where I want to be at such time. The harder part is actually making it happen. I’m no stranger to setting hefty goals and then being disappointed I haven’t achieved them. But then down the track I see that in fact some have been ticked off in ways I hadn’t expected.

Where do I want to be in my writing career in 2020? That’s a good question. Firstly, I want to be a full-time author-entrepreneur. That means earning $120,000+ per year (after tax) from my writing.

In four years I’d like to have at least twenty books on the market (that’s 4-5 books per year) including both fiction and non-fiction, novels, novellas and shorter e-books. I would also like for my blogs to be popular and earning a decent income while helping others achieve their entrepreneurial dreams.

Why do I want this? My son will be in school and I want to be there for pick ups and drop off and sports carnivals and all that jazz.

One day in the near future (3 – 5 years), I’d love to hire a car and drive across Europe over a six month period with my husband and son. This would be an epic adventure and being an authorpreneur can allow me to do just that as it would mean I could still work on the road and income would be trickling (hopefully flowing!) in from book sales.

I think to achieve your dreams the why has to be stronger than the what. If you really want something, you’re going to work your booty off and get it done regardless of what life throws at you.

Thanks Joanna Penn for suggesting this challenge it really allowed me to reflect over the last eight years and look at the bigger picture towards the future. Cheers to writing (and selling) more books!

How has your life evolved over the past few Olympic time periods? Where do you see yourself when the next Olympics roll around?

August Progress Report: How I Made $234 Side Income This Month (And Spent $400!)

August Progress Report: How I Made $234 Side Income This Month (And Spent $400!)

Why am I sharing my income reports with you? Well, I like the transparency of the blogosphere and it’s motivating for both of us. You can see that it’s not all easy or breezy. You actually need to put in the hard work to get somewhere.

My aim eventually is to make a full time living from my writing business. That includes selling books, freelance writing, affiliate marketing, helping other writers/entrepreneurs through coaching/courses and more.

I want multiple streams of income. I don’t want to rely on just one and be screwed should something fall apart. I want to be comfortable. I want options.

I don’t like the fact that someone else decides how much I can earn. Or how much I’m worth. Working for myself means that my income possibilities are endless.

As are yours.

My question to you is: what are you going to do about it today?

In August 2016, I made $234 from my writing business. Not a fortune but enough to suggest that, yes, maybe I can do this. And I want more.

How I Made Over $200 Last MonthIn My Spare Time!

At the beginning of the month, I decided that I was going to send out 30 pitches in August. I only sent out 6. But out of those six, I received three responses and three assignments. Win!

Check out Gina’s course, 30 Days Or Less To Freelance Writing Success, if you’re interested in becoming a freelance writer. It’s a great course that will challenge you and help you start pitching and getting work in less than 30 days!

Related: So, You Want To Be A Freelance Writer?

The Metrics

TrafficScreen Shot 2016-09-03 at 6.55.01 am

 

Posts: 8
Page Views: 504
Visitors: 31.9% returning, 68.1% new
Social Media Sources: Twitter, Facebook

Pitches: 6
Responses: 3
Books sold: 1
Books given away: 0

Income:

Freelance writing: $222.88
Books: $11.12 (this is money that has come into my account from previous months sales. Amazon pays 60 days after sale)
Affiliates: $0
Adsense: $0
Total: $234.00

Expenses:

$400.05 (This includes book editing, virtual assistant, PicMonkey annual subscription and Bluehost payment for the year).

My Biggest Blogging Mistake:
Doing the same thing and expecting a different result. I decided to make a change and start putting things into practice instead of just wishing things would happen. I’ve been blogging for fun for over eight years now. It’s time to start treating it like a business.

Related posts: How To Start An Author Blog & Blogging Mistakes Even The Experts Make

September Marketing Tactics

1 – Apply for writing jobs and send out pitches (aiming 30)
2 – Create a FREE ebook for subscribers
3 – Put Lethal Series on iTunes, Nook, Kobo
4 – Make Lethal Instincts permanently free on all platforms
5 – Create an account for automatic Pinterest and Twitter promotion
6 – Join blogging networks
7 – Participate in 2 Facebook groups by commenting most days of the week

September Objectives

1 – Get at least 3 pieces published externally
2 – Enjoy a trip to Hawaii
3 – Draft the first book in a new project
4 – Publish my first non-fiction book (free for anyone who signs up for the email newsletter)
5 – Publish Lethal Attraction Book 4 in the Lexi Ryder Crime Thriller Series
6 – Publish 15 posts on Writerly Pursuits
7 – Double my average monthly page views
8 – Double my income (& halve expenses)
9 – Read two motivational books
10 – Delegate some work to my VA (you need to spend money to make money)
11 – Sign up with an ad network
12 – Improve SEO on articles

How happy are you with your performance in August? What have you planned for September?

