My Posts Of The Year

by Sharon Hurley Hall on December 30, 2008


It’s time for another roundup of Get Paid To Write Online posts. This time, I’m looking at my favorite posts throughout the year, just one for each month. Here they are:

January – Why I’ve Gone Back To A Paper Diary

February – Freelance Writing Questions: Avoiding Scams

March – Taking Criticism: Are You A Dinosaur?

April – I AM A Real Writer

May – Freelance Does Not Mean Free

June – Why I Love Working At Home

July – When Last Did You Pay Yourself?

August – Organizing Your Freelance Writing Career

September – How To Get Your Dream Client

October – Recession And The Freelance Writer

November – Screenplay Copyright (guest post)

December – What To Do When You Have Said It All

You might also enjoy:

  1. Why I Love My Writing Newsletter
  2. The 12 Posts Of Christmas
  3. 2007: Writing Year In Review

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{ 3 comments }

Write and Earn a Living December 30, 2008 at 10:25

What a great idea to include links to 12 posts–and how you’ve done so with your favorites and also with the Christmas posts. This is an innovative and creative way to link to other posts.

So many of us with writing blogs seem to be doing some sort of yearly round-up.

I just did a post about looking at what you’ve been doing successfully and magnifying your efforts to grow earnings.

Write and Earn a Living’s last blog post..Writing Courses

Jeanne Dininni December 30, 2008 at 15:05

Sharon,

Thanks for sharing these great posts! I love the idea of resurrecting posts from our archives periodically to allow readers to catch some of our best work which they may have missed the first time around–or even allowing them to reread that work as an excellent reminder of a few helpful principles that they may have forgotten. The end of the year is one of the best times to do it, too! Excellent idea!

Thanks, again!
Jeanne

Sharon January 16, 2009 at 10:47

Thanks – I’ve seen some interesting approaches to this technique on other blogs, such as collecting posts around a theme that may not have existed when you started writing the first one.

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