My Experiment: Making a Living Writing for Associated Content

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I've been reading several articles off and on all geared toward writing enough to make a living writing for Associated Content. I've done the math with my own numbers (factoring in how much money I typically make per article, and the generalized time it typically takes for me to write an article) and my interest is piqued enough to give it a try.

At this point I believe it is safe to say that I am still relatively new to Associated Content with just fifty published articles under my belt. I only average 3.21 per article, so unlike many others I will have to do twice the work than others may have to do. I averaged that in order to make $500 a week I would have to write 155 articles per week. This is broken down to 31 articles per day for five days.

I made myself a long list of things that I could write about that I know about without having to do any research on, and managed to fill up a page in a notebook (front and back) with ideas, and the list keeps growing. I was actually surprised at the information I've managed to store in this noodle of mine. At any rate, I sat down with my list and decided to time myself to see how long it would take me to write a couple of articles. The first article "How to Get Your Dog Used to Riding in Your Car" took me 15 minutes. The second article, " Review of Purina Tidy Cats Scoop for Multiple Cats Cat Litter," only took me 10 minutes. I had two articles written in less than thirty minutes, and they are both articles I feel are well written and do not make me look poor as a writer.

If I average two articles every thirty minutes, then that means, roughly, that I need to write for a little under 8 hours a day; the same amount of time I would spend working a full time traditional job. This brings about pros and cons though. The major pro in this is that I don't have to spend any extra money in gas. Other pros are that I can work in my pajamas, I am in charge of when I work, I can take off any time I like or need to run errands. Of course the biggest con is having to write at a break neck pace at a consistent level and keep a flow of ideas for articles going. It would be easy to get burned out. So, the question for me isn't if its doable, but for how long is it doable.

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