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	<title>Comments on: Checking Up on Examiner.com</title>
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	<description>Helping freelance writers make more money with their writing by Anne Wayman</description>
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		<title>By: annew</title>
		<link>http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/2009/09/checking-up-on-examiner-com/comment-page-1/#comment-17275</link>
		<dc:creator>annew</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Sep 2010 14:08:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/?p=4711#comment-17275</guid>
		<description>Mr. Choice - many feel Examiner is more of a content mill than anything else and therefore not a great place to work</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Mr. Choice &#8211; many feel Examiner is more of a content mill than anything else and therefore not a great place to work</p>
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		<title>By: Mr.Choice</title>
		<link>http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/2009/09/checking-up-on-examiner-com/comment-page-1/#comment-17268</link>
		<dc:creator>Mr.Choice</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 12 Sep 2010 04:20:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/?p=4711#comment-17268</guid>
		<description>Wow, I did not realize Examiner.com was so superb. Many of you are making enough money on it already.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Wow, I did not realize Examiner.com was so superb. Many of you are making enough money on it already.</p>
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		<title>By: Al Ritter Baltimore Conservative Examiner</title>
		<link>http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/2009/09/checking-up-on-examiner-com/comment-page-1/#comment-10286</link>
		<dc:creator>Al Ritter Baltimore Conservative Examiner</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Feb 2010 15:28:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/?p=4711#comment-10286</guid>
		<description>To those considering writing for the Examiner.com, read this first! 


To those considering writing for the Examiner.com
Al Ritter

Financial incentives

When I first signed on to write for the Examiner.com they hinted at 1 cent per page view, which to be honest, at the time didn’t exactly impress me, but it was more than I receive for page views on my blog. This amount neither convinced me nor turned me away from writing for what I considered to a conservative leaning publication. From February 2009 to the summer of 2009 I did in fact receive 1 cent a page view and my ability to reach larger audiences with my opinions and views had outweighed the pay I was receiving. In the summer of 2009 the Examiner.com came up with a new formulation to compute page hits. This formula was NOT shared with the writers, claiming that it was similar to the formula that Ad Sense uses. They did say that it had to do with average time per view, and how many of your past articles were viewed in addition to your new one. This amount ranged between 10 and 20% less than the original 1 cent per view. This amount continued until mid December when the pay per page view dropped to approximately ½ cent per page view. 

Background checks and liability 


When I first applied to write for the Examiner.com I filled out an online application. I was informed after qualifying to become a writer that the Examiner.com would need to perform a criminal background check on me. This puzzled me……what exactly did that have to do with writing an interesting, informative article? Would G. Gordon Liddy be denied a writing job because of his criminal background? Finally I was cleared to write but was required to read a “terms of agreement” which foolishly I never copied for later proof against ever changing claims by management. Each writer was required to write 4 to 5 articles a week, save any and all resources, and all original articles used for publication. The writer is also responsible for all liability pertaining to each article written. 

Writer support 

Any company is only as good as the support they give to employees, and the Examiner.com is no different. The only way to find out how much your boss supports you is through experience and need. Each writer is given a contact or handler. My contact only answered my emails 50% of the time, and only then when the Examiner.com could possibly lose money. On the other hand my contact expected me to reply to HIS emails to me immediately, marking all his emails with “priority.” The website has a support area to fill out a form on complaints or problems. I had filled out so many of these forms having to do with publishing and site problems, I had lost count. Readership had dropped in early fall 2009 because of problems they were having getting articles into the Google search engines, nobody can find articles unless they show up there, either in the news section or the normal search. In the beginning I would get little emails regarding errors I had made, from the “editor guru.” These errors were merely oversights and could have easily been caught by spell check, which I used Word later on as my writing tool, to later cut and paste as my article. 

Publishing tools 

The publishing tools the Examiner.com uses are difficult to learn, and up until recently didn’t really jive with Microsoft Word! I don’t know what they expected you to use as a tool to edit your work with before publication, but it wasn’t Word! I have the advantage of judging one publisher to another as I have a blogsite also. My blog is through “blogspot” a site owned and operated by Google. Articles on blogspot are extremely easy and take less than 30 seconds to post. The Examiner.com articles are difficult and the tools that are required are clunky and don’t always work the first time. Each article takes approximately 15 to 20 minutes. Any pictures you use in any of your articles have to be pics taken by you, previously published pics from AP photographers on the Examiner.com, or freedom of use articles on the internet such as Wikipedia, etc. 

