If you’re getting into freelancing these days, one option is writing for content aggregator sites like Helium, About.com, Associated Content or HubPages. These companies pay writers to create massive amounts of content to help the sites rise up to the top of Web searches and make more money on click throughs.
But for freelancers, there’s a huge debate happening over the merits of writing for a content aggregator to advance your career, a debate that last week spilled onto the pages of this blog. First long-time freelancer Tim Beyers examined the reasons why a writer shouldn’t bother with content aggregators. Then Helium’s new writer outreach manager Barbara Whitlock countered with her own detailed explanation of why freelancers would want to write for a content aggregator, Helium in particular.
I say if you’re a writer looking for experience, there’s a better way.
Instead of writing for an aggregator, find out what hyperlocal news sites have popped up in your area, introduce yourself and ask if there’s anything you can do to help.
In case you’re not familiar with them, hyperlocal news sites are blogs that focus on what’s happening in a specific area, be it a neighborhood, town or city. You might also know them as community news blogs or citizen journalist sites. Some examples: NewzJunky in Watertown, New York; Hop Town in Hopkinsville, Massachusetts, and NeighborsGo.com in Dallas.
If you work for a hyperlocal news organization you’ll probably start out making about as much as you would at a content aggregator – which is to say not much. But if you really are just starting out, you could use the opportunity to go out and do some man-on-the-street reporting, and pick up other valuable experience.
If you don’t think there are hyperlocal or citizen journalists operating in your city you’re wrong, you just haven’t looked hard enough. Here in Portland, there are at least four, including Neighborhood Notes and OurPDX, more if you count sites that focus on niches like tech, books or cycling.
If there really aren’t hyperlocal sites where you live, start one. By teaching yourself everything you need to know to run a hyperlocal or community news site, you’re teaching yourself everything you need to know in 2009 and going into the future to get hired as a staff writer or make it as a freelancer, things like using a content management system (a fancy term for blogging or blog-like software), HTML, linking, how to write for a blog, how to write straight news, how to take pictures, video and audio, etc.
When it comes down to it, as long as you’re going to the time and trouble of learning the craft, why give the fruits of your labors to another business when you could maximize the benefit and profit for the enterprise that matters most – you.
Walter L. Johnson II says
Good article. It’s a good example of hyperlocal being more than just covering a particular city, town, or even suburb, or at least a certain neighborhood within such a community. It’s also covering certain topics within such markets. Still, it’ll be interesting to see how such a business model will be monetized. Any thoughts out there?
Lyrehca says
quick note–looks like it’s Hopkinsville, Kentucky, not Massachusetts.
Tracy from West Seattle Blog says
Actually I would beg to differ. We pay freelancers a lot more than they’d make — at least as I understand it — from those “content aggregators.” Unless they’re making more than $100 for the average story, in which case I stand corrected. We pay $50-$100 for assigned professional freelance-reported/photographed stories.
Betsy Richter says
As the owner/operator of OurPDX.com, I can safely say that we’re not paying freelancers at all right now. Instead, we’re a ‘cashflow-negative’ operation, with all of the cash currently flowing *out* of my pockets.
All of our authors know this going in, of course, and we’ve been fairly transparent about the site’s goals, aspirations, and operations.
And in return for paying our authors, um, nothing, well – we don’t have quotas (you write when the spirit moves you.) And we do at least spring for food at our monthly author/reader gatherings (yet another reason why we’re cashflow-negative…)
kmcdade says
I’ve got a cash-flow-negative hyperlocal site, too — http://parkrosegateway.com. It’s actually part of the Neighborlogs beta (http://neighborlogs.com). The idea is to get local advertisers to bring in revenue, and eventually do profit-sharing with contributers. I haven’t gotten that far yet, though (in fact, I’ve been rather neglectful), because I’m doing it on a very part time basis.
Barbara Whitlock says
A way to gain extra traction with the same article for a local newspaper or website is to also publish the same article in Helium’s Local Guides channel: http://www.helium.com/channels/136252-Local-Guides
Helium’s newspaper partners pay stock content — $5 to $20 per article — for one-time, non-exclusive use in print.
Barbara
DDD says
Personally as an espiring writer any exposure is better than having your thoughts bottled up or disappearing on paper from trying to find the right company to mail out your writings hence the word (NONE). The different styles from each company is beneficial to the different styles of the writers.
One style (size) does not fit all! The key factor is compensation, whether for cash or experience the details for each up front. Instead of the “read the book (buy the book)” situation. While conducting my research on the different sites many of them do not list the compensation details up front.