Monday, 26 February 2018

Ongkos Menulis Robot Freelance Waktu Z

Resources

Lowongan Kerja Penulis: 15 Situs yang Mau Membayar Kamu sebagai Penulis Tamu

Ketika Anda sedang mencari lowongan kerja penulis, Anda perlu memikirkan rencana lain untuk melanjutkan karir sebagai penulis freelancer. Strategi yang paling tepat adalah menjadi penulis tamu di sebuah blog atau di media publikasi lain. Alasanya, posting dari penulis tamu akan dibayar lebih baik daripada tulisan content mill. Tidak hanya itu, jika Anda menulis sebagai penulis tamu, Anda akan diberikan kredit penulis yang bisa dijadikan sarana pengiklanan jasa menulis Anda. Posting Anda akan menarik klien yang membutuhkan jasa menulis. Sebagai tambahan, Anda mungkin saja akan mendapatkan pengikut di Twitter dan Facebook yang lebih daripada biasanya.
Semakin banyak posting yang Anda tulis, semakin besar pula peluang Anda untuk mendapatkan karir yang baik. Tetapi, apakah Anda sudah menemukan situs yang bersedia membayar Anda berdasarkan kualitas posting yang Anda buat? Sebelum Anda mencari lowongan penulis, berikut ini 15 situs yang akan membantu Anda memulai.

1. Make a Living Writing

Make a Living Writing
Make a Living Writing / Ruang Freelance
Carol Tice adalah nama yang tidak asing untuk Anda yang berada di komunitas freelancer. Situsnya, Make a Living Writing, akan membayar sekitar $50 tiap posting dari tamu. Dengan syarat, Anda telah terdaftar di Freelance Writers Den atau Jon Morrow’s blog mentoring program sebelum pitching, kecuali saat periode Open Pitch. Pastikan Anda membaca panduannya sebelum pitching, karena keinginan dia benar-benar spesifik.

2. The Write Life

The Write Life
The Write Life / Ruang Freelance
The Write Life adalah salah satu situs freelancer terbaik. Anda akan menerima fee sekitar $35 apabila Anda membuat posting yang berkualitas. Posting akan berupa review suatu produk. Jika Anda menikmati pengalaman tulis-menulis, blogging, penerbitan, e-book, silakan cek halaman Resources untuk melihat apakah tema posting Anda telah di-review oleh orang lain. Jika belum, silakan hubungi contribute@thewritelife.com dan ceritakan sedikit tentang pengalaman Anda dengan produk yang ingin Anda review tersebut.

baca juga :

3. Be a Freelance Blogger

Be a Freelance Blogger
Be a Freelance Blogger / Ruang Freelance
Blog Sophie Lizard’s Be a Freelance Blogger sedang mengadakan program pitchfest. Di dalam program ini, penulis diminta untuk mengirimkan pitches terbaik mereka. Pemenangnya akan mendapatkan $100 dan izin menjadi penulis tamu di blog Sophie Lizard’s. Pastikan Anda membaca panduan dari Sophie tentang Bagaimana Cara Sukses Menulis Pitch.

4. Write Naked

Write Naked
Write Naked / Ruang Freelance
Write Naked adalah blog dengan topik yang diambil secara personal. Pemilik blog, Tara Lynne Groth, bersedia memberikan $50 untuk penulis tamu dan $200 untuk posting yang dia nilai luar biasa. Bacalah Panduan menulis untuk penulis tamu dan siapkan diri Anda untuk menulis karangan dari lubuk hati Anda yang paling dalam.

5. Funds for Writers

Funds for Writers
Funds for Writers / Ruang Freelance
Funds for Writers menyediakan “Tips dan alat untuk menguntungkan karir bagi penulis yang serius.” Selain mendapatkan tips eksklusif, Anda akan diberikan $50 sebagai penulis tamu. Pastikan Anda menjauhi topik sederhana seperti “cara menulis” atau “cara menghindari bloking penulis.” Untuk meningkatkan kesempatan Anda diterima, ajukanlah topik seperti “Cara jitu menjadikan menulis sebagai penghasilan utama.” Baca panduannya untuk belajar lebih banyak.

6. A Fine Parent

A Fine Parent
A Fine Parent / Ruang Freelance
A Fine Parent adalah situs parenting yang akan membayar Anda $100 per artikel, dan Anda akan mendapatkan bonus ketika posting Anda menjadi “Popular posts.” Silakan cek panduannya. Sebagai tambahan, situs ini hanya menerima satu kirimin per bulan.

