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Noticing Newbies: July 05, 2017 Issue [#8372]

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Noticing Newbies


 This week: Finding Your Writing Niche
  Edited by: Brooke Author IconMail Icon
                             More Newsletters By This Editor  Open in new Window.

Table of Contents

1. About this Newsletter
2. A Word from our Sponsor
3. Letter from the Editor
4. Editor's Picks
5. A Word from Writing.Com
6. Ask & Answer
7. Removal instructions

About This Newsletter


The Noticing Newbies Newsletter's goal is to make the newer members feel welcome and encourage them with useful information and/or links to make navigating Writing.com easier. Writing.com members of all ages and even veteran members can find useful information here. If you have specific questions, try visiting "Writing.Com 101Open in new Window. and/or "Noticing NewbiesOpen in new Window..


Meet The Noticing Newbies Full-Time Newsletter Editors






Word from our sponsor

ASIN: 1542722411
Amazon's Price: $ 12.99


Letter from the editor


Finding Your Writing Niche: Using your own experience and knowledge to finance your dreams.


Many writers wish they could make a living from their writing. If you have experience and knowledge in a particular industry, then you’re much more likely to attract clients seeking web content writers in that industry than any other. Common sense, right? You'd be surprised how many people don't understand that simple rule. It all comes down to finding your niche.

What comes first is finding your niche. Your niche is where these three things intersect:

*BoxCheck* Your experience
*BoxCheck* Your interests
*BoxCheck* Clients with good writing budgets

You begin by outlining your areas of expertise.

*BoxCheck* Jobs
*BoxCheck* Volunteering
*BoxCheck* Life
*BoxCheck* Jobs


List jobs or training you’ve had. As you think about these, include all the skills required and think about how your experience might cross over into other areas. Next, you can go through both lists looking specifically for those areas that overlap. Keep in mind, if you have expertise but no interest, just cross that one off your list. If you’re not interested enough in a topic, it will show in your writing and cost you jobs. You’ll also find it harder to market your services for a niche that you’re not particularly enthusiastic about, so don’t force yourself to work in an area that doesn't interest you.

Now, you may be saying to yourself, “How do I find the right niche industry for me?”

Consider where you’ve been working and what type of industry knowledge and connections you may already have. Don't forget about professional training or certifications. If you don't have any experience to pull from, perhaps you have a history or particular knowledge of a certain hobby niche, such as video gaming or cars and motorcycles. Don't overlook anything. Write down anything and everything you know something about. Once you’ve found that intersection between your expertise and what interests you, then you can research to ensure there is interest enough which means financial backing.You just need to be willing to spend time — and possibly some money — educating yourself in an area you’re passionate about.

Once you’ve identified your 'niche' topic, think about what it will be like to write about it, day after day. If you still feel excited, that’s a niche worth pursuing.

Good luck!

*Down*"This book doesn’t just tell you how to write, it also helps you decide what to write. It has been described as probably the most practical guide you can find about writing web copy."
ASIN: B00DJUK7HE
Amazon's Price: $ 3.99


Editor's Picks


Check out these offerings from some of our newest members!

~*Star*~

Image Protector
Medical Model Open in new Window. [E]
A tongue-in-cheek poem looking at mental health from an anti-psychiatry perspective.
by mislaidmermaid Author Icon

Excerpt:
'She suffers with her nerves'
Her mum was the same
Sister, great aunt, grandma
Faulty genes are to blame

Lemsip for a cold
Immodium for the runs
Why not a tablet
When the Black Dog comes?
~*Star*~

 The Seven Minute Duties of Reaper #357 Open in new Window. [18+]
Charlie – Reaper #357 – has become incredibly cynical about their job and life itself.
by C. Foley Author Icon

Excerpt:
“I am a reaper; number 357 to be exact, and I am here to take you through your life.”

“My life?” The man paused and stared in to space for a moment, realisation slowly dawning over his face, his eyes widening in response. “Oh God…I’m actually dead aren’t I?”

“Almost.”

“What does that mean?”

“Your body is dead…and your mind is following. You have seven minutes left, and in those seven minutes I will take you back through your life so that your soul will be cleansed and ready for whatever comes next.”
~*Star*~

 Writing Drivel Open in new Window. [E]
A wonderful and rewarding method of qwertying
by Kitchap Author Icon

Excerpt:
In days far gone, I always found that basking half-submerged in a bath, smoking a very large herbal cigarette, was a wonderful way of starting the old grey cells off. In the meantime, my fiasco (a far better description of my wife to be than fiance) would sit on the loo seat, drink half a case of brown ale, and take notes of my creative thinking. The herbal induced creativeness, aided by the extraordinary thought processes, inspired by the brown ale, would yield story lines of unimaginable drivel.
~*Star*~

 I Am A Nurse Cat Open in new Window. [E]
Written in the 'voice' of my elderly torbie-and-white cat Lilith.
by YankeeRuze Author Icon

Excerpt:
I am a nurse cat,
When my human is sick
I lay down with her,
Or on her,
And purr my best purrs
For her to feel better.
~*Star*~

 Readers Remorse Open in new Window. [E]
So many books...so little time!
by DakotaSkye Author Icon

Excerpt:
I've been a hero, and I've been a thief,
rescued damsels in distress,
surmounted odds beyond belief,
I've lived a thousand lives...
and I'm so far from done!
~*Star*~

 Peach Bottom Prologue Open in new Window. [13+]
It was the second home she had lost. That was the first thought Tye had.
by Jackie Snax Author Icon

Excerpt:
It was the second home she had lost.

That was the first thought Tye had, stretched out on the highway, her blood sinking down into the porous, cracked up tarmac. The second was that there were more homes than those two, and here she was again, too late in recognizing it. Another was being lost as she bled.

Heat was a slow river over the road. She could feel the ground cracking underneath, unable to contain the green, the green and the blue, every shade of human grey susceptible to the raw power of green and blue.
~*Star*~

 
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