Real Writing Jobs – Get Paid to Write Articles and Stories

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Real-Writing-Jobs - Startup Featured on StartUpLift

Discovering how doing simple writing jobs from home can be so profitable.

Target Audience: Anyone interested in writing.
Website URL: https://www.realwritingjobs.com


Feedback sought:

  • Visit https://www.realwritingjobs.com. What is your initial impression of what you see? Are you immediately drawn to click any of the buttons?
  • What are the three main aspects of writing jobs listed on the site?
  • Use your name and email to go to the next page. What do you see?
  • After seeing examples of other people’s success, are you convinced to sign up?
  • Please share any other feedback you may have.

About Real Writing Jobs:

RealWritingJobs lets you:

-Get Paid To Write Articles & Stories Thousands of topics to write about! You get paid for every article you write!

-Help Improve Books & Movie Scripts Give your suggestions and input and get paid $$$! Turn your spare time into real money!

-Get Cash For Writing Blog Posts Create simple blog posts or comment on blogs! Get paid cash for writing blog posts!

19 thoughts on “Real Writing Jobs – Get Paid to Write Articles and Stories

  1. Visit https://www.realwritingjobs.com. What is your initial impression of what you see? Are you immediately drawn to click any of the buttons?
    My first impression – and this was in the first two seconds – was of being set up for a sales pitch. The fonts, the choice of color, the large words, everything screamed sensationalism and sales pitch. I was instantly turned off. You say “buttonS”; there’s only one that I can see. The last thing I wanted to do was click on it and hear how all the faulty promises on the landing page could possibly be true.

    What are the three main aspects of writing jobs listed on the site?
    You offer payment – or leads to people offering payment for – blog posts and comments, think tank contributions for scripts from books and movies and articles and stories from a queue of thousands of projects.

    Use your name and email to go to the next page. What do you see?
    A page of sales copy set up just like many others of the same type leading to a request for a one-time fee to a lifetime membership at the site.

    After seeing examples of other people’s success, are you convinced to sign up?
    Convinced that someone paid money to use your site, and then suddenly was offered a job as an “entertainment editor for a big company?” No, I’m not. The testimonials seem fabricated, or encouraged. The message is, “I have NO experience but I can sign up, quit my job and then get a better one with people I’ve never met just by blogging some stuff about whatever.” As a freelance writer, I know that many internet testimonials are ghost-written by authors who could care less about the product, if they know anything about it at all. These don’t seem on the level to me. They seem designed for a specific purpose – to sell memberships. I can’t know that this is the case, but the relevant fact is that that’s the impression I get from reading them.

    Please share any other feedback you may have.
    As I mentioned, the immediate issue is the format of the site. It’s a common layout for a product that looks to be exciting and attractive, but upon further research all that’s found is a bunch of empty words, filler and questionable promises.
    Things went from bad to worse when I saw the check in the photo. I’m familiar with the company and to the best of my knowledge they have nothing to do with writing jobs as the page claims. Also, in order to make that kind of money with that company through their normal means of earning, a person would be tipping out at $6-$8 an hour on the optimistic side. Complicating matters is the fact that you may only get $1-3 of work a day if you’re lucky. *- I just double-checked and they only do what they’ve always done. In order to make any more money, you need to refer people to their site, who then need to participate. This is a form of MLM and has nothing to do with writing. Chalk this up as a slap in the face to an intelligent reader. This alone will kill sales.
    Your top-earner figures are ludicrous. Anybody making that much is either a successful professional writer who is working all day every day for years, or this is an MLM that pays for recruiting and referral and those guys are at the top of the pyramid.
    I mentioned I was a freelancer; the idea that anyone could just walk in and get paid to write is insulting. This is why there are now hordes of people out there paying 1 cent a word for horrible copy and then thinking that’s why good writers aren’t worth more. Anyone without a vague competence about them isn’t going to make anything near a livable income through paid writing engagements. The site seems to promote otherwise.
    My general feeling is that you consolidate sources otherwise available for free, and take payment for access to an extensive library. I fear people will shell out money only to find that they are turned down to 90% of the places they apply to because of lack of competence and that the ones that will take them are paying pennies on the dollar.
    I am willing to virtually guarantee that the examples of employment given are needing college degrees or extensive experience, plus writing examples/bios/resumes 98% of your target audience can’t provide.
    Overall, I found the site cheap and exploitative. Putting personal feelings aside, I was turned off from the start because of the sensationalism and generic sales pitches.
    Hope my input helps! Take care.