Novel Writing Series Part 3: Should You Write What You Know?

Novel Writing Series Part 3: Should You Write What You Know?

If writers stuck to writing what they knew best we probably wouldn’t have the crazy-arsed horror, sci-fi, fantasy, erotica, crime, or romance books on the market that we see. I don’t think JK Rowling went to wizard school and played Quidditch. Nor do I believe EL James has a naughty room and a billionaire lover.

Then again, I could be wrong.

Regardless, I’m sure you get my point. Writers don’t just write from experience, they also write based on their interests and curiosities. So don’t fret if you haven’t lived an adventure, you can still write a book.

It’s called research and writers do it well. The right amount of research will bring authenticity to your work.

Should You Write What You Know?

Write what you want to know.

What are the topics that peak your interests? What do you love to read about? If you could go back to university, what would you study? Where would you travel to? What would you believe? What’s on your bucket list?

It’s never been easier to find the information you need, to write the stories you want to. With the click of a keyboard and you can discover new places, people and situations.

Research is a vital part of being a writer. And it’s never been easier than right now.

  • Read reference books and biographies

  • Talk to real people

  •  Watch documentaries

  •  Study maps

  •  Read diaries and journals

 

You can research almost anything on the internet. No, actually, probably everything if you know what you’re looking for. That’s scary and empowering at the same time. Check out some of these when you’re researching your story.

  • Google Maps

  • Satellite images for more accuracy on setting

  • Tourist centres in most cities

  • Flickr Pinterest

We live in the information age. Information is accessible with the click of a finger. This is good and bad. Information can be abused. As a writer don’t want to do that. You want to take the information and turn it into something great.

If you’re writing a historical novel you can look for information and pictures that will help you create the world you want more authentically.

  • Find diaries of people who lived in the era that you are writing in

  • Run a Wikipedia check on the brief history

  • Check out your libraries online catalogue for books and ebooks

  • Contact HARO (Help a Reporter Out) for experts in the field

If you’re writing a police procedural and your character is a forensic pathologist you can search for articles, pictures of crime scenes, interviews with police, private investigators and the like and create a realistic story that experts won’t be able to poke fingers at.

  • The FBI/CIA/AFP etc all have websites you can use

  • Contact the PR of these organisations and see if someone is willing to speak to you

  • Get in touch with a local detective and see if they are willing to chat

  • Grab books for writers that deal with these topics

  • Talk to a PI and get them to tell you about their processes

You’re writing fiction, people are aware it’s made up. But people are also funny, and mean and brutal. If you make a factual error in a book someone will let you know and it’s not always going to be in a polite way. Make the effort to get the facts and use them correctly. There are a lot of tools available so you have no excuses!

The best one is chatting with people who are doing or have done what you’re writing about. Want to be more authentic? Consider your main character, even your secondary characters. Who are they? What do they do for a living?

Doctor? Great talk to your local GP about a typical day, their worries, and triumphs.

Mansion cleaner? They’re sure to have stories to tell about their clients – anonymously of course. Find some and get them to talk about their experiences.

Clown? Visit a circus, observe, take notes, chat with people.

Write what you are interested in and the information you need will come your way through research. You might be writing fiction but you want it to be realistic unless you’re writing sci-fi and fantasy which have their own set of rules to follow.

In the end, you should only write the story you want to tell.

ACTION STEPS

Where do you want your story to be set?

Start collecting information. Do a Google search and see what you can find. Save the information and any images into your research folder. Use Scrivener? There’s a function where you can keep all your research in one spot. It’s useful for both fiction and non-fiction writers.

How does your character look like?

A useful exercise is to grab a picture and describe it. Don’t tell me what’s on it. Show me so that I can see what you are seeing without actually having viewed the image. Your words as a writer need to paint a picture and it’s easier to do when you have something to look at.

What does your character do?

Research your character’s occupation. What information can you find on it? Wikipedia can give you some general information. Maybe you can find personal anecdotes to use or a diary of a day in the life.

Do you write what you know? How do you research what you don’t know?

So, You Want To Be A Freelance Writer?

So, You Want To Be A Freelance Writer?

It seems that these days being a freelance writer is cool and sexy. People around the world are chasing location independence and the internet age has given them this ability.

Freelancing is awesome but it’s not just about choosing whether you work today or not or staying in your pyjamas till noon. It’s actually requires some hard work on your part too.