Thinly veiled censorship
As with most credit card companies and banks your terms of agreement change, and so does the direction of the Examiner.com. I agreed to write for the Examiner as a conservative view from the Baltimore MD area. No demands were made of me to write on just local area politics; in fact I wrote some 250 commentary based articles on the national scene. To now supplement the amount of pay per views the Examiner has instituted, “Rules of the Road,” to pay you an additional bounty based on what THEY want you to write.

1) Topical
Articles are written in a manner that is knowledgeable about their assigned subject matter, and provide useful, relevant information to readers who might share a passion about it.
2) Local
If it&#039;s not locally relevant, it&#039;s not a local article. The combination of your topic and your city is the most important aspect of your Examiner contributions.
3) Length
Articles should be 200-400 words on average, and no less than 150 words. Use Who? What? Where? When? Why? How? as a guide.
4) Credibility
Use external sources whenever appropriate; quote and reference them when you do. Tip: Build real relationships within the community to use as ongoing source material; their credibility will build and strengthen yours.

Comment moderation

Comment moderation on the internet is handled differently by different companies, but the Examiner .com’s policy on comment moderation is sorely lacking, in fact it is nonexistent. Any moderation has to be done by the writer, except for profanities, which the Examiner will remove, but only after a complaint. You make think this is a pretty good policy at first, and it would be until you get an online troll stalker. In the summer of 2009 a particular person who didn’t agree with me wanted to make my life a living hell. The Examiner.com wouldn’t ban his ISP number, so I was stuck babysitting my articles every day. In one day in the summer this person was posting nasty, profane, and sometime threatening comments at the rate of 3 per minute! The Examiner was useless in stopping it. Comment moderation on other sites is by approval, and that has proved to be a very effective tool to combat situations like this, as well as spam. It’s funny how spam never seems to be posted on the Examiner but hateful comments can be. Below you can see but a few of the thousands of hateful things posted on my articles since February 2009.

Entry: Is Obama playing the name game?
Posted/Updated: 09/20/2009 08:19 PM
Xenu - Another crappy article from a crappy writer. 

Entry: Is a second stimulus to seniors a payoff?
Posted/Updated: 10/15/2009 12:15 PM
More stupidity from this blog - Idoiots. The payoff is to counter the lack of a Social Secuirty COLA for the first time in 30 years. Inflation has not caused an icrease in consumer prices, so their is no need for a COLA. The payment is unneccesary and is being given to seniors who claim (falsely) that expenses have gone up. In fact, these are the same seniors who were too stupid to save for any retirmenet other than Social Security, which was NEVEr meant to be a sole source of retiremnet income. Does the author ever research facts or do you and the posters just run off at the mouth like jackasses? 

Entry: Attacks and violations of decorum
Posted/Updated: 10/13/2009 12:30 PM
... - Glad to see you people are still on the extreme fringes of rational thought and still have notihng of value to contribute. It&#039;s just all ignorance and conspiracies for you people. Good luck in the elections suckers! Sore ass losers!

Entry: Doctors leaving their practices
Posted/Updated: 12/30/2009 03:50 PM
Dianna Sellers - Old people like you should be put out to pasture. You should read the book &quot;Logan&#039;s Run&quot; because it&#039;s a classic! You and ol&#039; Yeller are suffering from senility and rabies, respectively. The gov&#039;t should put ya out of your misery! 

Entry: Don&#039;t Cry for me Nigeria!
Posted/Updated: 01/05/2010 11:31 PM
Crappy Indep - Hey Sellers, this article isn&#039;t racist, it&#039;s just stupid and poorly written. Typical grandpa 

Entry: MTA Light Rail, a crowning glory or failed policy?
Posted/Updated: 01/14/2010 10:46 AM
Dianna Sellers - Al, don&#039;t start deleting my comments again. Please act your age - which is what, 86?