    ETA: I just closed out the window and the window refused to close. A message box popped up and basically said “the heck with you, you’re not closing out the window. Please buy our stuff.” Simply infuriating. I cant see how that works in your favor.


  2. Visit https://www.realwritingjobs.com. What is your initial impression of what you see? Are you immediately drawn to click any of the buttons?

    Honesty my initial impression is that the site looks like one of those scam type sites.  There is a lack of information like a “how it works” button or introductory video.  I think the picture looks a little too “cheesy” and not friendly and inviting for your average person.  I also feel there are too many different colors on the page and it doesn’t help in trying to make it look like a professional, legitimate site.  I’m under the impression from the home page that if I click a button it is going to lead to a page that asks for credit card details and a payment up front of $29.99 or something along those lines. So that puts me off clicking a button, hopefully I’m proven wrong.
     

    What are the three main aspects of writing jobs listed on the site?

    1. Articles and stories.
    2. Help improve books and movie scripts.
    3. Blog posts.
     

    Use your name and email to go to the next page. What do you see?

    The first thing my eye is drawn to is the “Visa” and “MasterCard” logos and the payment form.  Then my eye moves back up to the top page and I see another off putting picture and what you guarantee “Join today and we’ll guarantee you’ll find a high paying writing job in the next 10 days or we’ll refund your $2.95!”.  If I wasn’t reviewing this site I would immediately close the window.  I have payed for a couple of sites that look very similar to this in the past and been disappointed every time.  I’m also put off because it says a “trial membership” so I assume in the near future you would ask for more money.  Also again a lack of information as to what is included in the membership or the membership options.
     

    After seeing examples of other people’s success, are you convinced to sign up?

    I’m not sure where to find this section of information. I can’t find a button/link on the homepage nor on the next page after entering my name and email.
     

    Please share any other feedback you may have.

    I think I have mentioned my main concerns with the site.  The biggest concern is the lack of information which feels like I’m being scammed. If you have nothing to hide then make the information more visible.
     
     

  3. Visit https://www.realwritingjobs.com. What is your initial impression of what you see? Are you immediately drawn to click any of the buttons?

    My initial impression is that, it is another online money making website. the site do not really caught my attention. To be honest, i dont really feel like clicking any buttons. What will make me click a button is a solution of how it works. If you have button like “take a tour” or “how it works” i might click it because i want to know how does this work. and how is the process.

    What are the three main aspects of writing jobs listed on the site?

    get paid to write articles and stories, help improve books, movies or scripts, get cash for writing blogs posts. what i think could attract people is work from home. it will may caught the visitors attention but there is too much work from home sites and there is lots of scams. In order to make the visitor trusted your site, you have to prove something, such as creating your own website forum allow your member to post any comments or suggestion, or you can display the payment methods.

    Use your name and email to go to the next page. What do you see?

    There is proofs and testimonials, examples of paid writings jobs.

    After seeing examples of other people’s success, are you convinced to sign up?

    Not really, because it makes no different with others work at home site. you need something for active that allow the visitor to believe that this really can works. Such as you can provide a customers service hotline or a forum for helping visitors that have any problems.  

    Please share any other feedback you may have

    I think i have mentioned most of it above, i suggest that you can add the proofs in the homepage, or you can ask visitors to enter their email to see the proofs. People might not entering their email because they thought if i enter email mean they will receive lots of advertising email from you. The homepage plays the important role to convince visitor to make their first move. Good luck
    I

  4. Visit https://www.realwritingjobs.com. What is your initial impression of what you see? Are you immediately drawn to click any of the buttons?

