Freelance Work at Demand Studios
March 2, 2009 by The Frugal Home
Filed under Featured, Freelance Writing, Work at Home
Demand Studios is excellent if you want to have work writing for a site that is reputable, reliable and good for your resume. Demand Studio may be one of the best ways to get reliable work writing as they pay every week.
Demand Studios gives you a set amount of articles a week. You can suggest articles for a lower price or pick from their queue for a higher price. Demand Studios writers get paid for work writing how-to’s, about, and how does articles for websites such as ehow.com.
Many people write for ehow.com itself and Demand Studios. Writing for Demand Studios gives you a one time payment for your article while ehow.com does not give you an upfront payment. Ehow gives you a portion of the ad revenue of the page your article appears on. Demand Studios has added some revenue share articles but they own the rights to your articles once you submit them.
Unlike getting work writing for Associated Content, you must apply and be accepted to work for Demand Studios. Once accepted you may only be allowed to write five or ten how-to articles. If you do these well you can often ask for a raise to more articles and styles.
Demand Studios has a strict style code that if not followed can lead to a reduction in article limits or firing. The writing style expected may not work for everyone.
I do not really write for Demand anymore as I am focusing on other areas of my work at home jobs but I did make about $1600 in two and a half months there last year.
Apply at Demand Studios today!
How You Get Paid
Demand Studios generally pays every Friday for items that have been reviewed the previous Wednesday though there are time when you may get paid earlier or later.
What You Can Write
Demand Studios writers can expect to write How-to, About, or How Does, Fact Sheets, and List articles.
Health Care

Comments
One Response to “Freelance Work at Demand Studios”Trackbacks
Check out what others are saying about this post...[...] them so I might as well just leave them with eHow, take my money, and forget I was ever a part of Demand Studios. I didn’t care to work for the content mill of Demand, though I enjoyed eHow until last year. [...]