Freelancer is defined as being self-employed and working for various companies. Did you know historically ‘freelancer’ meant a medieval mercenary? Just a bit of useless trivia for you.

It can also be sexy as hell.

At least Gina at Horkey Handbook makes it look like it is.

So, you want to be a freelance writer?If you want to be a freelance writer, I highly recommend you go and check out Gina’s course on 30 Days Or Less To Freelance Writing Success. I did. And it was worth every cent.

There are a ton of courses out there claiming to help you become a freelancer. I’m not saying they aren’t any good. What I’m saying is Gina’s course is awesome.

It’s trumps on quality, cost, and ongoing support.

It actually tells you everything you really need to know without having to ask.

On top of that, there’s a community on Facebook for all graduates of her course. The group is impressive and generous. Whenever there’s a question, someone finds an answer. The support is incredible and sometimes that’s what you need to take the next step in starting your freelance writing career or getting out of a rut for a more advanced freelancer.

It’s not just the notes on a page, the emailed activities at the end of each module but someone rooting for you, holding your hand, having gone through similar experiences.

A lot of courses take your money, provide you with the material and then forget about you. Gina doesn’t do that. She’s there to answer your questions and offer ongoing support. It’s incredible.

If you’re serious about getting in the game, this is the course that will help you get there.

If you want to be successful you need a network of people around you. Thanks to the Internet age, your clients don’t have to live in the same city, country or even continent as you.

I wish this course was around eight years ago. It would have kicked me in the butt much sooner to get a move on and make freelancing a part of my life, and saved me a lot of frustration.

I’ve actually decided to run through the course again for a kick in the backside.

The dream is much closer than I could have ever anticipated. I feel a little giddy inside.

Accountability is important when it comes to starting a business. The beginning stages are the hardest. Having someone who’s got your back when rejection hits, and to pull you back up and make sure that you persevere and succeed is not just encouraging but fucking brilliant. We all need someone like that in our lives.

Success isn’t about how much money you make. It’s a daily effort. And each day can be a success on its own merits. The definition is yours alone. Own it.

If you’re serious about becoming a freelancer, I highly recommend you sign up for Gina’s email course, 30 Days or Less to Freelance Writing Success.

THIS IS WHAT YOU’LL LEARN

* How to write an effective query letter

* Find new writing markets to approach

* The different income streams available

* Where to find sources

* And so much more.

Gina regularly updates the course so it’s always up-to-date info that you can learn to get your freelance writing business off the ground. She also has a VA course, 30 Days To Virtual Assistant Success if you’re interested in that direction.

Gina’s course has everything you need to get started as a freelancer and so much more. But if you still don’t believe me, here’s a quick interview with Gina.

If you don’t believe me, check out this quick interview with Gina!

* This content contains affiliate links.

Check out the transcript below!

Want to start a freelance writing career?

Interview with Gina Horkey from Horkey Handbook!

Kasia: So tell us a bit about yourself.

Gina: Hi, my name is Gina Horkey. I self identify as a married millennial mamma to two precious toddlers. Of course I screw something up in the first like minute, right.

Kasia: Um, so what about for your business side of things. Tell us a bit about that. What do you do?

Gina: At first I broke into freelance writing and then I added some virtual assistant work, ah, for a client. Um, as a full time job I was a personal finance adviser and support person to a large planning practice. So I built my freelance business actually on the side of that for the first like eight months and then I put in my notice…that was back in 2014 so I’ve been going strong going on to two and a half years.

Kasia: Fantastic. So what made you decide on creating the 30 Days or Less to Freelance Writing Success course?

Gina: So, I had a fair amount of success early on in my freelancing career. I was able to bring my income from nothing all the way up to $4000 a month in the first six months and that was on the side again of that full time job, and you know I am very much a processes and data person so I kind of chronicled my journey during that time so that I didn’t live out that whole definition of insanity, as far as doing the same thing over again and expecting a different results, and so by taking notes, documenting my pitches and kind of my behaviour it helped me to see what I needed to change over time and then when I reflected on that, you know six months later I thought, well, I kind of have a blueprint here that could maybe help somebody else, and so I also had somebody whispering in my ear, an online peer that said ‘hey when are you going to break into the products market’ and I was like ’what do you mean the products market? Like who am I to put something out?’ That little bug just kept growing stronger and I decided to take November of 2014 and every morning I got up, I was again still working full time, and at 4:30 in the morning and I cranked out a lesson or two. By the end of that month I had 30 Days Or Less To Freelance Writing Success. The whole goal of the course was just to take what I had learned ah, practical advice that was really actionable as well. So the lessons are really short and the goal was to like read something and then immediately go and do something, so you’re taking action every single day towards your goal of becoming a freelance writer.