    This website looks like a scam, when you got all them color’s and links all over the place. make’s it look like it’s not a legit site.

    What are the three main aspects of writing jobs listed on the site?
    Work from home jobs
    legit work online jobs
    free sing up forum

    Use your name and email to go to the next page. What do you see?
    there’s proof that the job is legit there. 

    After seeing examples of other people’s success, are you convinced to sign up?

    no, I am not interested to sign up, because I don’t think the site looks like a legit site. it looks like a fraud. if you had more info of the website not all them links and colors and stuff free this and free home work jobs like that. It would look like a scam to me.  

    Please share any other feedback you may have
    The site is overall pretty good. Like I say make the color’s different. and put more info and thing’s on your site so people think it looks like legit jobs. 

  5. Visit https://www.realwritingjobs.com. What is your initial impression of what you see? Are you immediately drawn to click any of the buttons?
    As a writer, I have been on other sites that promise writing jobs. I might click on a button out of curiosity, but wouldn’t be anticipating any quality opportunities.
    What are the three main aspects of writing jobs listed on the site?
    * For writing articles and stories
    * For improving books and movie scripts
    * For writing blogs
    Use your name and email to go to the next page. What do you see?
    A page guaranteeing a “high paying” writing job in 10 days or my $2.95 will be refunded. This $2.95 is marked down from the regular $9.95 price. This looks like the promise of a job and not freelance. It does not clarify what “high paying” means. The right sidebar requests credit card info and states that my card will be charged $47.00 per month after the 10-day period.
    After seeing examples of other people’s success, are you convinced to sign up?
    What samples of success. I see two basic pages: the home page and the page with the guarantee and credit card info. I don’t see success stories or endorsements on either page.
    I would not provide my credit card information without (1) doing due diligence to make certain this is a reputable website and (2) being able to determine what kinds of jobs are available and, again, doing due diligence to make certain they are legitimate, (3) it looks as though you are attempting to hide (or hope that people don’t see) the $47 monthly charge.
    No, I would not sign up.
    Please share any other feedback you may have.
    Here are a few things that might get me to change my mind.
    * Clarification on whether these are W2, contracting, and/or freelance jobs.
    * Clarification on what is meant by a well-paying job.
    * A free trial, where I could at least be a spectator and see what jobs become available during the 10-day period.
    * Some way of checking to see if these are legitimate jobs.
    * A way to know, that these jobs are exclusive to you and not available through all the free writing job sites, general job sites like http://www.monster.com or aggregate sites like http://www.indeed.com or http://www.simplyhired.com. Basically, I want to know why I should pay you if these jobs are available through other sources.
    * And although this might be highly unusual, I would want information about your business model. Since most job sites charge the hiring company and not the job seeker, I want to know why you are charging $47 per month?
    Right now, you are asking me to take too much on faith.

  6. Visit https://www.realwritingjobs.com. What is your initial impression of what you see? Are you immediately drawn to click any of the buttons?

    I am a South African and with the current state of our country this website appealed to me cause it has the South African flag on it. The lady they chose in the picture seems unreal and makes you feel if you do not look like her you will not qualify. The whole feel of the website is kindergarten and does not seem genuine. Could have been the nobody down the road that have created it. Lacks a genuine feel with real people. Also the fact that you can write about anything tells me, why in the world would the owner of this website be interested in everything. Does he not have google on his computer??:) This lead my first impression to a second hand feeling. Someone out there only want to use me as cheap labour to sell my blogs and articles to other lazy or greedy people who do not have the time to do their own dirty work. In the process I will be getting peanuts and they will walk away rich!!
    I am definitely not drawn to click any buttons cause I have seen loads of this too good to be true deals. I will need more behind the scenes info of the owners before I would get interested or would compel me to press buttons

    What are the three main aspects of writing jobs listed on the site?

