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Out of the hundreds of emails I receive every day, a strong percentage of requests I receive are from writers who would like to contribute to Consumerism Commentary in some form, such as a blog guest post. Many bloggers, particularly those whose websites are popular, can attest to receiving similar requests. They come from a variety of sources: freelance writers looking for work, other bloggers looking for exposure, and companies looking to get links back to their websites.

Although there are some periods of time I don’t accept any guest posts, I’m usually happy to entertain all requests. I’m busy, so it can be a great relief when I have the opportunity to let someone else write. I’m not able to respond to every email, though. I often spend as much time — or more time — proofreading and editing an articles by a guest blogger as I would writing my own article. In fact, guest articles often result in being more polished and more professional than the articles I write for myself! I am certainly not a perfect writer and I don’t expect anyone else to be perfect, but I tend to ratchet up the standards just a bit when it comes to guest articles.

This article can help writers interested in contributing to Consumerism Commentary prepare a pitch that has a better chance of succeeding and an article that will click with the site’s audience.

Who is suited for writing on Consumerism Commentary

keyboardI do not accept guest articles from companies looking to advertise their products or services through the use of editorial content. Even a link back to a website is a form of advertising, and I do not accept link advertising. Consumerism Commentary does offer other options for effective advertising.

Before you ask to write an article for Consumerism Commentary, become familiar with the community. Participate in discussions on the website, become a fan of Facebook, and be engaged in other social media aspects.

The right pitch for the right article

Sometimes, the first email I receive from an interested contributor contains the article in full. This is not a good thing. There’s a reason that television studios or producers don’t read unsolicited scripts. If they were to read a script, and they happen to use an idea that they received, whether intentionally or not, they could be exposed to some legal issues. I will not read any article sent to me without communication beforehand.

I’m looking for topics and concepts that are somewhat original — anything that wouldn’t necessarily appear elsewhere. I appreciate relevant personal stories, detailed and well-thought-out analyses, and exercises in opinion if it’s clear why your opinions are exceptionally valid (for example, you’re an expert in that particular field). Some controversy is fun, but Consumerism Commentary is not a political blog. Rants and one-sided criticisms would not be appropriate for the website.

I’m open to any topics related, even tangentially, to personal finance except marketing, blogging, and earning income online.

It helps to understand the demographics of the Consumerism Commentary audience. According to Quantcast, the audience is weighted slightly above 35 years old, though there is a strong showing in the 18 to 35 age range. The audience is heavily weighted in favor of high income and graduate-level education. I won’t accept articles written to appeal to a fourth-grade reading level.

In your message to me, briefly explain who you are, why you’d like to write an article for Consumerism Commentary, what you expect to receive from the experience, and offer your idea. If you have several ideas and are willing to let me choose one, that is fine as well, but make sure you have at least one solid idea before contacting. Here’s a nice checklist to help ensure your message will make it through and I’ll respond to the request:

  • Who are you? Offer a brief introduction, particularly if we’ve never spoken before. If we have, remind me just in case. I meet many people, and I feel like my brain is shrinking on a daily basis.
  • Why would you like to contribute? If your intent is advertising, don’t try to hide it. I’ll see through that right away and I will simply ignore your email.
  • What are you expecting in return? I will link back to an author’s website in a bio. It’s rare that I allow any other links unless they are highly relevant. Guest authors are not paid.
  • What are your ideas? Usually, proposed article titles are enough in the initial email, as long as they are descriptive. If you want to offer more than a title, that’s fine, but do not send a full article.
  • Where can I find your writing? If you’re a published author, let me know. If you have a website or a blog where you write frequently, share the link. If you have any exceptional articles that reflect the type of writing you’d provide to Consumerism Commentary, please share.
  • What do you know about Consumerism Commentary? I would much more welcome a guest from a frequent reader of this website than one from someone whose first visit was yesterday.

Be sure to proofread your message to me, as grammatical errors or a poor command of English could reflect negatively on your ability to produce an article for Consumerism Commentary. I’m not immune to typos, and I forgive them easily. With a large volume of requests, I pay attention to detail.

