Thanks for all the replies - some great information here.
If you are a copywriter (which I am guessing based on your username), I would recommend that you come up with a way to make your writing stand out from the rest. What separates you from every other college kid on here who is looking to make a few bucks by writing content for a few weeks? Grow a customer base and find a way to keep those customers. Figure out new places to post content. Guest blog post for specific niches. Figure out something you can monetize.
I think doing this will be more profitable for you, and allow you to keep your sanity at the same time.
:food-smiley-010:
Yes, I am a copywriter. Getting clients and keeping them is not the issue - the issue is I have grown to genuinely hate making other people money when I should be doing the same for myself.
After a long day of grinding out client work, the last thing I really feel like doing is completing work for myself. It sounds ludicrous, but there is only so much "creativity" (for lack of a better word) in my mind, and when it gets spent, I just end up lying around or being totally unproductive.
As it is now, I have to continue paying the bills and supporting myself, so considering that my client work has made me the bulk of my money in the past, I have put that first. Is this a mistake? Probably. But, I have to eat...
Also, how much money can you make doing manual labor? Do you really think you will be able to afford putting money away for a PPC fund? After taxes and bills, you will have to work for a while to save enough money to run a decent campaign on any semi-competitive niche.
It's not so much using the manual labor job to save the money for PPC as much as using it to support myself.
Building on my last point, here's how I see the situation.
1. Stop writing for clients to support myself - replace this income with a manual labor job. I am mainly looking for a night shift position, but in my case, beggars can't really be choosers. I am living on a pretty strict budget right now (I am a university student) so after rent, I can live on about $250 a month. Even at minimum wage (I am in Canada, so that is $10.25) I think I should be able to support myself with this, while putting some money aside for developing my online business.
2. Spend my free time focusing 100% of my intellectual energy on building up my own assets.
Like I said before, I know what has to be done to be successful and achieve my goals. It's just that continuing client work is sucking the life out of me, literally and figuratively. But, in my current situation, it seems to be a necessary evil. This must change if I want to get where I want to go.
do you just need more money to scale? do you have a successful campaign already?
I have enjoyed a limited level of success in affiliate marketing through using the minisite model (throw up a bunch of 10 page websites based around a specific niche, determine which ones are gaining momentum and traffic, focus my energies on developing those and dump the ones that are flukes) But, these things take time to build, and I have not had the energy to focus on them and give them the time they deserve.
In terms of PPC, I have limited experienced. (I used this as my main way to get clients for my writing business, but no affiliate marketing yet) A bunch of the people I have written landing pages for have been using my copy for more than a few months and they continue to spend on advertising, so I assume it works for them.
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Overall, I know what I have to do to get where I want to go, but I need to find the right path to get there.
It has recently become very clear to me that continuing to write content for others is counterproductive and is causing me to go insane. I know that if I can find a way to replace the income I garner from my client work while preserving my intellectual energy, the rest of my business will take off. I have gone through this cycle over and over again, and I have just had enough...