    Articles & Stories
    Book & Movie Scripts
    Blogs Posts
    You get paid for writing
    You can do in from home anywhere in the world online at your own time
    You do not need any experience

    Use your name and email to go to the next page. What do you see?

    a Very convincing step by step laid out, mind convincing, method of getting the visitor to believe he or she has struck gold and come to the lifetime opportunity they have been praying for. The information is not well structured and vague in many ways. They tell you you can make little money, They tell you you can make lots of money. For a first check of $110 dollars it does not state if it was for 1 hour a week or 50 hours. The average payment for articles is about $5 per article in the online world. So that means this person has written at least 20 articles or 5 per week. For a mere $110 I would say it is slave labour.
    Savvy on the check tells me who is paying the money and also gives away this site as a 3rd party getting a piece of the pie. Would rather deal directly with the company paying the money. Worst is when you get to the bottom and get promised $3780 worth of software. I could go out and buy myself the latest apple mac plus all the software I will ever need already installed. Plus I thought I am the guy who will make the money. Now the game changed and I became the victim and who knows what is next. Maybe a monthly subscription to a 3rd party who has all on autopilot raking in my hard earned cash. Be honest, Who in the world writes 5 articles a day???

    After seeing examples of other people’s success, are you convinced to sign up?

    No. I am smelling a rat and do not feel the people in the pics are real. They feel too much like the one in a million super gifted ones who never knew they posses the ability to write
    Philippine, Indian, Romanian or East block countries where the income is low. Even me poor South African tells me they are targeting the low income places of the world and want to first make money from them rather than helping them. Very bad first impression.

    Please share any other feedback you may have.

    I might sound very negative on my overall views, but one thing I can truly tell you is that the people who have created this website have not done article writing themselves. They know who will sign up and be wiling to slave labour for little money. It maybe is a good thing to get people in and let them pay a little money only to realize it more like 50 hours plus a week that makes good money. I will have to try it out myself first to see if it works. I also have a feeling this will be the only time they can make money from the people who signs up and after they connect with a company who pays them they will be gone with your money. The 60 days money back guarantee does sound tempting. I truly hope their intentions are to help people more than just making a quick buck.
    Yours in freedom
    Francois

  7. Visit https://www.realwritingjobs.com. What is your initial impression of what you see? Are you immediately drawn to click any of the buttons?
    The landing page reads like a sales ad as opposed to a career or employment website. One thing that concerns me is the improper use of grammar and style on the landing page. This may very well be a legitimate site for writing opportunities but most writers will recognize punctuation and grammar errors and will immediately be suspect.
    What are the three main aspects of writing jobs listed on the site?
    Articles and stories
    Books and movie scripts
    Blog posts
    Use your name and email to go to the next page. What do you see?
    After submitting my name and email, I was taken to a sales page. What isn’t clear is what the actual service or product is. Will I receive email listings of jobs? Will I receive an ebook on how to find these jobs? Is this a membership site where I can access listings in a private area? What is the $68 one-time fee for? I would also say that the copy appears to be written perhaps by a non-native English speaker. Not a problem but if your target audience is U.S. writers, you may want to have the site edited by a native speaker.
    After seeing examples of other people’s success, are you convinced to sign up?
    Unfortunately, no. Video testimonials may be more effective here (if you can get them from existing customers) because often textual testimonials are thought to be authored by the site owner rather than actual customers.
    Please share any other feedback you may have.
    There are many, many folks who are looking for opportunities to work part-time or full-time from home as writers and editors so there is a definite market for a site like this. My advice would be to have the site professionally edited and be very clear about what product or service you are offering to help them be successful. What is your value proposition? What makes your offerings unique and what can they get from you that they can’t get from any other site that has an established brand offering similar services?

  8.  

    Visit https://www.realwritingjobs.com. What is your initial impression of what you see? Are you immediately drawn to click any of the buttons?

