Maelo Writes
Learn Content Writing | Mindset | Motivation |Strategies Writer
18/05/2025
Day 26.
Best Platforms to Earn from Writing (Beginner-Friendly List)
Want to turn your writing into actual income?
Here are some solid platforms where writers—yes, even beginners—are making real money:
1. Upwork – Tons of gigs, but be ready to pitch like a pro.
2. Fiverr – Great for selling writing packages & building reviews.
3. LinkedIn – Not a job board, but a goldmine if you know how to show up.
4. ProBlogger – Quality job listings for content & blog writing.
5. PeoplePerHour – Another solid platform for international gigs.
Bonus: Medium Partner Program – Get paid for your articles based on views and engagement.
The key? Pick one, master it, and stay consistent. You don’t need to be everywhere. You just need to be good somewhere.
Which one’s your go-to? Or are you still deciding?
12/05/2025
If you want to become great at content writing, you should analyze the learning patterns, habits, and methods of top content writers and apply them systematically. Here's how you can do that:
1. Learning Patterns of Top Content Writers
✔ Consistency: They write daily or at least follow a structured writing routine.
✔ Diverse Reading: They read blogs, books, and industry reports to stay updated.
✔ Feedback Loop: They seek feedback from mentors, editors, or writing communities.
✔ SEO & Analytics Mastery: They understand keyword research, SEO optimization, and content performance analysis.
✔ Experimentation: They test different writing styles, tones, and formats to see what resonates with audiences.
2. Habits of Successful Content Writers
✅ Writing Every Day: Even if it’s just a few hundred words.
✅ Research & Planning: They create outlines before writing to maintain clarity.
✅ Time Management: They use the Pomodoro technique or set daily writing goals.
✅ Editing & Revising: First drafts are rarely perfect—editing is key.
✅ Networking: They collaborate with other writers, guest post, and engage with their audience.
3. Methods to Replicate Their Success
🔹 Follow a Structured Learning Plan:
Week 1: Basics of content writing & grammar improvement
Week 2: Research techniques & SEO basics
Week 3: Writing engaging content & storytelling
Week 4: Editing, publishing, and promotion strategies
🔹 Practical Exercises:
Write daily blog posts on trending topics.
Summarize articles/books in your own words.
Join platforms like Medium, LinkedIn, or personal blogging.
Analyze top-ranking articles and rewrite them in your style.
🔹 Follow Industry Experts & Case Studies:
Neil Patel (SEO & content marketing)
Brian Dean (Backlinko – SEO writing techniques)
Ann Handley (Content strategy & storytelling)
HubSpot & Copyblogger (Content trends & best practices)
05/05/2025
Day 24:
Portfolio Mistakes Beginners Make
So you’ve decided to build a writing portfolio. Great move!
But… are you unknowingly sabotaging it?
Here are 3 rookie mistakes that can turn clients off fast:
1. No Niche Focus:
A mix of health, tech, fashion, pets, finance? All over the place.
Pick 1-2 niches. Show depth, not just range.
2. Weak Headlines, Strong Text:
You wrote a killer blog post but your headline is snooze-worthy.
Spoiler: most clients don’t read past the title. Make it pop!
3. Cluttered Design:
A Google Drive dump a portfolio.
Use Notion, Canva, or a simple website. Keep it clean and clickable.
Here’s the thing: your portfolio is your silent pitch.
Let it speak clearly and loudly for you.
Been there, fixed that?
Share your portfolio link below. we’re cheering you on!
03/05/2025
Day 22: How to Find Clients as a Content Writer
So you’ve honed your writing skills… now what?
Time to get PAID for them.
Finding clients as a content writer isn’t just luck — it’s strategy. Here’s how to start:
1. Pick a Niche (or two)
Don't try to write for everyone. Choose a few industries you're interested in (health, tech, finance, etc.) and start there.
2. Optimize Your Profile
Whether it’s LinkedIn, Upwork, or your portfolio site — your bio should scream:
“I solve content problems with words that convert.”
3. Leverage LinkedIn
Seriously. Post value, engage with others, and send warm DMs. People notice consistent writers.
4. Use Freelance Platforms
Start with Upwork, Fiverr, Contra, or FlexJobs. Apply smart. Tailor each proposal. Skip the generic stuff.
