• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

@BasilPuglisi

Content & Strategy, Powered by Factics & AI, Since 2009

  • Headlines
  • My Story
    • Engagements & Moderating
  • AI – Artificial Intelligence
    • Content Disclaimer
    • đź§­ AI for Professionals
  • Basil’s Brand Blog
  • Building Blocks by AI
  • Barstool Biz Blog

communication

Four Secrets Every Freelance Writer Should Know

May 28, 2012 by Basil Puglisi Leave a Comment

Finding the right balance between writing what you want and writing for a living can be a difficult challenge for freelance writers. There may not be a good target market for the style and subject you would prefer to write about, but there is an endless supply of work for social media, technology and business experts, online. Here are four ways you can increase your chances of finding the right balance and earning enough money.
1.     Finding the right publisher
You can choose to write material and seek a publisher to sell your work to, or you can agree to write what a publisher requires. The two sets of work are often miles apart in subject choice unless you are one of the lucky writers who happens to live in an online social networking and SEO world.
However good your own work is, if you cannot find a suitable publisher, you will not be paid for your work. Your research hours may have reduced your pay per hour too far. Also, you need to consider the constant flow of rejections and your underlying stress levels.
If you are given an assignment you must complete on time or preferably, sooner, so you can guarantee payment. Of course, it must meet the brief offered and be suitable work for the personality with the check book.
2.     Finding jobs that pay enough
The jobs are out there and you need to find out how to locate them if you want to earn enough to extend your standard of living, at the very least.
Often the work offered by organizations will be mind-numbingly boring, but there is enough of it to ensure you can pay your bills. There isn’t always sufficient work in the area of your expertise, so you will spend time online researching the subject so you can write as an authority, taking care not to copy work directly from another source.
3.    The competition is fierce
You are not the only writer out there who has found they can work from home to avoid long car chases and the endless office politics that prevented real work at the office.
You are in competition with many countries where English isn’t the first language, but they can write for figures you wouldn’t dream of taking for a job. Just because others will work for the price of an expensive coffee each day, it doesn’t mean you should try to compete. You need to fight with your skills to not only write to the brief, but to ensure you meet all deadlines and are easy to work with.
4.   The editor is not always right
Editors vary in how they wish to see a finished product. If you write for several editors you will need to remember and apply each individual’s choice of style and composition. Otherwise, you run the risk of your work being returned for a re-write.
Even when editors are wrong in their choices, you must still apply to their terms and not fight an editor over your preferred alternative to writing sentences, paragraphs or layout. If they prefer short sentences while you maintain that long sentences make for better English, you will lose out in the long term. You might win the battle, but you won’t win the war which means they won’t offer you further work if you become a nightmare to work with.
Author:
Tim Brookes is the Managing Director of Storage Concepts a UK-based mezzanine floor & suspended ceiling company @storageUK
Sources:

  • The Two Things Every Piece of Web Content Should Lead With
  • Copywriting Tips to Become an Effective Copywriter
  • The Quickest Way to Become a Freelance Writer

Filed Under: Basil's Blog #AIa, General, PR & Writing, Publishing Tagged With: business, communication, editors, Freelancer, publishing, Search engine optimization, Writer Resources, Writing

#SMWF: How Hilton Does Social Media

November 12, 2011 by Basil Puglisi Leave a Comment

Hilton has one message from their industry that rings true into their social media campaigns. Hospitality is social. If it isn’t, the execs at Hilton think it should be. Their studies into how social media integrates with travel accommodations has shown:

  1. Those who travel often are commonly also active on social media networks.
  2. Those who use these channels do expect their favored businesses and locations to be listening, available, and willing to respond via these networks.
  3. Those using these venues are not only interested in deals, but often also travel advice, and to deal with customer service issues.

Hiltons Wide-Reaching Social Network

Hilton has made finding information on an incredible variety of things on social networks of all types, quite easy. They regularly post interesting videos on YouTube that show a myriad of benefits for choosing Hilton accommodations when you head out for your next vacation.