    Being a South African myself I was immediately attracted by the South African Flag. Do not know if it is a piece of programming that picks up that I am in South Africa and would change for each country people visit the website from. All is appealing and attracting. I do not relate with the girl as I am a guy. Yes she is pretty but that has nothing to do with writing skills. There are not a lot of buttons to press and I would like to gain more knowledge about the website and the owners behind it. I was more tempted to follow the links at the bottom of the Page. The offer was kind of too good to be true. It covers a vast amount of work and I do not quite understand why the owners would like you to write about anything. a bit confusing.

    What are the three main aspects of writing jobs listed on the site?

    Write Articles & Stories
    Improve book and movie scripts
    Write Blogs

    Use your name and email to go to the next page. What do you see?

    This is a typical sales letter with all the right info to make a decision and take some action. I feel it tries to cover too much of a spectrum that the average guy like myself is confused. First page get me excited. Second page asks me money. I thought I was going to earn some cash and now they want me to spend it. The check that is displayed comes from a company that does not relate to the website. This means it must be a third party. They probably make money by the initial sign up and also for using you as a referral. Feels they not really there to support you or help you. Yes they offer writing aids worth $3780 but it sounds too good to be true. I can buy myself the latest Apple Mac with all the software I can dream of and still will not add up to that amount. In my humble opinion they say if a offer is too good to be true it probably is. Feels to me this website is all about making money and not truly having a passion for helping people. On the testimonials there are all kinds of nationalities. From what I can tell there are Philippines, Indians and looks like eastern European people. Like myself coming from a third world country with the dollar rand exchange very strong, I get the idea that the work that needs to be done is cheap labour where people will do just about doing anything. Getting paid $20 a article also sounds too much as I know most articles you write only pays about $5. I am not impressed with the offer and kinda feels a little exploited as a South African.

    After seeing examples of other people’s success, are you convinced to sign up?

    No, I am not convinced. It would be better to use video testimonials of successful people who use this site. Also I would need to know that they are real people and not just a picture with a story. Anyone can make this up. Social proof is very important. Would suggest a Facebook app that you can visit these peoples public profiles and see if it is true. This will definitely convince me and it is very easy to add it to a site. Would also be nice to se how many people liked the site. I still have a feeling the website will need to be more authentic and genuine. It feels like a quick sales pitch with not enough evidence.

    Please share any other feedback you may have.

    Making money online is never easy. Never was, never will be. It comes down to hard work and long hours. Maybe I am just the unlucky fellow who never had it made. Guess it is true. However I can easily tell you if something is genuine or when it is fake. If you ask me if real writing jobs are genuine or fake, I would say it is fake for a couple of reasons.
    1. The whole feel of the website is funny, meaning it comes across like the high school kid make his first $100 online and wants to share it with the world.
    2. None of the figures used in the site seams real. They all are blown up and unrealistic.
    3. The money paid out is for people in the UK, USA and Australia, but the testimonies comes from Philippines, India and eastern European countries. If it truly is made for South Africans then put South African testimonies on the site.
    4. The little pencil icon next to the address in the browsing window give it a comic or unreal feel.
    5. If the owner of the website truly did make $110 with his or her first article, why not show your face, give a facebook link or just tell your story. Real life is never easy money and certainly does not happen overnight.
    Tell me how hard you had to work and how much trouble you had when you first started. It is the passion for something that makes people do the things they do. Not the first easy money they get.
    Hope this was helpful and I know this website has big potential.

  9. using Mac OS 10.6.8 with Safari and FireFox
    Feedback sought:

    Visit https://www.realwritingjobs.com. What is your initial impression of what you see? Are you immediately drawn to click any of the buttons?

    With a ten second glance at the page, first impressions is that it is one of those ‘make-money-quick’ schemes. Lots of information on the landing page, but lots of ‘distractions’ as the eyes get drawn from title to title without settling on the text. The brief information posts below the headers flush out a bit what the site aims to provide and the processes for achieving some cash flow.

    As for being drawn to click on any buttons, there are a few places that give the impression they are links to click but aren’t. The ‘turn your spare time into cash’ in the green box looks like it is a button, as does the banner header at the top of the page.