Once you are ready, you can contact me here with your idea.

Providing the article

Once we’ve agreed to a topic and discussed expectations for timing, send the first draft when it’s ready. Most of the time, only one draft is necessary. I don’t have specific guidelines for writing the article, but I do have a few small restrictions.

  • Don’t include any affiliate or SEO links.
  • Don’t promote a company’s product or service.
  • Don’t unfairly criticize a person or company.

Have someone proofread the article for you.

It is rare that after accepting a proposal I would reject the final article. By accepting the proposal, I have a good suspicion that the result will be suitable for Consumerism Commentary. I would not require a writer to go through the effort of writing and possible revising only to reject the outcome.

In terms of format, I prefer receiving articles in plain text with HTML tags if necessary. I will add appropriate styles and formatting. We use Gravatar for profile avatars, so make sure you have a high-quality Gravatar image associated with your email address. You may also provide a three or four sentence bio that will be included in an “About the Author” section.

Benefits of contributing a guest article

Presenting a contribution of an article to Consumerism Commentary can be a great way to reach a broad audience. Contributors and partners have benefited from increased traffic to their websites, more RSS and newsletter subscribers, and stronger brand awareness. Your content will reach over 15,000 RSS subscribers, Twitter followers, and Facebook fans, and quality articles will easily convert Consumerism Commentary readers to your own fans.

Here is a selection of the articles provided by guest bloggers at Consumerism Commentary from the past few years:

If the above sounds good to you and you’re ready to move forward with an idea for a guest post, contact me.

Photo: ian.schofield

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This is a guest article by Ramit Sethi, author of the best-selling personal finance book, I Will Teach You to Be Rich. He recently launched a new program, Earn1k, to help people earn more money on the side. To get a free mini-course on earning more, sign up here. Ramit will also be our guest on the Consumerism Commentary Podcast this coming Sunday.

Last year, when I went on book tour for my book, I Will Teach You To Be Rich, I asked my readers to share the number one thing they wanted me to write more about.

I was surprised. The number one reason people wanted to earn more money wasn’t paying off debt, or investing, or money and relationships. Almost universally, people wanted to know how to earn more money.

I initially believed people wanted to earn more so they could buy a $2,000 handbag or fly to Vegas for the weekend. Again, I was way off.

Most people are simply unsatisfied with the limits of their 9-to-5 job and want the option of eventually quitting and working for themselves. In fact, some of them don’t even want to work themselves…they just want the option of doing SOMETHING else.

Have you ever met people who are a few years out of college and feel like, “Huh…is this it?” We all have dreams of living a certain lifestyle, and it can be disheartening when we realize we’re going to have to save, scrimp, and pinch for 40 years. For many of us, $1,000 to $2,000 a month would make a huge difference in our lives.

We want to earn more now more than ever, and it’s not just about the money itself. We want to be independent from our corporate jobs (even if we end up staying at them, we want the option of doing something else). We want to work from home or from the beach. Here’s a picture of my brother’s office in Mexico:

Money isn’t the end goal. But we want it to help us achieve our real goals to live a rich life. And you can’t out-frugal your way to rich.

Earning money isn’t easy

But it’s not easy. People immediately see how challenging it can be to consistently earn more money and end up fantasizing about their independent lifestyle dream without taking action — forever. They come up with delusional ideas like “passive income” or create psychological barriers like “I could never earn money… I don’t have an idea.” After all, if you’re a regular person (i.e. someone who has a busy job, and still wants to have a life), your available money-making options start looking really limited. These options usually either:

  • take a lot of time and money to start (Brick and mortar businesses),
  • are spammy and dumb (“The latest secret money-generating trick!”), or
  • have zero growth potential (Donating plasma, taking paid surveys, etc.).

There’s a better solution. It’s not sexy, but it will help you lead a rich life: Turning your skills into income using freelancing.

