|
|
In today's newsletter, I want to take a look at a question that crops up for a lot of writers, often at different times and in different ways.
It's definitely a question I've had to grapple with over the years, more than once. I'm not sure I've found the perfect balance, but hopefully I can help you think through what a good balance might look like in your life.
|
Should You Write What Pays or What You're Passionate About?
|
If you're looking at writing jobs, you might well be wondering how to find a balance between what pays ... and what you're passionate about.
The easy and glib answer would be: do both! Find something you LOVE writing about and make money from it.
That might work well for some writers. If you really enjoy writing, say, time management advice or diet tips or technical manuals or advertising copy, you should easily be able to find a way to make a living from the writing you love.
But for a lot of writers, including me, it's not quite so clear cut.
- Maybe you enjoy your freelance work and it pays decently, but it's not something you'd necessarily do purely for fun. Instead, you love writing poetry.
- Maybe you've got a well-paying job writing website copy: it covers the bills and more, but what you really enjoy doing is writing novels.
- Maybe you like ghost-writing blog posts for your clients ... but you'd love to spend more time on your own literary fiction.
- Maybe you haven't ever written for money or even considered it, because what you truly love writing is fan-fiction.
There's no "right" way to be a writer, and you shouldn't feel that you're doing anything wrong by focusing on pay (or by NOT trying to maximise your income).
It's not a waste of your writing time to do something you enjoy, with little or no prospect of making money from it. Equally, it's not a waste of your writing time if you're writing something that's, frankly, pretty mundane ... but that pays the bills.
Here are a few possibilities you might want to consider:
- You could spend your writing time (e.g. poetry). You might enjoy writing something that you're not – yet – quite at the level of making money from. (Learning to write great fiction, for instance, takes a lot of time and practice.)
- Some writers choose to work a regular day job and enjoy writing in the evenings or at the weekend. There's absolutely nothing wrong with that: your writing does not need to be a full-time occupation for it to "count".
- You might write something you're not particularly passionate about in order to pay the bills. There's nothing wrong with that either! You're using your talents, you're still being creative, and while sales copy or technical reports may not exactly be your "passion", you may still find it very satisfying to do a good job.
- You could, like many writers, blend together a mix of different types of writing to create a – more or less! – balanced life. You follow your passion some of the time (even if it isn't making you any money), but you do other writing-related things too. Some writers edit, some teach, some ghost-write ... whatever works for you.
The only things I'd suggest avoiding are:
- Working for content mills. (Large sites like Upwork, where gigs typically pay very low rates.) Even if you're just starting out, you can do better. Check out Carol Tice's blog Make a Living Writing for lots of of excellent advice.
- Writing something that you hate. If a certain type of writing makes you want to pull your hair out, don't do it; look for something different that you'd at least enjoy a bit.
- Deciding to simply "follow your passion" ... wherever it might lead. Ending up deep in debt isn't going to do wonder for your creativity.
- Letting go of your passion altogether. If you love writing poetry / memoir / fiction, carve out some time for it on a regular basis: ideally at least once a week. It doesn't matter if it doesn't pay. What matters is that you enjoy it and find it fulfilling.
If you feel that your writing life isn't meeting the right balance between profit and pleasure, how you could tip the scales this week? Decide on one small way you could make a change and give it a go.
|
|
If you don't want to receive the Monday blog posts by email, click this link and you'll be instantly unsubscribed from them.
If you want to receive the blog posts but not the newsletter, click this link and you'll be instantly unsubscribed from them..
If you want to receive both the blog posts and the newsletter emails (recommended!) ... don't click anything! :-)
If you want to unsubscribe from everything, use the "Unsubscribe" link right at the very bottom of this email (next to "Change Subscriber Options").
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|