    The F.A.Q. is usually the first link I look for regarding sites of this nature (work at home sites). Finding it in small font at the bottom of the page is a bit discouraging, as it seems like you are hiding it. Maybe include a ‘Learn More!’ link on the landing page that links to the FAQ. 

    In reading the FAQs (doing this before signing up for anything), I am given the impression that I have to pay to use the site. The answer for the third question states that you have an unconditional 100% money back guarantee. Nowhere on your landing page do you inform people that they must pay or provide financial information in order to ‘make money’ off the site. I guess that this happens after one ‘signs up’. Nor do you provide in your FAQs how much it costs to register/sign up.

    What are the three main aspects of writing jobs listed on the site?

    The three aspects that you list are getting paid to write articles and stories, improve books and articles, and write blog posts.

    Use your name and email to go to the next page. What do you see?

    Too much. I see a lot of claims and promises on how much can be made, a cheque that is passed as proof that you can make big money, a “real earnings observed by individuals participating in job freelancing websites” and a calculator that lets to hypothetically figure out what you can earn. As well, there are testimonies (see below), and the pitch saying that you have done the hard part by making the connections for us and all we have to do is sign up and start making money.

    And finally, the catch: paying to sign up. This is the big turn off, even with the 50% off coupon. Of course, I am not commenting on the ethics of the site, but its esthetics and user-friendliness. 

    All-in-all, your pitch page is too cluttered, and comes across like an overly long and annoying commercial that makes you wonder why you haven’t changed the channel yet. Try to trim it down a bit, maybe cut down the testimonies to two with a link to more. Try not to make it feel like it takes forever to get to the point (signing up)

    After seeing examples of other people’s success, are you convinced to sign up?

    No. Online testimonies are usually as trustable as politicians in regards to their truthfulness. They appear to be ‘stock’ replies, in that they manage to dutifully cover all the aspects promised by stay-at-home jobs (more time with family/no more low-end job at coffee shop, make money for school, laid-off after kid but now making good money online and the ‘finding new and exciting things’ to do). These testimonies are standard for most sites that promise a stay-at-home online job. I would put more stock in real users replies on your Facebook page, but seeing that there is no place for user comments there, none of the comments convince me to sign up.

    Please share any other feedback you may have.

    If you are going to make people pay, let them know on the landing page, straight up, before they sign in or provide an email address. Otherwise the site comes off as a scam.

    Your FAQs, TERMS AND CONDITIONS and DISCLAIMER, though well written, are under presented, in that their links should be placed in very noticeable locations and a notice that they should read before someone signs up. They do a lot to explain that much of your site is based upon speculation and forward-looking statements and that they express your opinions of earnings and are in no ways a guarentee. This is an important fact, in that many sites fall well short of what they promise even if much effort is put into them. They also, in my opinion, do more to sell your site to the more critical/discerning visitors than your ‘pitch’ page.

    I feel that signing up and sharing your email address before actually signing up is a bit of a cheat–I have to give you some of my information in order to learn more information about you. Thankfully, the short welcome email you sent provides an unsubscribe option. Hopefully it does what it promises and I will not be collecting spam.

    In regards to your promises of income, “If it sounds too good to be true, it usually is.” This does not mean that your site is a scam, but that I feel it will not deliver what it promises, and that many people who sign up will not work long/hard enough to make back what they paid in because it is not for them or not what they expected.  

    ——– A few other things ——-
    Using the same stock photos on all your sites doesn’t go well. Some of the same images appear on the ‘get paid to translate’ site, as well as the same special ‘50%’ offer and the same offer for free writing and blogging resources (yes, I looked :o)

  10. Visit https://www.realwritingjobs.com. What is your initial impression of what you see? Are you immediately drawn to click any of the buttons?

    As soon as you visit the site, which calls for Indian Writers to register their name and mail ID to sign up for writing jobs that can pay you lots of money, ensure you have enough free time on your hands, and all that typical sales promotion stuff, that in itself rings a warning bell!  OK, may be I am a bit skeptical due to all the scams out there, so I sign up and move to the landing page.