Check out this video about a spectacular special drink created by one of Hilton’s own bartenders at the Hilton Hawaiian Village® Waikiki Beach Resort.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v4xZJbW5uBY]

Not only does this create an interest in this location and its amenities, it also builds upon true customer engagement by giving them a real taste of what to expect on their next trip, but also a familiarity that many can appreciate.

None of the above even takes into account that not only does Hilton engage their customers with this type of open information but they have also effectively engaged the employee. It looks like Hilton has taken the proactive stance that many other businesses have by utilizing their current staff to share the big picture through social media networking.

@HiltonSuggest

Social Media Guru for Hilton, Vanessa Sain-Dieguez, helps implement training for their employees on how to use social media to help take care of their customers. In a comprehensive study on using social media with their guest, they noted one very important issue, customers do not just expect their favored businesses to be ‘listening’ to them, but they also expect them to act.

A highly active Twitter account known as @HiltonSuggest stays on the lookout for those who Tweet messages like:

Although none of these Tweets specifically mentions Hilton, @HiltonSuggest still doesn’t mind offering immensely helpful suggestions based on exactly what folks are looking for in the Twitterverse. Also noticable is the fact that not all of the blurbs thrown into the Twitterverse have hashtags, which shows that Hilton is really listening, the replies show that they are also willing to act, even when it doesn’t mean a direct consumer experience for their industry.

It turns out that dbmei author had written an article that had personally touched him and his family, and yes Hilton was behind it! Check it out here.

  • Listening Tools: Who is listening to you?

Defining Social Media in the Hotel Industry

A panel co-hosted by HVS Executive Search and ESSEC Business School Paris was held on February 7th, 2011 to discuss what the rise in social media means for the hotel industry. Attendees were students, hoteliers and other staff, all of whom declared they are active on at least one social media network.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vhg4vug1yZM]

Sources:

  • Hiltons YouTube Channel
  • Hilton Utilizes Employee Advocates Worldwide
  • Vanessa Sain Dieguez – Hilton Social Media Guru
  • Listening Tools: Who is listening to you?
  • Who’s Listening, Revisited

Filed Under: Basil's Blog #AIa, Business, Business Networking, Conferences & Education, General, Sales & eCommerce, Social Brand Visibility, Social Media Topics Tagged With: brand, business, communication, customer service, internet marketing, Social Brand, Social Media, Visibility

Skype: The Platform that Microsoft Just Bought

May 13, 2011 by Basil Puglisi Leave a Comment

An announcement on May 10th that Microsoft had bought Skype was obviously colossal business news, however, most users seem more concerned with how the eight and a half billion dollar deal will impact their user experiences.

Skype in 2010

In the past year, Skype has seemingly remained focus on providing a positive user-experience for their consumers, and that focus may have also been a driving factor behind a reported $7 million dollar loss for the company. With whispers of a holographic Skype in the works, among other improvements, it seemed to be doing fairly well in keeping up with the times though. Other key elements in important improvements to Skype in 2010 included:

  • Two way video calling for the iPhone was implemented
  • New capability for phoning friends on Facebook
  • Even the President took the first-ever Skype call at a town hall meeting to help bring the entire world into the digital dimension.

In early 2010, Skype teamed up with Citrix to provide remote desktop capabilities in GotoMeeting for Skype video chat users. This partnership brought an entire new aspect to Skype’s capabilities when it came to meeting and beating the curve for a fully bundled, big business remote meeting or educational tool.

Ending the year with a crash due to shaky servers and a possible bug in the client software, Skype may have been sent plunging towards the edge it was brought to when the decision to sell began to seem like the best one for current users.

Skype Users

It seems that everyone is using Skype for either personal reasons that can include things like communication with family in the same country, or across the globe, to large corporations that have begun to use it to conduct meetings, or even hiring processes, thereby saving immense expenses in travel and other costly elements for their companies.