Freelancing, as opposed to productization, is the easiest way to earn more money. It costs virtually nothing to get started, you can start earning money right away, and you can rapidly test and refine what you offer to earn even more.

Compare this to building products, which excites people due to the kooky idea of passive income… but requires multiple skill sets that few people have.

With freelancing, you can get started immediately and be earning money within one week. Freelancing also gives you practice running your business, without all the risk typically associated with entrepreneurship. It dispels the most common myths and excuses people make about why they could never work for themselves.

Common excuses about earning more money

We hear these all the time:

“I don’t have an idea.” The mistake is believing that you need one magical idea that will rain down from the sky and give you a profitable business. Not true! Instead, the critical part is building a system to rapidly test ideas to find a profitable one. Here are some ideas that my students have turned into profitable income: Personal organizer, music instructor, tutor, freelance writer, personal chef.

“I’d rather make passive income.” For delusional people dreaming of thousands of dollars in passive income being deposited into their PayPal account all while they sip coconut juice on the beach is just that — a dream that keeps them far away from the reality of earning more. The people who are serious about earning money realize that, to earn money passively, you have to start out actively doing work actively.

“Are you crazy? I don’t want to work an extra 60 hours every week.” Nobody wants to take on a second full-time job. You can actually freelance as many or as few hours as you want — even as little as five hours per week. If the client work piles on and you start getting too busy, you can increase your rates to bring the hours back down. (I did this, raising my rates over 1,000% in a few years.) There are dozens of other strategies like this that professional freelancers use to balance a high client load, or to balance freelancing with a full-time job. My friend Ben is a senior product manager at a very well-known web company, and still manages to freelance on the side — not because he needs the money, not because he hates his day job (he actually loves it) but simply because he wants to. How does HE manage the workload? We interviewed him to get the inside scoop here.

“Wait, first I have to set up my company Facebook and Twitter accounts!” PLEASE READ THIS CAREFULLY. If your goal is to earn money, social media is a waste of time for the vast majority of people. Social media can be fun and useful, but its greatest utility comes when you’re already well-established. For those starting out, it’s a distraction and a risky pitfall. You don’t need an audience; you need customers. If you’re spending time optimizing 20 social media profiles or doing other feel-good things before you’ve gotten your first client, just kick yourself in the face. Then start talking to some prospects.

“I’m just not a big enough risk taker to just quit my job like that.” Most people aren’t, and you don’t need to be either! I want to expand on this last point, because it’s common for people to get tripped up about having a job. Actually, if you want to work for yourself one day, you should use your job to your advantage. Here’s how:

  • Develop your skill set. Learning new skills for free is great, but getting paid to do it is awesome. Make sure your job has you doing high-value work that you can potentially use elsewhere. If not, you may want to think about finding another job first.
  • Build your network. People love to hire and recommend people they know. Get to know the influential people in your industry so that when you quit (on good terms, of course), you can reach out to them for help.
  • Finance yourself. Treat your employer like your own venture capitalist — let them put food on your table while you experiment with business ideas. Be sure to build up a comfortable cash fund (at least six months worth of living expenses) before quitting.

Earning more is as much about changing our mindset as about the actual tactics of getting clients and refining a business offering. The best approach to earning more builds you a track record a client base long before you even quit your job (or make whatever next transition). When — and if — you’re ready, you can hit the ground running because you’ll already have built the foundation for the lifestyle you truly want.

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As I find time, I write articles for websites other than Consumerism Commentary. This will always be my home for writing about money, but I’ll take whatever opportunity I can to share my thoughts online with more readers.

Here are a few of the recent articles I’ve published around the internet. Please read these and participate by commenting if you are so inclined.

Combining Money With Your Honey. Can a couple where both participants have different attitudes towards money and different incomes survive in a relationship with combined finances? The title of this article doesn’t sound like me — I think my original title was, “How People With Differing Attitudes can Combine Finances.” I’m pretty sure the new title is an improvement.