Kasia: Fantastic, so did you ever think, did you expect it to be as successful as it has become?

Gina: No (laughs). Not that I’m that big of a deal, or the course isn’t that big of a deal, but you know I launched it in December and then I was hoping that people would buy it and then I was hoping that they would be able to put it into practice and get the results that I had, and you know I’m really happy to say that I’ve got some really great testimonials that I’ve collected over time, and you know people that have been in the first couple of weeks of the course that had you know started making $500 a month. There are of course people that it takes a little longer to that as well, and that’s completely ok. But it’s been really fun getting to know this community of people. The Facebook group now is almost 600 strong and not everybody that takes the course, you know decides to join that but they’re very supportive of one another and you can tell that the goal is to build each other up, and to cheer each other on, it’s very much a mentality of abundance rather than scarcity, like they don’t see each other as competition. And I think I’ve had a little bit of a hand in that. I try to be a natural encourager but I’m just really proud of the group as well for doing that for one another.

Kasia: Well, your course has probably changed a few people’s lives.

Gina: Well, they’ve done the hard work. I’ve just given them you know the tool or an instruction or two.

Kasia: Well, we all need a nudge sometimes, in the right direction.

Gina: We do, even myself.

Kasia: Um, so what makes your course unique to all the other courses that are on the market?

Gina: Sure, I think you know, me, um not to give myself a big head but you know that’s one of the common pieces of feedback that I get is that I’m very relatable and the way that I write is very conversational, and so the person that is taking the course doesn’t feel like they are studying for this big final exam – there’s not an exam at the end of the course. The exam is getting clients and being successful, right? But they think it’s instead of me kind of being over their shoulder talking to them as a friend, and teaching them as a friend and breaking it down so that they can again go and put it into practice really easily, so I’ve heard that quite a bit, that makes me really proud. I’ve also heard that encouraging part like I’m their kind of cheerleader there egging them on. The Facebook group is great that’s nothing crazy, new or outlandish, but the group itself, the people that are in there, like I said are really awesome. So when you just put all that stuff together and you know the action on your part, the dedication on your part, I think it gets results and that’s what’s important.

Kasia: So It’s not really just signing up for a course and getting a few emails, you are actually very hands on throughout?

Gina: I try to be. As much as I can. There are a couple of different tiers. So if you just want to do it yourself you totally can, if you want a little bit more coaching there’s options for that as well. I try to keep it affordable too, so it doesn’t break the bank. You should be able to make your investment back with a client or two. And you know the goal is again just to help people get started and take action because where most of us fail is thinking too much, learning too much. Um you know you can read on the internet for days and if you don’t put any of the information into practice then it’s really hard to get results so instead of listening to every expert out there on freelance writing maybe give a course like mine a try, and you know commit to putting the action steps in place to doing them and seeing where you are at the end of a couple weeks or a month, depending on how much time you have.

Kasia: That’s what comes down to, doesn’t it. It’s taking action even if it’s a small one.

Gina: Exactly.

Kasia: So, um, what do you think is the hardest part of freelancing?

Gina: Ourselves. You know, it can be a tough gig. In a way it’s sales. You’re selling yourself you’re trying to market and get clients. If you don’t have any experience than I think we get in our way by telling ourselves like, who are we to put ourselves out there, to call ourselves a professional writer or are we gonna be any good, is the client going to like our writing and you know a lot of that fear then builds up that inaction, right? And tells us not to put ourselves out there, not to pitch, not to turn in a piece for review and I think it’s really ourselves and kind of the self doubt. I think rejection can be hard but that all kind of blends in with the same thing but the opportunity is abundant if you want to spend more talking about that. I was actually on a podcast interview earlier today and we were talking about how we’re moving into a more global economy and workplace which is great, and there’s just a lot of opportunities to be a freelancer or a webpreneur these days. If you think about it every company really needs a website , every website needs writing through copy, through white papers, through email, and then a lot of them are very open to have a blog as well so obviously that’s something that needs to be updated on a regularly basis in order to connect with a client or customer base.

Kasia: Well, definitely in an information age aren’t we?

Gina: Yeah. I don’t see our mediums continuing to change and experiment, as far as video is really hot right now but you still need writing to go along with the video to introduce it, right?

Kasia: That’s right.

Gina: Plus a lot of people will deliver a video interview as well as transcribe it into a blog post which has to do with writing, um, so the writing part isn’t going anywhere ah anytime soon.