Entry: One man’s ascension to power
Posted/Updated: 01/24/2010 02:31 AM
i h8 neo cons - neo cons like you need to be put to sleep. how dare you link Obama to Hitler. yet you voted for george bush - you hypocrite!!!

Conclusion
As you can see the benefits are hardly worth the hassle to me, you might think that “getting your word out” is worth all the problems that the Examiner causes. You may think that maybe I am merely a malcontent marginal writer bent on painting the Examiner in a bad light. Since June 2009 I have been the most read political writer in the Baltimore area. My articles had 141,000 hits last year, my highest month was 30,000 hits, I have written over 600 articles in an 24 month period, I wasn’t a fluke or a flash in the pan, my history was simple and easily proven. I have a fan base of loyal readers, they don’t make any comments on the Examiner anymore because they don’t like to be bashed by the stalker, this is sad. I liked appealing to a large readership, but I refuse to bend to something I’m not. I will continue my high standards of research, and publishing the very articles my readers can use as definitive proof of claims of their position to others. 
If you would like to follow my work you may do so at http://alspoliticalview.blogspot.com/</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>To those considering writing for the Examiner.com, read this first! </p>
<p>To those considering writing for the Examiner.com<br />
Al Ritter</p>
<p>Financial incentives</p>
<p>When I first signed on to write for the Examiner.com they hinted at 1 cent per page view, which to be honest, at the time didn’t exactly impress me, but it was more than I receive for page views on my blog. This amount neither convinced me nor turned me away from writing for what I considered to a conservative leaning publication. From February 2009 to the summer of 2009 I did in fact receive 1 cent a page view and my ability to reach larger audiences with my opinions and views had outweighed the pay I was receiving. In the summer of 2009 the Examiner.com came up with a new formulation to compute page hits. This formula was NOT shared with the writers, claiming that it was similar to the formula that Ad Sense uses. They did say that it had to do with average time per view, and how many of your past articles were viewed in addition to your new one. This amount ranged between 10 and 20% less than the original 1 cent per view. This amount continued until mid December when the pay per page view dropped to approximately ½ cent per page view. </p>
<p>Background checks and liability </p>
<p>When I first applied to write for the Examiner.com I filled out an online application. I was informed after qualifying to become a writer that the Examiner.com would need to perform a criminal background check on me. This puzzled me……what exactly did that have to do with writing an interesting, informative article? Would G. Gordon Liddy be denied a writing job because of his criminal background? Finally I was cleared to write but was required to read a “terms of agreement” which foolishly I never copied for later proof against ever changing claims by management. Each writer was required to write 4 to 5 articles a week, save any and all resources, and all original articles used for publication. The writer is also responsible for all liability pertaining to each article written. </p>
<p>Writer support </p>
<p>Any company is only as good as the support they give to employees, and the Examiner.com is no different. The only way to find out how much your boss supports you is through experience and need. Each writer is given a contact or handler. My contact only answered my emails 50% of the time, and only then when the Examiner.com could possibly lose money. On the other hand my contact expected me to reply to HIS emails to me immediately, marking all his emails with “priority.” The website has a support area to fill out a form on complaints or problems. I had filled out so many of these forms having to do with publishing and site problems, I had lost count. Readership had dropped in early fall 2009 because of problems they were having getting articles into the Google search engines, nobody can find articles unless they show up there, either in the news section or the normal search. In the beginning I would get little emails regarding errors I had made, from the “editor guru.” These errors were merely oversights and could have easily been caught by spell check, which I used Word later on as my writing tool, to later cut and paste as my article. </p>
<p>Publishing tools </p>
<p>The publishing tools the Examiner.com uses are difficult to learn, and up until recently didn’t really jive with Microsoft Word! I don’t know what they expected you to use as a tool to edit your work with before publication, but it wasn’t Word! I have the advantage of judging one publisher to another as I have a blogsite also. My blog is through “blogspot” a site owned and operated by Google. Articles on blogspot are extremely easy and take less than 30 seconds to post. The Examiner.com articles are difficult and the tools that are required are clunky and don’t always work the first time. Each article takes approximately 15 to 20 minutes. Any pictures you use in any of your articles have to be pics taken by you, previously published pics from AP photographers on the Examiner.com, or freedom of use articles on the internet such as Wikipedia, etc. </p>
<p>Thinly veiled censorship<br />
As with most credit card companies and banks your terms of agreement change, and so does the direction of the Examiner.com. I agreed to write for the Examiner as a conservative view from the Baltimore MD area. No demands were made of me to write on just local area politics; in fact I wrote some 250 commentary based articles on the national scene. To now supplement the amount of pay per views the Examiner has instituted, “Rules of the Road,” to pay you an additional bounty based on what THEY want you to write.</p>