Be the Big Saver on Campus. This article is a guide for first-year college students, known vernacularly as freshmen or frosh. I don’t remember thinking about money at all when I first entered college, but if I had I probably would have been in a better situation when I graduated.

Is the Frugal Life Here to Stay? I keep hearing about the “New Frugality” in the media, and I often receive questions about whether those growing up post-Great Recession will have adopted an entirely new lifestyle that will last until they die, like those who grew up in the Great Depression. I certainly have an answer for that question.

These are only the most recent articles. You can look forward to more of these in the future.

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Thanks to the editors of The Consumerist who directed their readers towards Sasha’s 5 Stupid Financial Mistakes in 2007 and Four Factors That Determine the Value of a Coin. Please feel free to subscribe to the Consumerism Commentary RSS feed to be notified whenever new articles are posted here.

Here are some articles I’ve enjoyed lately from around the web.

A Look at the Ten Highest-Yielding Dow Stocks from AllFinancialMatters. JLP reveals CitiGroup as the highest yielding Dow stock last year. Some of the top ten stocks appear in my mutual funds, but I don’t own any of those stocks outright. The two stocks that I own, MSFT and AKAM, did not do well last year.

50% of Debt: Gone! from No Credit Needed’s guest author, Tricia from Blogging Away Debt. “There are moments of pure bliss when you pay off a chunk of debt. The first year we were paying off chunks of debt left and right. We were tightening our financial belt and bringing in more income. Debt reduction life was good! The next year, things were a lot different.”

You Should Be Paid an Extra $133k for a Long Commute or Lots of Travel. Free Money Finance should tell that to my boss. “Nattavudh Powdthavee of the University of London published research to show that if you are going to take a job where you will give up seeing family and friends on a regular basis, you would need to earn $133,000 just to make up for the lack of happiness you feel from being away from those people.”

Blu-Ray vs. HD DVD: Blu-Ray Likely Winning on Blueprint for Financial Prosperity. As Jim mentions, more studios are now supporting the Blu-Ray format exclusively. I was rooting for Blu-Ray in the early stages thanks to its higher capacity; it’s just unfortunate that there has to be one winner and the formats can’t somehow find compatibility with each other. Now I’m glad I hedged my bets and allowed my girlfriend to give me a Blu-Ray player to accompany the shelf with my HD DVD player.

Feed a Family of Two on $10,000 a Year. BankerGirl Heidi is creating her first budget ever this year. “I know that there are people out there that have proven that you can eat well on $20 a week or less — and I say, ‘Good for them!’ We won’t be going to that extreme — we’re trying to eat healthfully and buy locally whenever we can, and sometimes that means paying a bit of a premium.”

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The Carnival is Up!

by Flexo

Happy new year! The last Carnival of Personal Finance has been published at We’re in Debt. The King of Debt was gracious enough to include my article about charitable gift funds in the Carnival as well as a number of other great articles. In addition to the Editor’s Picks, take a look at How to ... Continue reading this article…

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I’ve Been Interviewed at Moolanomy

by Flexo

Pinyo, who wrote a recent guest post for Consumerism Commentary, The Weak Dollar is Killing Americans’ Wealth, interviewed me yesterday. We spoke about websites, investing, gurus, and a little bit of personal history. Read the interview at Moolanomy.

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Should High Schools Require Money Management Classes?

by Flexo

USA Today reported earlier this year that teens are not getting a decent financial education. High school students failed a 2006 quiz from the JumpStart Coalition for Personal Financial Literacy, correctly answering an average of only 52.4 percent of questions about credit cards, insurance, retirement and savings. This is well below high school students’ average 57.3 percent ... Continue reading this article…

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Men: Do You Like Electric Razors?

by Flexo

I enjoyed Matthew’s guest post last week, Cutting Down on the Cost of Razor Blades. Several commenters, including MillionDollarJourney and Dimes, pointed out the cost advantage of opting to use a decent quality electric razor. Here’s what (a different?) Matthew had to say: I’d agree with the above comments about electric razors. I’ve had two ... Continue reading this article…

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