Kasia: Awesome. So, how does, um 30 Days Or Less To Freelance Writing Success help wannabe or aspiring freelancers overcome some of the hardships like you said – the fear of rejection, overcoming their own inability to take that plunge?

Gina: Yeah, so, one of the things the course doesn’t really cover is how to write, right. There’s definitely tips on formatting and blogging and that sort of thing but you need to kind of have decent writing chops to begin with. Um but the rest of the course is definitely on the business of freelancing, the business of freelance writing and so, I think how it helps people that are unsure or have that self doubt is it breaks it down to those manageable, small steps, so really all you have to do is plug in and play. If you kind of just follow what is outlined for you, if you put in a half an hour or an hour a day for a period of time, then there’s no reason that you can’t put the things in place to have a launching pad for a successful business.

Kasia: So, do you think most people can be, can start a successful freelance business?

Gina: I think if you have a good attention to detail, you’re responsible as far as like meeting deadlines, you aren’t afraid of putting yourself out there or at least you’ll get better at it over time as far as prospecting. And you have a sufficient command of the English language – I’m a much better writer than I am a talker I don’t know. Yes, there’s a lot of opportunity again and you’ll get better with time. I mean look at random bloggers um they weren’t that great in the beginning. You and I weren’t that great a writers in the beginning but the more you practice your craft, the better you’ll get at it and now that also goes with the learning curve I think of the type of clients you get too, so my first client I was writing WordPress these descriptions for $7.50 a piece, US. They were 150-200 words and I think that is somewhere around like 5 cents a word, I can do the math real quick. But um you know at my skill level at the time you know that was a decent pay check , would I take that project today? Probably not. It just wouldn’t be worth my time. But I needed the certain stepping stones in order to get my feet wet to practice. My boss, the client was really great at helping me give me constructive criticism or feedback, not criticism um which helped me to grow as a writer and as a freelance writer.

Kasia: You’ve grown quite a bit from what, it’s only been what two years since you started?

Gina: Yep, going on to two and a half.

Kasia: That’s fantastic. That’s very impressive, um, result.

Gina: Yeah. I appreciate that. You know I started as a freelance writer and then worked my way into virtual assistance and then you know the course is obviously on the product side of my blog, I try to do a little bit of affiliate marketing too…I’m a big fan of diversification and I like try new things too.

Kasia: There’s nothing better than multiple streams coming through , isn’t it?

Gina: Yeah, unless you drive yourself crazy on too many things. But I think it’s good to try different things for sure and to have a couple of different ones because you know things will change and it’s summer right now a lot of the time that’s lower for freelancers because companies are taking more time off that doesn’t mean there aren’t clients to be had. Though I built my business in the beginning during the summer months as well here in the United States anyway I know you’re in winter over in Australia um but and that’s the other great part is you guys are in winter so maybe you’re not taking as many holidays as we are over here so there’s a chance to work with different types of clients across the world. Um, my point is yes, things are cyclical but I think that if you’re putting consistent effort out there especially from pitching standpoint, and when I say pitching you know going out there bidding for freelance jobs , prospecting, marketing. Um that if you consistently do that over time you know you’ll be able to fill your client load pretty quickly. And certain things take time to also come into fruition you might pitch somebody today but you might not hear back from them for a conversation for two or four months from now, so it makes sense to be deliberate and consistent about it.

Kasia: Fantastic. So if you were starting um freelancing today is there anything that you’d do differently?

Gina: No, I’m a fan of learning from my journey. I’m sure there were things that weren’t as effective but at the same time I was able to ramp up pretty quickly so I don’t see anything really glaring. Um one piece of advice is to be as authentic as possible, and relational. Ah, because you never know who will become your client or who you could refer for. But if you’re only looking at relationships, and building relationships from that standpoint of. what can you offer me or who do you know kind of thing that’s not good. But instead be interested in people to try to develop relationships that I think that really helps with prospecting too um people like to work with or refer to people they like so kind of keep that in mind from the get go. I think I could have done more relationship building and I can still do more relationship building it’s just always hard when you have a finite amount of time.

Kasia: That’s right, it is time, it comes down to time, doesn’t it? Time to fit it all in. And it is who you know, not what you know, often?

Gina: Right but I didn’t have a journalistic background. I went to college and I had a psychology degree and then I was in personal finance , did a lot of writing as a part of my day to day job activities, but I didn’t have any concrete experience in that realm, and I didn’t have any contacts in my network either that gave me work so everything that I did was built through that hustle and that grind of putting myself out there and making connections. So, please if you’re listening definitely hear you don’t have to have this established network already. It’s something that you can build over time, you don’t have to have a journalism degree. It’s something that you can use your skills and always build and invest in them as well.