<p>1) Topical<br />
Articles are written in a manner that is knowledgeable about their assigned subject matter, and provide useful, relevant information to readers who might share a passion about it.<br />
2) Local<br />
If it&#8217;s not locally relevant, it&#8217;s not a local article. The combination of your topic and your city is the most important aspect of your Examiner contributions.<br />
3) Length<br />
Articles should be 200-400 words on average, and no less than 150 words. Use Who? What? Where? When? Why? How? as a guide.<br />
4) Credibility<br />
Use external sources whenever appropriate; quote and reference them when you do. Tip: Build real relationships within the community to use as ongoing source material; their credibility will build and strengthen yours.</p>
<p>Comment moderation</p>
<p>Comment moderation on the internet is handled differently by different companies, but the Examiner .com’s policy on comment moderation is sorely lacking, in fact it is nonexistent. Any moderation has to be done by the writer, except for profanities, which the Examiner will remove, but only after a complaint. You make think this is a pretty good policy at first, and it would be until you get an online troll stalker. In the summer of 2009 a particular person who didn’t agree with me wanted to make my life a living hell. The Examiner.com wouldn’t ban his ISP number, so I was stuck babysitting my articles every day. In one day in the summer this person was posting nasty, profane, and sometime threatening comments at the rate of 3 per minute! The Examiner was useless in stopping it. Comment moderation on other sites is by approval, and that has proved to be a very effective tool to combat situations like this, as well as spam. It’s funny how spam never seems to be posted on the Examiner but hateful comments can be. Below you can see but a few of the thousands of hateful things posted on my articles since February 2009.</p>
<p>Entry: Is Obama playing the name game?<br />
Posted/Updated: 09/20/2009 08:19 PM<br />
Xenu &#8211; Another crappy article from a crappy writer. </p>
<p>Entry: Is a second stimulus to seniors a payoff?<br />
Posted/Updated: 10/15/2009 12:15 PM<br />
More stupidity from this blog &#8211; Idoiots. The payoff is to counter the lack of a Social Secuirty COLA for the first time in 30 years. Inflation has not caused an icrease in consumer prices, so their is no need for a COLA. The payment is unneccesary and is being given to seniors who claim (falsely) that expenses have gone up. In fact, these are the same seniors who were too stupid to save for any retirmenet other than Social Security, which was NEVEr meant to be a sole source of retiremnet income. Does the author ever research facts or do you and the posters just run off at the mouth like jackasses? </p>
<p>Entry: Attacks and violations of decorum<br />
Posted/Updated: 10/13/2009 12:30 PM<br />
&#8230; &#8211; Glad to see you people are still on the extreme fringes of rational thought and still have notihng of value to contribute. It&#8217;s just all ignorance and conspiracies for you people. Good luck in the elections suckers! Sore ass losers!</p>
<p>Entry: Doctors leaving their practices<br />
Posted/Updated: 12/30/2009 03:50 PM<br />
Dianna Sellers &#8211; Old people like you should be put out to pasture. You should read the book &#8220;Logan&#8217;s Run&#8221; because it&#8217;s a classic! You and ol&#8217; Yeller are suffering from senility and rabies, respectively. The gov&#8217;t should put ya out of your misery! </p>
<p>Entry: Don&#8217;t Cry for me Nigeria!<br />
Posted/Updated: 01/05/2010 11:31 PM<br />
Crappy Indep &#8211; Hey Sellers, this article isn&#8217;t racist, it&#8217;s just stupid and poorly written. Typical grandpa </p>
<p>Entry: MTA Light Rail, a crowning glory or failed policy?<br />
Posted/Updated: 01/14/2010 10:46 AM<br />
Dianna Sellers &#8211; Al, don&#8217;t start deleting my comments again. Please act your age &#8211; which is what, 86?</p>
<p>Entry: One man’s ascension to power<br />
Posted/Updated: 01/24/2010 02:31 AM<br />
i h8 neo cons &#8211; neo cons like you need to be put to sleep. how dare you link Obama to Hitler. yet you voted for george bush &#8211; you hypocrite!!!</p>
<p>Conclusion<br />
As you can see the benefits are hardly worth the hassle to me, you might think that “getting your word out” is worth all the problems that the Examiner causes. You may think that maybe I am merely a malcontent marginal writer bent on painting the Examiner in a bad light. Since June 2009 I have been the most read political writer in the Baltimore area. My articles had 141,000 hits last year, my highest month was 30,000 hits, I have written over 600 articles in an 24 month period, I wasn’t a fluke or a flash in the pan, my history was simple and easily proven. I have a fan base of loyal readers, they don’t make any comments on the Examiner anymore because they don’t like to be bashed by the stalker, this is sad. I liked appealing to a large readership, but I refuse to bend to something I’m not. I will continue my high standards of research, and publishing the very articles my readers can use as definitive proof of claims of their position to others.<br />
If you would like to follow my work you may do so at <a href="http://alspoliticalview.blogspot.com/">http://alspoliticalview.blogspot.com/</a></p>
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		<title>By: Meg</title>
		<link>http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/2009/09/checking-up-on-examiner-com/comment-page-1/#comment-7869</link>
		<dc:creator>Meg</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Nov 2009 23:16:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/?p=4711#comment-7869</guid>
		<description>Allena&#039;s not the first editor I&#039;d heard saying they don&#039;t take clips from Examiner.com seriously. I&#039;d be really cautious about adding those links to a portfolio or sending them with an application. 

