How many words should a content writer write per day?
Depends on the kind of content you are producing! 1000–1200 words a day is more than sufficient if you are writing original or creative copy. 1500–2000 words are great for any other kind of content. Any thing above 2000 words a day will result in your brain getting clogged over time…
How many words are in content writing?
It seems that most content providers will write between 500-2000 words a day from the discussion. (That made me smile too.) Some people who don’t write on a daily basis will still try to pump out new content ever few days which comes out much less than 500 words per day.
How long does it take to write 1000 words?
Writing 1,000 words will take about 25 minutes for the average writer typing on a keyboard and 50 minutes for handwriting. However, if the content needs to include in-depth research, links, citations, or graphics such as for a blog article or high school essay, the length can grow to 3.3 hours.
How many words should my website content be?
Every webpage is normally 400-700 words and this is why this is the range that I offer to my clients for the rates I currently charge. Ideally I would like to charge for the quality of website content writing being provided at Credible Content, rather than according to the quantity.
A content writer is susceptible to this kind of notion that he/she must write above 1000 words, especially for a startup on a daily basis. Let me tell you, the production of 100\% unique content that’s worth 1000–1500 words, takes time, energy, research & lots of concentration.
How much should I charge for content writing?
When you are paying for content writing it is always better to pay for chunk of words or better, for quality. This is why when I charge $25 per blog post (for example) or $35 per webpage, I commit a range of words: 400-700 words. After that, it is $5 for every extra 100 words.
Why do writers write more unnecessary content?
Sometimes, writers tend to write more unnecessarily just because they are charging per word. Sometimes clients truncate their content to reduce their costs at the expense of quality and effectiveness.