Kasia: That’s fantastic advice. That’s one thing that could keep people from embarking on a freelancing career.

Gina: And the whole thing about working online and freelancing and we’ve kind of talked a little bit about this already is, like, most people want to learn new skills and always kind of to broaden their horizons, and what they’re capable of doing, and it’s a pretty fast paced world, things are always moving. There’s new tools that are on the market coming out on the market, look at social media platforms there’s a few if you’re new ones popping up all the time. I think if you have a capacity to use things and an interest in learning new things you could make a good webpreneaur.

Kasia; Um, so where do you see the freelancing industry heading in the next five to ten years especially, um when so many people are actually turning to the industry?

Gina: Yeah, we eluded a little bit to it earlier when I was talking about just like the opportunity that exists. That’s what I really think will happen, as more companies work with freelancers, solopreneurs, entrepreneurs, whatever you call yourself, there are so many names these days but basically you know small business or self-employed people are going to be people that want to work in corporate America or similar capacity around the world where they like being an employee they want to clock in and just do their work and what have you, but there’s a growing number of people that are frustrated with that type of atmosphere. They want more flexibility and control and they are comfortable with taking the risk and working hard in order to get more of that reward as well. So I don’t see that part slowing down. It’ll be interesting to see what types of platforms continue to pop up. You know if you think of Fiver, or you think of what used to be Elance is now Upwork . Those aren’t places that we recommend that you go look for freelance writing work by the way although you could they just don’t, aren’t known to be the highest paid places. Um but I think that part will be interesting to see how many more places are I guess hooking up freelancers with clients and in a capacity where you’re getting good quality service and the freelancer is getting a good rate as well.

Kasia; Ok, so opportunities are still available.

Gina: Totally.

Kasia; That’s good to know. Um so why should freelancers, or aspiring freelancers sign up for 30 Days Or Less to Freelance Writing Success?

Gina: Well the course is catered definitely for kind of newbies, people that are just looking to break in that really haven’t, don’t have a lot of experience, definitely don’t have a full client load. But there’s a lot of people that have taken it that have already gotten their feet wet and they really want to take their business to the next level. So if you thrive on structure, you want kind of a road map, something that’s worked for other people, now going on, I don’t know, 800 people that have taken the course I think it’s a good kind of starting point for you. I’m also working on an advanced version right now which will focus more on like blog monetisation as well as freelance writing. Some other aspects of working online. But I think it’s a great, simple, when I say simple program, it kind of is. It will challenge your comfort zone and you will learn new things but it’s not overly technical, you don’t have to do a lot of math. You know it’s fun and there’s a great supportive place in the Facebook community as well.

Kasia: Fantastic. And so do you have any other courses going at the moment?

Gina: So I have one for virtual assistants as well. It’s the same name. So, 30 Days Or Less To Virtual Assistance Success . Um, you know I broke into freelance writing first and then added the VA services on. And the VA services are honestly what allowed me to put in my notice at work behind because of the predictability of the pay, which isn’t always there from a freelance writing standpoint although you can get more retainer type clients. Actually all the client’s i work with right now are predictable in that nature. We have a retainer agreement um so I created that course because the two are honestly very complementary to one another, and you know a lot of writers don’t want to write for forty hours a week or whatever too, so maybe virtual assistance work is a good complement for them, um plus it’s just another growing field that I see people have a lot of enjoyment with that course too. It’s been around about a year now .

Kasia: Excellent. Well thank you so much for your time Gina. It’s been great chatting to you. I mean, I’ve done the course, I think it’s fantastic. It’s definitely helped me boost my abilities and confidence so I highly recommend it. Um, thank you again and have a lovely day.


Gina: Yes, thanks for having me. I appreciate it.

Click here to check out Gina’s course and start your freelance writing business in 30 days or less!

3 Ways To Improve Your Writing

3 Ways To Improve Your Writing

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Do you want to be good or do you want to be great?

I want to be great. Getting there isn’t going to happen overnight. But I’ve noticed there are a few things that definitely improve my writing skills a little bit every day.

The changes won’t happen instantly, and I’ve still a lot to learn, but they will happen.

You are a writer, right? You want to be published and widely read. You want to earn a living or at least a side income from your craft. You want to constantly improve, don’t you?

3 WaysGood writers are easy to come by, great writers are few and far between.
Check out these three ways to improve your writing.

