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Hi Erin,
If you share more about your goal and abilities it would be easier to make suggestions.
What are you looking to do exactly in travel writing/photography? What skills do you have? Elena
Hi Elena,
I currently write a Health and Wellness column online with the Examiner, which obviously does not pay very much! But from my two years of traveling abroad, I have developed a passion for combining the topics of health in differing cultures. I would like to write about life expectancy, diets, happiness, etc in the different cultures worldwide. I am an aspiring photographer so I would love to add my photography in to enhance the articles.
I hope to hear from you, and thank you guys for your replies!
Erin
Simon & Baker Travel Review said:Hi Erin,
If you share more about your goal and abilities it would be easier to make suggestions.
What are you looking to do exactly in travel writing/photography? What skills do you have? Elena
I think the key thing in travel writing today is entrepreneurship, Erin. As you know, I came up in the years when a writer could get $1 a word for travel stories in any number of magazines, you could make a good living from guidebooks (especially by doing the revisions in subsequent years), and professional writers did not have to compete against "reader-generated content" on trip.advisor, hotels.com, etc., not to mention amazon.com et alia. Nor did they have to compete against companies like DemandMedia.com, which supplies media with articles for which their writers are paid maybe $.05 a word. Travel photographers, meanwhile, did not have to compete against companies like istockphoto.com, from whom media can get images for as little as $1 a pop -- often damned good images, too.
Today, some travel journalists -- and that includes some members of Tripatini -- are still managing to earn a living working for magazines, newspapers, and even websites owned by large companies such as The New York Times. But they are the exceptions; mostly, travel journalists are trying other things: creating niche blogs, writing niche guidebooks (e.g. on hiking trails in the Hudson Valley), writing for pay-per-click sites like Examiner.com, doing their own publicity work, and/or generating iPhone apps in partnership with companies like Sutro Media, etc. So you can be more independent today, but entrepreneurship, a willingness to put in 18-hour days, and an ability to live frugally -- not just now, but most likely in your 50s etc. -- are important.
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