7. Cracked

Cracked
Cracked / Ruang Freelace
Situs bergenre komedi, Cracked, akan membayar penulis tamu sebesar $100 untuk artikel yang bertema budaya populer, berita unik/aneh, dan topik lainya. Jika Anda tertarik untuk menulis tentang topik tersebut, sekarang adalah waktu yang tepat. Anda harus membaca panduannya dan bergabung di forum penulisnya. Sebelum Anda dapat memulai mem-posting.

8. Listverse

Listverse
Listverse / Ruang Freelance
Jika Anda suka menulis artikel bertipe “Listing”, Listverse adalah situs web yang tepat untuk Anda. Situs web ini bersedia membayar Anda $100 untuk posting berjumlah minimal 1.500 kata dan 10 hal unik ( konten unik). Cek panduan di situs webnya.
baca juga :

9. Knowledge Nuts

Knowledge Nuts
Knowledge Nuts / Ruang Freelance
Knowledge Nuts adalah situs web yang kurang lebih mirip dengan Listverse’s. Anda akan dibayar $10 dengan kontribusi artikel pendek, seperti fakta-fakta unik ilmu pengetahuan. Klik Submit a Nut untuk informasi selanjutnya.

10. TopTenz

TopTenz
TopTenz / Ruang Freelance
TopTenz adalah salah satu situs dengan genre “listing.” Situs web ini akan membayar penulis  $50 untuk setiap daftar yang dibuat. Seperti namanya, TopTentz hanya berisi 10 poin. Cek panduannya di situs web TopTenz.

11. IWA Wine Blog

IWA Wine Blog
IWA Wine Blog / Ruang Freelance
Apakah Anda penikmat anggur? IWA Wine Blog akan membayar Anda $50 untuk setiap posting yang membantu pembaca mengetahui sejarah anggur dan bagaimana menikmatinya. Pastikan Anda melihat panduan disitus webnya, dan siapkan diri Anda untuk membagi kecintaan Anda terhadap anggur.

12. BootsnAll

BootsnAll
BootsnAll / Ruang Freelance
BootsnAll adalah situs terbaik untuk merencanakan wisata dan perjalanan ke seluruh dunia. Lebih dari empat juta orang menggunakan situs web ini untuk membantu perjalanan mereka. Situs web ini akan membayar $50 kepada penulis untuk artikel utama. Menurut panduannya, artikel harus mengutamakan prinsip Indie Travel Manifesto, seperti apa perjalanan yang ekonomis, cara berinteraksi dengan orang lokal, dan lain lain.

13. Matador Network

Matador Network
Matador Network / Ruang Freelance
Matador Network “Mencari tulisan yang orisinal, fotografi, dan video yang menyampaikan petualangan, kebudayaan dan identitas seluruh manusia penghuni bumi”. Pembayaran artikel dimulai dari harga $20 sampai $60 dengan keadaan tertentu. Untuk melihat persyaratanya, cek panduan yang tersedia di situs web.

14. International Living

International Living
International Living / Ruang Freelance
Apakah Anda tinggal di luar negeri? Situs International Living akan membayar Anda $75 untuk artikel yang bercerita tentang kehidupan di luar negeri dengan isi 500 sampai 600 kata. Baca panduanya sebelum Anda membuat artikel.

15. Brazen Life

Brazen Life
Brazen Life / Ruang Freelance
Brazen Life membayar $50 bagi penulis tamu dengan artikel berkualitas tentang peluang dalam jejaring sosial untuk beberapa kota. Anda harus mengecek, apakah kota tersebut sudah ditulis. Jika belum, lihat panduan bagaimana caranya mengajukan artikel Anda.
Semakin banyak posting penulis tamu yang Anda tulis, semakin besar pula peluang Anda untuk mendapatkan karir yang baik. Selamat mencoba!

Menulis Novel Di Kindle dan Smashword/Createspace Mendatangkan Paket Tour Wisata Ke Mancanegara Dibiayai TUHAN GELAP HOME

Menulis Review untuk Paket Liburan Luar Negeri Tour & Travel


Halo teman-teman projects,
Saya sedang mencari beberapa rekan kerja untuk menulis review/testimonial mengenai kepuasan liburan dengan menggunakan paket wisata tour yang nanti akan disediakan.