Write, edit, and write some more.

Writing on its own isn’t enough. You want to get better with each word, sentence, paragraph you put down on the page. You want to experiment with different forms of writing. With short paragraphs, with long paragraphs. You want to be able to keep to the rules and no when to break them especially when you’re writing fiction or blogging.

Write every day. You don’t have to formally sit down and write for an hour or two for the time you write to be valuable time.

Ten minutes is enough.

Get up ten minutes earlier if you have to. Start journaling. Get into the habit of writing down your thoughts and feelings. Look out the window and write down what you see. Show, don’t tell. Use descriptive words. Paint a picture with your words.

Have an hour?

  • Write a pitch to your favourite magazine.
  • Pen an article on a quirky angle of something you love doing.
  • Draft a short story.
  • Brainstorm an idea for a book.
  • Write a poem.
  • Stretch your writing muscles in whatever way you can.

After your done. Use a program like Grammarly to check your writing. Writers write. That’s what they are good at. Editing is not necessarily their forte.

To improve your writing you need to edit. Check out the Elements of Style book. It’s short and sweet and has everything you need to know. Another goodie is Eats, Shoots, and Leaves. Learn the rules so later you know how to break them.

Put your piece into Grammarly (there’s a free and paid option). See what results it spits out. Understand where you went wrong. If you need clarification invest in an editor to help you, at least in the beginning. Or if you’re lucky to have a friend who’s a grammar nazi, see if they’d be willing to read through your work and pick out all your mistakes – just promise them you won’t get offended and never be their friend again!

Read more books, magazines, newspapers and anything you can get your hands on

To be a good writer you also have to be a ready. I really don’t understand how some writers say they do not read. It makes me sad actually.

Reading fuels creativity. It is the backbone of writing. Even in fiction you need to read (ie. research, duh) to be able to write adequately. You are reading this now, aren’t you?

You need to put something in your brain to get something out in return.

It’s easy to say you don’t have time to read but if that is the case, then you probably don’t have the time to write either. You might be better off doing something more in line with your time availability.

There is always time to read and like with writing it doesn’t have to be a one or two hour stint.

10 minutes is enough.

How much can you read in 10 minutes?

  • 2-3 articles in a magazine.
  • 5-10 pages of a fiction book.
  • 5 -10 pages of a non-fiction book

Each time you read your brain processes the information, retains what it requires, allows you to remember what you need to and stores the rest in your subconscious. You never know when an idea will form from the information you have obtained or what topic it’s going to be related to.

I’ve watched action flicks and got article ideas from them.

I’ve read non-fiction books and came up with book plots.

You are a creative and you need to add fuel to the fire to ensure it keeps burning. Start by reading things you like and then move onto reading everything you can get your hands on – the good, the bad and the ugly. Every book can teach you something.

I used to keep a spreadsheet of the books I read, now Goodreads does it for me. You can even enter a reading challenge. I’m aiming for 52 books this year. That’s one per week. Could you read 12 books? 24? 100?

Get published and use feedback to get better

Writing for yourself is one thing. Write for an audience is a completely different kettle of tea.

Until I published my first book, Lethal Disposal, I didn’t feel like my writing was improving even though I had been writing fiction for the better part of two decades. But I had no audience other than myself. I was too scared to show anyone my work, and so I was also slow to improve.

As soon as I hit publish, something clicked in my brain and my writing style and output changed. I was no writing for an audience and I wanted to publish again, and get better at it.

The second and third books I wrote were novellas. I wanted to experiment with a shorter style and write quickly. My writing improved with each one. Scrivener helped me pick up the pace.

Blogging has been the same. I’ve started eight blogs since 2008. I have learnt something from each one of them. I probably would have improved quicker had I made contact with other bloggers. I was shy, naive and thought I could do it all myself. No, you really cannot. You need to connect with others to grow and improve. We are not alone on this planet and one way or another we need each other to succeed.

Need to get published. Why not start a blog? Check out this post for starting a blog and you can do it today, in less than 30 minutes. The post is aimed for authors but you can use the instructions for a blog in any niche.

Being a writer is a job that allows for lifelong learning. It’s one of the reasons I want to do it full time. I’m an eternal student. If I had the time (made the time), I would go back to university in a heart beat to study things like law, forensics, physiotherapy, nutrition, criminology and psychology. I’m a geek in that regard. Writing can let me in to all those topics and so much more without having to sit in a lecture hall and spend tens of thousands of dollars. I can write, read, and interview experts, all the while learning about the topics that interest me and becoming a better writer. Thanks to the internet I can share it with an audience, you, almost instantaneously, or I can use the information I gather in my fiction books.

