Hey everyone! I'm sure many of you have spoken to me or seen my name poking around by now.
My name is Limarc (lee-mark) Ambalina and I started my professional writing career in 2015 with Valnet, a HUGE media company that owns: Screenrant, Gamerant, CBR, The Gamer, Review This, and more.
My most successful article received 1.8 million views in 1 month. 🎮
In 2016 I moved to Japan 🏯 to teach English and started freelance writing for http://blog.gaijinpot.com and http://keengamer.com and eventually found a full-time content writing gig on a marketing team for https://lionbridge.ai/.
During that time, I continued to write freelance and contribute to many publications including: https://zenmarket.jp/en/, http://kdnuggets.com, and of course http://hackernoon.com, all while maintaining my own blog about Japan on the side: http://jpbound.com.
Currently, I'm the VP of Growth at Hacker Noon and our Editor in charge of Gaming and AI.
You can ask me anything about:
✍content writing
💰finding writing gigs
📰starting your own blog
✍Writing for Hacker Noon
I'll be answering questions all week so don't be shy!
https://hackernoon.com/augmented-reality-vs-mixed-reality-vs-virtual-reality-ik8730gv
I was working content marketing for Lionbridge AI at the time and wanted to get a feel of the Hacker Noon platform and wrote about something I was passionate about. A couple weeks after that post a company called https://hackernoon.com/telepresence-robots-are-the-future-for-remote-workers-an-interview-with-double-robotics-0t7b30iw messaged me on LinkedIn referencing the post and asked me if I'd write about them. (showing the power of getting published on Hacker Noon).
I still remember that article fondly because it led to my full-time position on Hacker Noon today! It's funny how one article can change the course of your life! Write everything with care.
1. Choose a niche or niches and write quality content within it. Write a variety of content: news pieces, reviews, guides, opinion pieces, interviews
2. Get published on as many tech blogs/pubs as you can
3. Learn SEO and social media marketing/promotion
4. Constantly search for jobs via as many platforms as you can: LinkedIn, Glassdoor, local job boards, etc.
5. Apply and wait
Rinse and repeat. I used to think finding jobs in writing is about knowing the right people, but it's not. It's about honing your craft, consistency, hard work, and constant searching. Luck comes to those who are prepared.
I'd also recommend working on selling yourself and your skills well. Some writers can write but they can't talk about their value in an interview or even in a cover letter.
Focus on accomplishments and numbers, not on your willingness to work hard.
The dangers of deepfakes may have been a big deal in 2019 but maybe we will see advancements in 2021 that combat this threats. The fact that tech is changing makes it all the more interesting to write about and talk about.
At my peak when I was writing full-time and managing 4 other freelance writing gigs on the side, optimizing your routine is paramount to maintaining a high output and a healthy lifestyle.
One major thing that increased my output while maintaining quality was creating templates for every article I wrote and following that template every time I wrote a similar article. A lot of my articles did well because they followed simple structures that provided people with a good user experience and ticked all the write on-page SEO boxes that allowed them to rank well on Google.
One of my favorite gigs was writing anime listicles for a Japanese publication:
When I started, I was a full-time English teacher in Tokyo with 2-3 writing gigs on the side. If you want to find a stable writing job, you should build up a portfolio of articles in a niche you're interested in and then look for marketing content writing positions in that industry.
Unsurprisingly (since we're having this discussion on Hacker Noon), tech is one where you'll see lots of money and good writers are in demand because writers bring in money. Articles bring in potential users, which become leads, and eventually paying customers.
Obviously not the purest capitalist response. I am really really struggling with it. I feel I am acting the fool. Why am I such a purist who won't write something I do not want to write for any amount of money? If I want to write it, I will. If I don't, NO AMOUNT of money has gotten me to do anything but write code. It is art for me. I do not want to prostitute it. I am a dummy:zany_face:
That passion for media or tech transferred to video games when my father bought me a PlayStation 1 when I was 6 years old and the games I played there began to foster my love for stories.
Interestingly, I think a huge defining moment for me was in second grade. The teacher gave us the assignment of writing a short story. We were 6 and 7 year olds, so I don't know what she was expecting. But I took the assignment seriously. I went to the library and rented 8 children's books to get ideas from. That's where I discovered plagiarism. I thought "This is a good story. Why don't I just write this story down and read this to the class?"
So that's what I did. And after I read my story aloud, for the first time in my life I heard applause for something I'd written and my teacher said "I think we have a future writer on our hands!". But when I sat down at my desk I felt guilt, because I knew the story wasn't mine 😔. I made a silent vow to myself that the next time I read something aloud to the class, it would be something I'd written 21 years later....And here we are!
But journalism is typically news, op-eds, investigative pieces. Content writing could include those topics, but more. Like if I'm writing guides on "How to Set Up Your WordPress Account" I don't think I'd call that journalism. But I would call it content writing.
Do you need to take journalism courses to be a good writer?
No. But I'm sure they would make you a better writer. I took creative writing courses and wrote mostly fiction during my college life, but those courses still helped me become a content writer and improved my reading and writing abilities.
Lead image via: Florian Klauer on Unsplash