I think there is money to be made from pageview-based sites, if you write well, choose evergreen topics, aggressively promote your pieces, and bring your own traffic. But if you&#039;re going to do that, why would you want to split the profits with a content site? And why would you want to put your hard work up next to other &quot;articles&quot; with massive  spelling, grammar and factual errors?
.-= Meg´s last blog ..&lt;a href=&quot;http://simpsonsparadox.com/2009/11/still-lost-in-blue.html&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;Still Lost In Blue&lt;/a&gt; =-.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Allena&#8217;s not the first editor I&#8217;d heard saying they don&#8217;t take clips from Examiner.com seriously. I&#8217;d be really cautious about adding those links to a portfolio or sending them with an application. </p>
<p>I think there is money to be made from pageview-based sites, if you write well, choose evergreen topics, aggressively promote your pieces, and bring your own traffic. But if you&#8217;re going to do that, why would you want to split the profits with a content site? And why would you want to put your hard work up next to other &#8220;articles&#8221; with massive  spelling, grammar and factual errors?<br />
.-= Meg´s last blog ..<a href="http://simpsonsparadox.com/2009/11/still-lost-in-blue.html">Still Lost In Blue</a> =-.</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Edna</title>
		<link>http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/2009/09/checking-up-on-examiner-com/comment-page-1/#comment-7868</link>
		<dc:creator>Edna</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Nov 2009 22:43:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/?p=4711#comment-7868</guid>
		<description>Eric, 
Thanks for a more positive take on Examiner. I hesitated writing for them because of mixed reviews but I&#039;ll get started...hopefully today with my first article.
.-= Edna´s last blog ..&lt;a href=&quot;http://breakingnews23.wordpress.com/2009/10/24/steve-stevanovich-and-applied-mathematics/&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;Steve Stevanovich, University of Chicago and applied mathematics&lt;/a&gt; =-.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Eric,<br />
Thanks for a more positive take on Examiner. I hesitated writing for them because of mixed reviews but I&#8217;ll get started&#8230;hopefully today with my first article.<br />
.-= Edna´s last blog ..<a href="http://breakingnews23.wordpress.com/2009/10/24/steve-stevanovich-and-applied-mathematics/">Steve Stevanovich, University of Chicago and applied mathematics</a> =-.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>By: jorgekafkazar</title>
		<link>http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/2009/09/checking-up-on-examiner-com/comment-page-1/#comment-7867</link>
		<dc:creator>jorgekafkazar</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Nov 2009 21:01:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/?p=4711#comment-7867</guid>
		<description>Anne, I once prepared a technical report at an aerospace company, the summation of six months of painstaking experimental work. My boss and I re-read the text and revised it many, many times, wanting to get the report absolutely perfect. We didn&#039;t release it for in-house publication until we were certain there were no errors in it. When the 200 copies were delivered, the title on the cover read (in 28-point type): 

DETERMINIATION OF THERMAL CONDUCTIVITIES OF REFRACTORY MATERIALS AT ELEVATED TEMPERATURES. 

