![]() ![]() I think you're better of finding a niche you have a lot of expertise in and write it yourself. I know a site that pays $100 a piece for about 1000 words and when you delve a little deeper, you find they've scraped content from other sites and pieced the article together. ![]() You can end up paying $100 for a piece, only to find it is no better than someone who would have produced it for half as much. I generally find these writers on Upwork and I find personal trainers and nutrition experts (I deal with fitness).Īt this point I'm looking for engaging, helpful content as opposed to targeting keywords.īe careful here. In the meantime, I hire a few writers and have them write more engaging content that I promote. I look for about 50-100 of these articles to post 1-2 daily for a couple months. It saves me time compared to writing from scratch. These are generally basic articles ranging from 700 to 1500 words that I use as a rough draft and edit before posting. I pay for the extra $0.30 per 100 words for an 'experienced writer' (or whatever they're called) which seem to be better articles in my opinion. This is essentially what I use for a new website to make it look full, get crawled by search engines and target long tail keywords. I use to find writers for what I call "filler content". This is just what I do and there is absolutely no science or anything behind it. but you said you wanted a high quality writer, correct? Go looking for one that can give you several examples of his/her writing in the niche of your interest. ![]() Yes, what I'm suggesting takes a little more work than just flipping a coin at one of the freelancer sites. Find someone that has a foundation and experience in the niche already. but do focus on finding the one writer already in your niche that can speak the language, that understands the problems and desires of the audience, that won't have to do a ton of research just to learn about the niche basics. So don't focus on the websites where hungry writers congregate. Upwork (and others sites like it) are just the "outlets" for some writers looking for work, and very often not the best writers. Don't worry so much about the web site platform (iWriter, Textbroker, Upwork, etc) where the writer advertises or accepts gigs. So may I suggest the following?įocus on finding one great writer that is active in, and understands the niche your are in. I have used writing services before, but not for blog posts - I write my own posts. Has anyone dealt with these above and found one site a lot better than all the rest? ![]()
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