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How to Make Money Writing for Demand Studios

The key to making money on Demand is time.

The first step is to get hired to write for them. They are forever advertising writing jobs but it is extremely difficult to actually get hired by them. Go to www.demandstudios.com and fill out an application. You will be asked to upload your resume and provide a short (300-500 word) writing sample. The system will also ask you to choose your areas of interest. If you don’t hear from them, email them once a week until they answer you. Be pushy.

Once you are hired, you will be directed to the home page for writers. Here you will find your dashboard, where you can choose from hundreds of titles to write about. They are arranged in categories for supposed ease of selection. Don’t bet on it. Here are some tips about title selection for you.

Do a quick keyword search first. Look for titles that interest you and that you can write quickly on. For instance, I run a search on “write”, “book”, “anxiety”, “florida”, “chihuahua”, “garden”, etc. Keep a list by your computer of keywords of subjects you are knowledgeable about.

Make the time to browse through ALL of the titles at least once a day. The title list is constantly being updated.

Don’t count on finding titles placed in the correct category. If you are only looking under the “Education” category, then you are possibly missing out on a great table that has been filed in the “Sports” category. You HAVE to browse the whole list to find the gems.

Choose to write “Fact Sheets” on titles that you have to do very little research on. These can be written very quickly, as they are only 200-300 words. They only pay $5 for these titles but considering it can take under 10 minutes to write one, that’s not bad pay.

You start out with only 10 titles that you are allowed to claim. After writing a couple and going through the process, write the editors and request more titles. I know people that are allowed 50 titles at a time and no doubt there are others who have more.

To ensure getting paid once a week, try to get your articles submitted by Monday of each week. Sometimes the editors are very quick in reviewing an article, sometimes it takes much longer. But generally, I upload my finished articles on Sunday, and I have money in my Paypal by Friday.

Try out the different forms of articles and decide which you are most comfortable writing. “About” articles take a different form than “How-To’s”. I find “How-to’s” easier and quicker to write, but some people prefer the “About” format. It is a matter of personal preference.

The key to making money on Demand is time. Choose articles that you can write fast, with little research. Don’t submit articles that are inaccurate though – the editors will send you into rewrite. If you are asked to rewrite, you need to determine if it is worth your time to do so. You don’t have to rewrite – you can simply hit the delete article button and move on. I’ve done this several times. It just isn’t always worth your time to rewrite a perfectly good article just because an editor wanted major changes. Take your article over to Triond or Bukisa and move on.

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4 Responses to “How to Make Money Writing for Demand Studios”
  • Nelson Doyle
    February 3rd, 2009 at 3:11 am

    Good information to have and hang onto when other more profitable opportunities are lagging in earnings. Nice work gathering the information to write this article.

    God Bless,

    Nelson Doyle

  • Athlyn Green
    February 26th, 2009 at 2:54 pm

    I checked into Demand Studios but it appeared they wanted actual 500-word articles and were offering less than stellar rates. I thought the advertisement was for blog posts but it turned out they wanted articles.

    While they do pay more than other outfits, the pay is still below ideal. But, for someone starting out, Demand Studios at least offers payment for writing. Far better than the article mills.

  • WriteEditSeek
    July 15th, 2009 at 12:21 am

    Awesome information. Thank you for sharing it. I’m checking into other options for freelance in addition to Triond. I love Triond and their policies, but I just don’t make enough. Thanks again!

  • Patrick O'Doore
    May 1st, 2010 at 5:26 pm

    Great stuff. I’m a writer with Demand and you hit it on the head.

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