Murphy&#039;s Law says the error that makes it through the filter is always in the biggest print.
.-= jorgekafkazar´s last blog ..&lt;a href=&quot;http://jorgekafkazar.wordpress.com/2009/09/07/tenirax-ch-v/&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;Tenirax, Ch V&lt;/a&gt; =-.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Anne, I once prepared a technical report at an aerospace company, the summation of six months of painstaking experimental work. My boss and I re-read the text and revised it many, many times, wanting to get the report absolutely perfect. We didn&#8217;t release it for in-house publication until we were certain there were no errors in it. When the 200 copies were delivered, the title on the cover read (in 28-point type): </p>
<p>DETERMINIATION OF THERMAL CONDUCTIVITIES OF REFRACTORY MATERIALS AT ELEVATED TEMPERATURES. </p>
<p>Murphy&#8217;s Law says the error that makes it through the filter is always in the biggest print.<br />
.-= jorgekafkazar´s last blog ..<a href="http://jorgekafkazar.wordpress.com/2009/09/07/tenirax-ch-v/">Tenirax, Ch V</a> =-.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Anne</title>
		<link>http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/2009/09/checking-up-on-examiner-com/comment-page-1/#comment-7865</link>
		<dc:creator>Anne</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Nov 2009 19:22:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/?p=4711#comment-7865</guid>
		<description>Watch your headline on your blog, Regina... Jorge busted me on one of mine...</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Watch your headline on your blog, Regina&#8230; Jorge busted me on one of mine&#8230;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>By: Eric</title>
		<link>http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/2009/09/checking-up-on-examiner-com/comment-page-1/#comment-7864</link>
		<dc:creator>Eric</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Nov 2009 19:14:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/?p=4711#comment-7864</guid>
		<description>Quoting Allena: &quot;I know newbies have to start somewhere, but I’d first hire a new writer who gave me a clip from a non-profit that she volunteered for, or a clip that he wrote specifically for my posting, or a memo from a pervious job, or a newsletter they did for their church. Those are, to me, better clips and more indicative of your writing skills then Examiner sites.&quot;

I, myself, prefer to hire writers - managers in particular - who know the difference between &quot;then&quot; and &quot;than&quot;.   

Frankly, I am tempted to believe you are trying to dissuade people from joining Examiner.com because you are paid by the competition or you&#039;d prefer them to join your site.  You need to stop propagating lies.  Examiner.com does not, in fact, take any and every applicant.  I know someone who works there and the rejection rate is approximately 40% of applicants.  If you don&#039;t believe they reject people, try reading more articles about the website and take a look at the angry comments from &quot;pefessional righters&quot; who need a place to sound off on their &quot;exclusionary tactics&quot;.  

