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Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

Write – First 4 For Free? You’re Kidding, Right?

May 21, 2008 by Anne Wayman  
Filed under Jobs

moneyEvery now and again I run into an ad that says something like:

We’re big and growing and need a gillion articles. Write the first four for free for us and starting with article five, assuming you’ve demonstrated you’re good, we’ll start to pay you.

I never publish these ads. I mean, do they think we’re stupid? Assuming whoever uses this scheme actually needs, ultimately, 10,000 articles. If they get 100 writers to do agree, they’ve got 400 articles for free. That will take maybe two or three weeks, maybe a month, depending, to get edited and up. Then they run the ad again and get another 100… do you see what I mean?

It just seems like a scam to me, so I don’t publish their ads.

But maybe I’m wrong. Have any of you had any experience answering ads like this? What was your experience? Let’s talk about it.

Write well and often,

Two newsletters:
Abundant Freelance Writing – a resource for freelance writers including 3x a week job postings.
Writing With Vision – for those who want to get a book written.

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Comments

9 Responses to “Write – First 4 For Free? You’re Kidding, Right?”
  1. Yeah, I also like the ones that say “write us a test article on this subject, and if we like it, we’ll send you more work.”

    One day I’m going to take them up on that, Copyscape it, and see where the article ended up — and then send them the bill.

    ~Graham

  2. Anne Wayman says:

    If you do that Graham, come back and tell us about it for sure.

  3. Ashish Ahuja says:

    I thinks its better to write on your own blog and monetize it

    Regards,

    CA Ashish Ahuja, FCA
    A Roaming Blogger and a CA
    Indian Chartered Accountants New Delhi India
    Company Formation India Private Limited

  4. Celine says:

    Only a gillion articles? If they were *really* as big as they say they are, they’d need a gazillion bijillion killion articles.

  5. Anne Wayman says:

    Ashish, yes, altho monitizing isn’t particularly easy, at least it’s yours.

    lol Celene… yes

  6. LS says:

    I see those all the time. I guess there’s someone, somewhere who really does it. But, of course it’s a scam. It’s just a vague scam that isn’t technically thievery since they never actually promised future work.

  7. I’m in a trial period right now but I get paid for the trial articles as well (and yes I’ve already been paid); indeed, even when I did sample blog posts for a blogging gig, I got paid for those. For those hiring writers, that’s the right way to do it.

    That said, Publishers Weekly requires a 3 month, 6 review UNPAID trial period; I thought that was odd for such a reputable company. I couldn’t do even the offered trial period because I’m located in Italy, but I’m sure I wouldn’t have been happy with giving up 6 free reviews even for the chance to work with them.

  8. Anne Wayman says:

    it may not technically be theft, but by any other definition it sure is imo

  9. Glenn Vincent says:

    A publisher asking a writer to work for free is like a car dealership asking an auto maker to send them cars for free. The publisher pays for everything else he uses – rent for office space, equipment, supplies, etc. – but he expects to get his “bread and butter” (the words he prints) without paying the person who produced them? In any other business this person would be laughed at and thought of as an arrogant a$$#@((.

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