5. Cold Pitch (but don’t be weird)
Find businesses with weak blogs or no content at all. Send them a friendly, personalized email.
No spammy vibes—be helpful, not salesy.
6. Referrals Work
Happy clients = repeat work and word-of-mouth. Always overdeliver. Always.
Pro Tip: Don’t wait to feel "ready." Start messy. Learn as you go.
You’ve got the skill. Now go get the gigs.
Want help with your first pitch or profile bio? Drop a comment!
01/05/2025
Day 18
5 Best Chrome Extensions Every Writer Should Try
You don’t need a fancy setup to write better, just the right tools. And lucky for us, Chrome extensions make writing smoother, faster, and even kinda fun.
Here are 5 I swear by:
1. Grammarly – Obvious? Maybe. Essential? Absolutely.
2. Hemingway Editor – For trimming the fluff and making your writing punchy.
3. Toggl Track – Keep tabs on how long you actually spend writing (spoiler: it’s less than you think).
4. Loom – Great for quick explainer videos or pitching ideas with your voice.
5. OneTab – Because writers have 67 tabs open and OneTab saves our sanity.
Try one, try all. Writing’s tough enough, make tech your sidekick.
Got a favorite I missed? Drop it in the comments. I’m always hunting for new gems!
29/04/2025
Wanna go viral? Here’s a secret:
It’s not luck. It’s structure.
Most viral content falls into one of these five categories (and once you spot the pattern—you can’t unsee it):
1. Relatable AH
→ “This is SO me.”
Think memes, personal rants, behind-the-scenes chaos.
2. Shock & Surprise
→ “Wait, WHAT?”
Unexpected stats, weird facts, bold opinions.
3. Super Useful
→ “Saving this for later.”
Templates, tools, tips that solve a problem right away.
4. Feel-Good Vibes
→ “This made my day.”
Uplifting stories, wins, human moments that spark emotion.
5. Controversial (But Smart)
→ “I don’t agree, but I see the point.”
Posts that challenge common beliefs without being toxic.
Viral doesn’t always mean millions of views.
Sometimes it just means lots of the right people connecting with your message.
So next time you write, ask:
Would I share this with a friend?
If yes—you’re on the right track.
29/04/2025
Blog Post Sample Job
Upwork-style Job Posting:
"We need a friendly, SEO-optimized blog post (1000 words) on 'How to Stay Motivated as a Freelancer.' Tone: conversational, helpful, a bit humorous. Keywords: freelancer motivation, stay motivated freelancing."
Practice Task:
Write a catchy title.
Draft a lively intro (talk like you're cheering up a tired freelancer).
Outline 4–5 motivating tips.
Wrap it up with an encouraging call-to-action.
2. Product Description Sample Job
Upwork-style Job Posting:
"Looking for someone to write 5 product descriptions for handmade candles. Each description 100–150 words. Style: cozy, inviting, a little poetic but clear."
Practice Task:
Imagine 5 candle scents (e.g., Vanilla Dream, Forest Mist).
Write short, vivid descriptions that appeal to emotions and senses.
Use cozy words: warm, soothing, crisp, glowing, etc.
3. Website Copy Sample Job
Upwork-style Job Posting:
"We need homepage copy for a new eco-friendly skincare brand. Tone: professional yet warm, trustworthy but not stiff."
Practice Task:
Write a headline (catchy but meaningful).
A short tagline under it.
2–3 short paragraphs introducing the brand (benefits + emotional appeal).
4. Email Newsletter Sample Job
Upwork-style Job Posting:
"Create a fun, engaging newsletter introducing our summer sale. Audience: young women 18–30. Style: playful, emoji-friendly, short sentences."
Practice Task:
Write an email subject line.
Friendly opening line (“Hey you, yes you!” kind of vibe).
Announce the sale.
End with a casual CTA (like “Snag your faves before they’re gone!”).
5. Social Media Captions Sample Job
Upwork-style Job Posting:
"We need 10 Instagram captions for a coffee shop. Tone: casual, witty, coffee-lover vibes."
Practice Task:
Write 10 short captions.
Use puns, playful questions, or cozy feels. (e.g., "Espresso yourself!")
Quick Tip:
Save every practice piece you write.