Finally, Examiner.com is rated by Quantcast.com as a top 100 website leaving sites like Demand, Suite101, etc in the dust.  After being around for just about 18 months or so, I&#039;d say they&#039;re doing a good job.  I haven&#039;t joined as I really enjoy the freedom of my own blog, and I make enough money at my real job, but I might consider it in the future.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Quoting Allena: &#8220;I know newbies have to start somewhere, but I’d first hire a new writer who gave me a clip from a non-profit that she volunteered for, or a clip that he wrote specifically for my posting, or a memo from a pervious job, or a newsletter they did for their church. Those are, to me, better clips and more indicative of your writing skills then Examiner sites.&#8221;</p>
<p>I, myself, prefer to hire writers &#8211; managers in particular &#8211; who know the difference between &#8220;then&#8221; and &#8220;than&#8221;.   </p>
<p>Frankly, I am tempted to believe you are trying to dissuade people from joining Examiner.com because you are paid by the competition or you&#8217;d prefer them to join your site.  You need to stop propagating lies.  Examiner.com does not, in fact, take any and every applicant.  I know someone who works there and the rejection rate is approximately 40% of applicants.  If you don&#8217;t believe they reject people, try reading more articles about the website and take a look at the angry comments from &#8220;pefessional righters&#8221; who need a place to sound off on their &#8220;exclusionary tactics&#8221;.  </p>
<p>Finally, Examiner.com is rated by Quantcast.com as a top 100 website leaving sites like Demand, Suite101, etc in the dust.  After being around for just about 18 months or so, I&#8217;d say they&#8217;re doing a good job.  I haven&#8217;t joined as I really enjoy the freedom of my own blog, and I make enough money at my real job, but I might consider it in the future.</p>
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		<title>By: Anne</title>
		<link>http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/2009/09/checking-up-on-examiner-com/comment-page-1/#comment-7846</link>
		<dc:creator>Anne</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Nov 2009 14:35:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/?p=4711#comment-7846</guid>
		<description>Allena, you didn&#039;t miss it... just posted it yesterday I think... anyway, thanks! All true... sounds roughly like much of my career.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Allena, you didn&#8217;t miss it&#8230; just posted it yesterday I think&#8230; anyway, thanks! All true&#8230; sounds roughly like much of my career.</p>
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		<title>By: Allena</title>
		<link>http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/2009/09/checking-up-on-examiner-com/comment-page-1/#comment-7839</link>
		<dc:creator>Allena</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 03 Nov 2009 15:38:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.aboutfreelancewriting.com/?p=4711#comment-7839</guid>
		<description>Hey Anne, Don&#039;t know how I missed your invite to blog about this (probably same reason I missed the typos in my original comment). 

 I got my start in web content with a company called WRG, of which today&#039;s equivalent I suppose would be Demand Studios. New writers always lament that it&#039;s so hard to find outlets for their writing, but sites that pay pennies per view are NOT the solution for them. Sites like WRG and Demand ARE the solution, as they tell you UP FRONT how much you will make. However, I always say, start there but, please MOVE UP. 

When I hire writers I want to see an upward arc in credits. Demand is fine, as long as you&#039;re moving on up.

As for print credits: I got my start with a local magazine and, again, worked my way up to national publications in my niche. Took about a year and half of querying to land that first national print byline. 

It&#039;s funny, cause anon says it&#039;s so hard to find print outlets, but then says that anyone with the marketing, networking, working ability can succeed at Pennies Per Page VIew Site of the Week. 

Well, if you have that ability, why would you use it for Examiner instead of for working the higher paying jobs?
.-= Allena´s last blog ..&lt;a href=&quot;http://freelancewrite.about.com/b/2009/11/02/writers-7-steps-to-prepping-for-the-holidays.htm&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;Writers: 7 Steps to Prepping for the Holidays&lt;/a&gt; =-.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hey Anne, Don&#8217;t know how I missed your invite to blog about this (probably same reason I missed the typos in my original comment). </p>
<p> I got my start in web content with a company called WRG, of which today&#8217;s equivalent I suppose would be Demand Studios. New writers always lament that it&#8217;s so hard to find outlets for their writing, but sites that pay pennies per view are NOT the solution for them. Sites like WRG and Demand ARE the solution, as they tell you UP FRONT how much you will make. However, I always say, start there but, please MOVE UP. </p>
<p>When I hire writers I want to see an upward arc in credits. Demand is fine, as long as you&#8217;re moving on up.</p>
<p>As for print credits: I got my start with a local magazine and, again, worked my way up to national publications in my niche. Took about a year and half of querying to land that first national print byline. </p>
<p>It&#8217;s funny, cause anon says it&#8217;s so hard to find print outlets, but then says that anyone with the marketing, networking, working ability can succeed at Pennies Per Page VIew Site of the Week. </p>
<p>Well, if you have that ability, why would you use it for Examiner instead of for working the higher paying jobs?<br />
.-= Allena´s last blog ..<a href="http://freelancewrite.about.com/b/2009/11/02/writers-7-steps-to-prepping-for-the-holidays.htm">Writers: 7 Steps to Prepping for the Holidays</a> =-.</p>
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