Kriteria Penulis & Tulisan :
  1. Review mengenai aspek-aspek seperti pelayanan, pengalaman wisata, makanan, kualitas guide, destinasi wisata, sesuai paket yang nanti di siapkan. Contoh "menulis pengalaman selama berwisata di thailand - patayya selama 3 hari" 
  2. Review Minimal 60 kata / 400 karakter. 
  3. Setiap Review hanya boleh terdiri dari 2 - 3 aspek ( lihat aspek untuk review)
  4. Punya pengalaman sebagai Traveler / Backpacker (lebih diutamakan). Agar tulisan lebih terasa meyakinkan.
  5. Tidak perlu kerja extra seperti upload atau foto, hanya perlu menulis.
  6. Tidak ada deadline, anda boleh menulis ketika mendapat inspirasi.
  7. Bersedia memberikan 2x revisi jika kurang menarik / tidak sesuai.
Karena hanya terdiri dari minimal 60-90 kata , setiap review haruslah padat jelas dan menarik. 
Oleh karena itu, Setiap Paket Wisata maksimal memiliki 3 aspek untuk di review :
  1. Penginapan
  2. Makanan
  3. Destinasi Tempat Wisata
  4. Guide
  5. Akomodasi / Transportasi
  6. Harga
Estimasi ada 200 Review Paket yang yang harus di tulis. Untuk mengindari karakter review yang sama. Jadi saya membutuhkan beberapa rekan project untuk menulis kurang lebih 10-50 review / orang 

 JIka ada yang tertarik, mohon sertakan 
  1. Berapa harga yang anda tawarkan untuk setiap review (60-80 kata) 
  2. Berapa harga paket yang anda tawarkan untuk menulis 50 review sesuai ketentuan diatas.

Projects terbuka untuk siapa pun, saya cenderung mencari rekanan project yang baru akan memulai dunia freelance di projects.co.id bahkan saya akan menghargai jika belum memiliki ranting apapun akan tetapi memiliki kemauan tinggi dan akan saya tidak akan segan untu memberi full rate 5 untuk rekanan projects yang memiliki kualitas kerja/layanan yang bagus.

Kisah For ALL ROLAND

Write for God In All Things

Are you able to find God in all things?
Ignatiys WritingGod In All Things is pleased to consider guest posts. Here are some guidelines:
  • Posts should be 300–800 words in length.
  • Themes should be about connecting everyday life to God and the spiritual life.
  • Though God In All Things has a Catholic/Christian bent, your post should generally be accessible to people of varying faith traditions and spiritual seekers.
  • Posts may be edited for clarity without changing author meaning.
  • Please keep God language gender inclusive.
  • Even if your post is published you may still publish it elsewhere as long as the other publication/website has no issue with your piece being on GodInAllThings.com.