Call the folder: “Portfolio Samples.”
Even if no one is paying you yet, you’re building a real portfolio!
27/04/2025
🎉 Just completed level 3 and I'm so excited to continue growing as a creator on Facebook!
27/04/2025
Day 18:
How to Actually Write a Blog Post (Without Losing Your Mind)
Okay, so you’ve decided you’re gonna write a blog post.
Awesome.
Now what? Stare at the blinking cursor until your soul leaves your body? Yeah… no thanks.
Let’s break it down, step-by-step — real-world style, not some boring “10 rigid steps to success” guide. Ready? Let’s roll.
1. Pick Your Topic (Like, Actually Decide)
First things first: pick your topic and commit to it.
No “Oh but maybe I should write about this other thing…”
Nope. Lock it in. Write it down. Done.
If you waffle here, you’ll be stuck in "Idea Purgatory" forever. And trust me, it’s crowded.
2. Quick and Dirty Research
Now, don't dive headfirst into a black hole of 40 open tabs.
Start simple: Google your topic.
Look at the top few articles. Skim.
What’s already out there?
What’s missing? What’s boring? What made you go, “Ugh, I can say this better”?
Jot down quick notes. Don't overthink it.
You’re just stocking your brain’s fridge right now — you’ll cook later.
3. Rough Outline (A.K.A. Your Roadmap)
Here's the thing: you need a game plan, but it doesn’t have to be fancy.
Just scribble a basic outline:
Intro
Key Point 1
Key Point 2
Key Point 3
Wrap it up
Think of it like a GPS for your brain. Otherwise, you’ll wander off talking about cheese in the middle of a post about productivity. (Not that I’ve ever done that… ahem.)
4. Draft Like You’re Talking to Your Friend
Now the real magic starts: write.
And here’s the secret sauce — don’t write like you’re writing.
Write like you’re texting your friend, telling them a story, venting about your topic, whatever feels real.
Messy first drafts are not just okay — they’re essential.
You can’t edit a blank page, but you can fix a messy one.
Short sentences. Long rambly ones.
Questions. Jokes. A little sass.
Let it pour out.
5. Clean It Up (But Don’t Murder the Vibe)
After your wild draft is out, then you go back and tidy up.
Cut the clutter.
Fix awkward sentences.
Make sure it flows like you’re still chatting.
BUT — and this is big — don’t polish it until it’s boring.
Humans don’t talk in perfect paragraphs. Let your post breathe a little.
6. Add Some Flavor
Now, sprinkle in some extra goodness:
A quote? Nice.
A funny GIF? Even better.
A relatable little story? Chef’s kiss.
Remember: people come for information, but they stay for personality.
7. Hit Publish Before You Chicken Out
You’ll never feel like it’s 100% perfect.
Spoiler alert: It’s never perfect.
Hit publish anyway.
Done is always better than perfect.
Final Pep Talk
Writing a blog post isn't about sounding like a scholar.
It’s about being human.
Saying what you mean.
Helping someone.
Maybe even making them smile.
So next time you sit down to write, remember:
You’re not just typing words.
You’re starting a conversation.
And hey, you’re pretty good at that already, right?
27/04/2025
Day 17:
Feeling stuck? Here’s how to crush writer’s block (without losing your mind).
Let’s be real, writer’s block is brutal.
One minute you're ready to create magic... the next, you’re staring at a blinking cursor like it personally offended you.
Here’s the thing , it happens to everyone.
But the good news? You don’t have to stay stuck.
Here are 3 quick ways I use to snap out of it:
1. Set a 10-minute timer.
Tell yourself, "I’ll write anything for 10 minutes."
No pressure, no editing , just messy, glorious word vomit.
(You'll be shocked how often momentum kicks in.)
2. Change your environment.
New café? Different desk? Fresh playlist?
Sometimes, moving your body moves your brain too.
3. Steal a first line.
Grab a headline, a quote, a random sentence from a book and start.
You can always delete it later.
The point is: motion beats perfection.
Remember: Waiting for "inspiration" is like waiting for a text from your crush.
It might come. But wouldn’t you rather just make the first move?
What’s your go-to hack for beating writer’s block?
Tell me below .. I might steal it!
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27/04/2025