What topics keep you up at night?

There’s never been a better time to be a writer than today.

Novel Writing Series Part 2: Where Do You Get Your Ideas?

Novel Writing Series Part 2: Where Do You Get Your Ideas?

Ideas are interesting things. Ideas are everywhere and nowhere. It’s your job as a writer to notice them and use them to your advantage.

Not the answer you were hoping for? No, me neither when I was starting out.

where do you get your ideas?
I prefer to work in specifics. Tell me step by step. Don’t make me assume. Assumptions are the mother of all fuck-ups. The more you assume, the more fucks up.

Excuse the French but it doesn’t sound as effective without the cursing. I got that from a movie line by the way, Under Siege 2. Not the best film but entertaining if you like the late 80s early 90s action flicks. I don’t mind them for a bit of numbing of the brain. They’re entertaining and that’s all they are meant to be. If I want something deeper I’ll reach for Braveheart.

Ideas are everywhere. Including in those numbing movies, we are probably wasting our time watching. Consider them research and watch guilt free!

Ideas form from the movies we watch, the television series that we binge on, the books we read, the newspapers we peruse, the people we talk to.

If you’re a writer, you will find ideas wherever you look and sometimes even when you’re not looking.

I tried not looking for ideas once. It didn’t work for long. The ideas where always there, scratching at the surface. Pushing me to go back to putting words on the page.

Having said that, I can’t fathom where artists get their inspiration from. How they paint the beautiful pictures they do? It’s probably the same for people who don’t write. Ideas exist all over the place and we simply must start chipping away at them until a coherent story forms.

I’m a writer. I see ideas all the time. Whether it’s a conversation I overheard at a local cafe, watching the news for the latest scandal, reading the newspaper or a magazine, talking with colleagues, binging on a TV series completely out of my favourite genre, watching, reading, dreaming.

Yet, I still fear one day I will wake up and have no idea. Is that even possible? Well, I’d rather not jinx myself.  I hope that there’s always going to be a new idea just around the corner.

Play the ‘What if?’ game

I’ve found that playing the ‘what if’ game works wonders. One kernel of an idea can create an awesome story.

It took me about an hour and a half to outline my novella, Lethal Instincts, using the what if method. I got the bare bones down while my then 16-month toddler was sleeping in his pram and I sipped my coffee at the Hilton cafe.

The story evolved from the initial outline as I wrote. But that one hour and a half were all I needed to get the story moving.

I did this again for another book in a new series recently which I’m hoping to start soon. The idea for it kept floating around refusing to leave me alone so I had to write it down.

So how do you play the what if game? Here’s an example.

What if a young woman discovers she was adopted?
What if her parents hid that from her? How would she react?
Why did her real parents give her up? Who were they? Were they hiding something? Hiding her from someone?
What if someone would kill her if they found out she existed?
What if her real parents decided to find her to save her? What if her adopted parents were willing to do everything to stop them? What are some of the things they’d do?
What if she had something they needed? What if, what if?

You’ve got two story angles. One where the child is protected, the other where they wish to do harm. Which way are you going to go? Which angle will give you the story you want to write?

Write down as many possibilities as you can think of. Don’t censor yourself. This is the fun part. The creative part where you can come up with the most ridiculous scenarios. 

By asking questions a story slowly evolves on the page and you can take it anywhere you want. It could be a suspense-thriller. A family drama. A horror. It’s your story, it’s your choice.

That’s the what if game. You just keep asking questions until you come up with a story that excites you. Then start writing.

ACTION STEPS

  • Grab a piece of paper or start a fresh page in your Word document.
    Start playing the what if game. You can continue on with what I started above or choose something of your own.


  • What sort of books do you like to read?
    Is there anything you read that you think could be better?
    How could you improve on it?
    Is there a character you would have liked to know more about?
    Create their world and see what evolves. You might be pleasantly surprised.


  • Pencil in time each week to brainstorm ideas. James Patterson has too many ideas to write everything himself so he has co-writers. I once read in an interview that he had a filing cabinet overflowing with ideas.

  • Create a folder and start collecting interesting pieces of information from the news, from your studies, snippets of conversation, poetry, photos. Anything that gets the idea pot brewing.

  • Always carry something you can jot notes on. Smartphones are great. So is pen and paper. Yes, I’m old-school in some ways.

  • Read outside your genre. Pick up a national newspaper instead of the local one. Switch radio stations. Listen to podcasts on psychology, sociology, business, economics or whatever topic that interests you.

Where do you get your ideas?