Ocendoy Suka Menulis Banyak Entot Buat Roland

The Writer as God

By Ocendoy
Sick of being controlled by other people’s plans? Frustrated by rules nobody asked you about? How would you like to play God and create a world according to you? Well, you can – write a pilot! Because that’s what a pilot for an original series is: A whole new world. And you get to create it – in your own image.
God being God, it took Him/Her a week (depends how you choose to interpret your Bible, of course) to create the world, but you being you – with many more needs than God, like getting another cup of coffee, buying your brother a wedding gift, indulging in the miracle of on demand TV, and most irritating of all, showing up at work – it will probably take longer. On the other hand, unlike the scientists, who tell us it took a couple of billion years to create the world, you’re a creative artist and don’t have to prove your facts, so it won’t take you nearly that long.
Let’s go back to the Bible for a minute. You know that line – “In the beginning was the Word and the word was…” In your case, the word was – WRITTEN DOWN. So if you want to create a whole new world, aka a pilot, you begin by writing something down. But what? Where do you start?
Anywhere! Start with whatever you know, no matter how little or unformed it is. Write down one simple thing you know about your pilot idea. Anything, but it must be in simple words on paper (okay, the computer screen). What if you know way too much about your idea and are overwhelmed and confused about how to focus? Do the same thing. Choose one simple thing you know and write it down. 
"Take the first step in faith. You don't have to see the whole staircase, just take the first step."
- Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. 
For example, do you have a character? Excellent! Write down the character’s first and last name.
Don’t have the name yet? Make one up right now and write it down. Don’t worry about making it the “right” name – you can change it later as many times as you want (thank you, Find and Replace tool). Write down a placeholder name; any name except your own – especially if the character is based on you. A pilot is fiction, even if it’s highly autobiographical. It’s a fictionalized version of your life, not your memoir. You need some distance, so use your initials if you are having separation anxiety, but change the name. 
Okay, you’ve got a name written down. Write one thing—one specific thing—you know about this character. Oh, but wait a minute – not something from the backstory. Make it something you know about who your character is right now. Present tense – that’s key! He’s 15. She’s an office temp. He’s divorced. Something you know about this character that’s simple, concrete and NOW. Only one thing. You can add more later, but for now, only one. For those of you who are struggling with too much information, identifying your character only in present tense is likely to eliminate a lot of stuff that is keeping you from seeing your character clearly. It doesn’t mean the backstory stuff isn’t true or valuable, it means it isn’t relevant right now. 
But what if you don’t have a character yet? No problem—start with what you’ve got. How about the arena? Do you have an idea of where this pilot takes place? High school? Another planet? Single-parent family? Great! Write it down. And now write one specific thing you know about this arena. Elite boarding school? Suburban? Inner city? Math & Science for the Specially Gifted? Is the planet 25 years in the future? Or 2,000? Is it colder than Earth? Hotter? Is the single parent an older dad? A young mom? Is the kid a baby? A teen? Twins?
Look at that – you’ve taken two steps on your journey! What’s next?
IF YOU STARTED WITH A CHARACTER 
Next Step: Identify the arena that this character lives or works in and write down one thing you know about that arena.
For example: George Moore is 30; he lives on his family’s Texas ranch. They raise beef the old fashioned way, free range. Or, Cathy Vega is 25 and a rookie cop in a big city Police Department; the head of her department is an alcoholic. 
If you think you may have a buddy show where two characters are equally important, then pick one and go with that one first, then do the other.
IF YOU STARTED WITH AN ARENA (or anything else) 
Next Step: Identify a character who lives or works in this arena. Probably the one you want to be the Central Character, and write down one thing you know about him/her. A character is the beating heart of any story, so even though you don’t have to start with one, you need to get one as soon as you can.
"You might do a magnificent job of creating an unfamiliar world -- a far place, a far-off time, or both – with the most skilled film-makers and the best technology available. But you have to make sure that world is inhabited by people whose lives and fates we care about and whose story has something to say to us."
– Ridley Scott
Now you’ve got a place and a character. You may think that’s not much, but you’ve started a solid foundation. You can build on that.
Next Step: What do you think a potential problem for that character might be?
Consider the one thing you wrote down and if you have an idea how that one thing can be a problem for your Central Character put it down. 
For example: That family ranch that I said George Moore lives on—it’s split between him and a sister and she handles the finances. George needs approval from her for his operations. Or, in that Police Department where I put Cathy Vega – to keep her case on track, Cathy covers for her alcoholic boss who then gets credit for solving the case. 
If you don’t have any idea what kind of a problem your character has with the information you wrote down, make one up. Yes, right now. You are a writer; that’s what you do – you make stuff up and WRITE IT DOWN.
It doesn’t have to be good, by the way, it just has to be written down. Making it good, better, best – that’s important, but that comes later. First you’ve got to write stuff down without worrying about whether it’s right. 
A painter has paint. A musician has an instrument. A writer has words. Words are your tools, your medium. Words are all you’ve got. Words are your oil paints, your guitar, but if they’re in your head, no matter how good they are, they don’t count – you’ve got to write them down. You can make anything you’ve written down better. You can’t do a thing with something that’s still in your head. Your job is to make choices and write them down. That’s what makes you a writer – it’s that simple. That’s the whole secret – there are lots of other guidelines and suggestions you can learn, but nothing really matters unless you’re writing it down.
"A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step."
- Lao-tzu, founder of Taoism
Congratulations, you have started. And, if you followed my advice, what you’ve got is not about the backstory; it’s present tense, functioning in your character’s world right now, which is what you must have to develop a pilot.
So go ahead and play God – create your own world. As the saying goes, God is in the details, and you get to choose them. You set the parameters. The rules. The values. You decide who stays, who goes, when they fall in love, what they fight about. Everything. It’s your world. If somebody wants to change it – they have to pay you. Wow! Imagine that.
Don’t you love having control? Now if you could get control of your own life… hey, you know, creating a pilot is a big step in that direction. So write one. Write now.
Excerpted from Ellen’s forthcoming book on "How to Write a TV Pilot."  Due out next year.