Predominantly used by highly educated males ages 45 years old and up, global traffic statistics shows its three-month traffic ranking stands at #198, while the US ranks it at #281. It is also incredibly popular in other countries such as Algeria, India, and Russia. Skype is still currently located in Luxembourg.

Future positive prospects for Skype may be possible, however, Microsoft may need to go as far as needed to retain the best, brightest employees that Skype currently has while implementing lucrative changes for the products longevity. Whispers of possible changes for the Skype program have included a wide variety of possibilities.

Facebook Friendly

One of the rumors includes putting the Skype product in front of over 600 million Facebook users by integrating video chat into their social network. Although it may have been no more than a passing comment, it was mentioned around the recent sale that ‘social’ may be one of the possible new uses for a Microsoft-lead Skype.

Since Microsoft still actually owns a small piece of Facebook with a buy-in of $240 million in 2007, it seems a quite likely, time and money saving idea for their developers.

Improving Microsoft Mobile Technology

It is no huge secret that Microsoft’s Windows phones are no true leaders on the cell phone market circuits. Since Android and Apple products already have the capability to run Skype apps, it seems likely that Microsoft would now follow suit, however, it is also obvious from a marketing standpoint that not quite everyone is into the video chat scene quite yet, although it of course remains a frank possibility for future benefit.

Gaming Integration

Although the Xbox remains a very popular gaming console with off and online capabilities, for high-end gamers, other consoles still remain top priority when it comes to real-time communications.

Considering that at least 10 million Xbox users now have cameras attached to their Xboxes, those 10 million now owning the Kinect system, already have the works for setting up video chat capabilities, indeed, video chat gaming integrated capabilities, could be quite endless with Skype as their video tool, and immensely intriguing to the gaming world, another extremely lucrative industry. No doubt putting Skype on the Xbox could be a significant push forward for both products.

Sources:

  • Dotcom Boom 2.0
  • Microsoft Buys Skype
  • Microsoft Buys Skype for $8.5 Billion
  • Microsoft Buying Skype, Bad Idea?
  • Skype Teams up with Citrix
  • Why Skype Crashed

Filed Under: Basil's Blog #AIa, Branding & Marketing, Conferences & Education, Mobile & Technology Tagged With: advertising, communication, microsoft, mobile, skype, video, Visibility

Primary Sidebar

For Small Business

Facebook Groups: Build a Local Community Following Without Advertising Spend

Turn Google Reviews Smarter to Win New Customers

Save Time with AI: Let It Write Your FAQ Page Draft

Let AI Handle Your Google Profile Updates

How to Send One Customer Email That Doesn’t Get Ignored

Keep Your Google Listing Safe from Sneaky Changes

#AIgenerated

Spam Updates, SERP Volatility, and AI-Driven Search Shifts

Mapping the July Shake-Up: Core Update Fallout, AI Overviews, and Privacy Pull

Navigating SEO After Google’s June 2025 Core Update

Navigating SEO in a Localized, Zero-Click World

Communities Fragment, Platforms Adapt, and Trust Recalibrates #AIg

Yahoo Deliverability Shake-Up & Multi-Engine SEO in a Privacy-First World

Social Media: Monetization Races Ahead, Earnings Expand, and Burnout Surfaces #AIg

SEO Map: Core Updates, AI Overviews, and Bing’s New Copilot

YouTube Shorts, TikTok, Meta Reels, and X Accelerate Creation, Engagement, and Monetization #AIg

Surviving February’s Volatility: AI Overviews, Local Bugs, and Technical Benchmarks

Social Media: AI Tools Mature, Testing Expands, and Engagement Rules #AIg

Navigating Zero-Click SERPs and Local Volatility Now

More Posts from this Category

#SMAC #SocialMediaWeek

Basil Social Media Week

Digital Ethos Holiday Networking

Basil Speaking for Digital Ethos
RSS Search

@BasilPuglisi Copyright 2008, Factics™ BasilPuglisi.com, Content & Strategy, Powered by Factics & AI,