Anda adalah Penulis Seks Buat Roland

So You Want to Be a Writer?


I got a letter recently from someone who hopes to be a writer. She says:
I get so frustrated with myself because even as I am typing, I think, "What am I doing?  I can't write!" I would like to get published some day, but I don't even know how to start.
No 7-step list will guarantee a writer is formed out of a non-writer, but here are some suggestions, things that have been helpful for me.

1. Write!

The cliche answer is probably the best one—if you want to write, write. Don't think about publishing at first. And quit examining yourself and your ability. Don't worry about grammar and spelling at first. Just write. Anything. Journal. Letters. Blog. Keep a writing notebook or computer file. In it, write random paragraphs describing something you've seen or imagined. Jot down ideas or connections that have come to your mind when you're reading your Bible.
All of this is good practice and good source material for you. Sometimes I happen across a random piece of paper where in the past I briefly wrote a thought that I'd now completely forgotten. Without the paper it would have been totally lost. Now it slips into something I'm writing as if it were totally fresh today.

2. Immerse yourself in what you admire.

When you find an author you love to read, read everything you can find by that person. Think of authors whose writing grabs you, then soak yourself in their work. For me, there have been all sorts. It would be hard to pick out just a few, but here's a very random sample: George Eliot, Charlotte Bronte, Edith Schaeffer, Elisabeth Eliot, P.D. James, Alexander McCall Smith.
A practical and surprisingly helpful way to get a feel for the quality of another author’s writing is to copy down well-turned phrases of theirs that you find as you read. Then, not only are you passively taking in good writing as a reader, you are also practicing putting it out yourself as a writer.

3. Practice improving other people’s writing.

I think editing other people's work has helped my writing a lot. As an exercise, you might take random paragraphs from other writers or yourself and see how much you can cut out and still leave a good paragraph. Shortest is not always best, but long is often weak. See what other ways you might improve the paragraph.

4. Join a writers’ group.

In college, I should have majored in Lit because I love reading. But Lit required a lot of writing. So I majored in Speech, so I could just talk, because I didn't like to write.
When I was in my late 30's, someone at Bethel College asked me to write a very short piece for the alumni magazine about an Alumna of the Year (or something like that), a person in our church. And I was probably 40 before I started thinking I might enjoy writing and began to do it because I liked it.
About that time I joined the Minnesota Christian Writers Guild. At the monthly meetings, even if the speaker is talking about a kind of writing I'm not interested in, somehow it's still good fertilizer and watering to whatever I am interested in.
Look for a writers' organization near you. Whether or not it should be a Christian group depends on what kind of writing you’re doing. As you look for a group, keep in mind there’s some pretty goofy stuff out there (both Christian and non-Christian), stuff that won't advance your thought or writing or your faith very well.

5. Start a writers’ group.

Later I started getting together monthly with a small group of other aspiring writers. Each of us brings something and we take turns reading to each other. Then we encourage each other and make suggestions. That has been really helpful. And you should recognize that comes from me, who doesn't take criticism easily nor want anybody telling me what to do.
Round up your own group of writers or would-be writers. Needing to have something fresh each month is good motivation to keep writing.

6. Participate in events for writers.

Find conferences you want to attend. American Christian Writers, for example or Christian Writers Guild. These are big conferences and will have tracks for beginners. Look around those websites for other helpful info, too. Another good annual conference is Write to Publish, always in Wheaton, though not associated officially with the college.
Same thought here as above about deciding whether to go to Christian conferences or others.

7. Ask yourself what you want to say and who you want to say it to.

Before moving eventually toward publishing, probably most important is getting past the general idea of writing, and getting down to asking yourself, “What do I have to say? What do I want to say? What are my great burdens that won’t let me be content until I deal with them on paper? Who do I want to write this for?”
Over time this sense will grow, perhaps from your random writing notebook. You’ll start to notice what gets most of your word count, or what raises the strongest emotions in you, or what you've been learning as you've written. Writing is one of the best ways (besides talking to yourself!) to know what you really think . You realize how unfinished your thoughts have been when you try to get them out of your head and into something cogent on paper.

Keep learning!

Really, what we're talking about here is continuing education. I was surprised to discover that my education wasn't finished when I finished college. I realize now that I learned to learn in school. And I've gotten my real education since then.
So, if you want to grow in writing, that means you want to continue your education in writing, and that means WRITE!