    What are the three main aspects of writing jobs listed on the site?
    Write short articles
    review websites 
    write blogs

    Use your name and email to go to the next page. What do you see?

    What do I See?    A well hyped up sales pitch page that has all the right ingredients, from the need for writers, a graph chart for writers in demand, a few of the real proof of income checks, some samples of the type of jobs you could do, your potential earnings calculator and some testimonials too!  

    You also get extra bonuses,  money-back guarantee and half the price coupon codes which you can avail of to buy this package.  If this is not typical sales tactics, then, what is it?  Ofcourse, with a 60 day money-back guarantee, many may just be lured to buy this product.

    After seeing examples of other people’s success, are you convinced to sign up?

    Personally, I would rather steer clear of such packages and opt for free to join ones.  You hear so many informations about people getting paid to give testimonials like this, so it is quite difficult to differentiate between the genuine and the fake, so I don’t go by testimonials.

    Please share any other feedback you may have.

    First thing is, when you call for writers, please make it clear at the beginning itself that they would have to pay an upfront fee, if it is essential.  Better would be to make it free of charge and let the writer’s talents earn them the money, which is only fair!  

    Another thing is when you target the general working class, you should be aware of the constraints that even a 34$ will place on them and be ready to help them out by offering free writing jobs, if you are so worried about that plight you display at the top of the sales page.  Would go a long way in being well appreciated and you may even get more writers to start with! Once you try to log out, you get a discount and are asked to pay only $24 which again get reduced to $12 when you leave the page once again. Why not offer it for free???

    Alternatively, you could let them start the work for free and then collect the membership fee from their first pay checks!

  11. What is your initial impression of what you see? Are you immediately drawn to click any of the buttons?
    Initially, my first thought was there is a huge demand for writers by the use of the word”URGENT”. However I think the word “REAL” should have been highlighted as well, as there are many freelance writing websites offering false promises. Overall, I was interested to sign up.
    What are the three main aspects of writing jobs listed on the site?
    The three main aspects of writing jobs were writing articles and stories, improving books and scripts, and blogging, which basically a college student would be able to do.
    Use your name and email to go to the next page. What do you see?
    It went further into details about earning potential and requirement. A good tactic was the use of people holding the placards, since people are being laid off in these times.
    The cheque was not convincing, however the use of the coupon convinced me that I would be getting a good deal.
    After seeing examples of other people’s success, are you convinced to sign up?
    The success stories did not convince me to sign up, but I would sign up however because of indication of the requirements and the coupon code as well as the earning potential stated.

  12. What is your initial impression of what you see? Are you immediately drawn to click any of the buttons?

    My first impression is that this website looks like so many others, a sales marketing tool for an expensive service that gets you very little in return. With that said, as a writer, I was curious and had to click the registration button to find out more. I was disappointed to find that no other buttons on the home page were active. I wanted to know more without registering, but that was not possible.

    What are the three main aspects of writing jobs listed on the site?

    writing articles and stories
    improving books and movie scripts
    writing blogs

    Use your name and email to go to the next page. What do you see?

    The next page caught my attention with the laid off, unemployed, under employed people looking for work. This is all too common today and I read further. The picture of the check was thought provoking, but not in a good way. My thought was, this is way too easy to fake. However, as I read on, the idea of a discount did make me thing about taking the risk.

    After seeing examples of other people’s success, are you convinced to sign up?

    I was not convinced, I have been “taken” by several of these sites.  Paid my money and got nothing in return. The money back guarntee helps, but my experience is that it is near impossible to make  web based business honor that. The interesting thing was that everytime I tried to navigate away from the page….the price was discounted. I will say I was tempted and I do plan on returning to the site for a closer look.

    Please share any other feedback you may have.

    It needs to be more clear; such as, will you be supplying the jobs directly and handling the payments or will your site only be conecting them to others who “may” be looking for writers in specific areas.

  13. Visit https://www.realwritingjobs.com. What is your initial impression of what you see? Are you immediately drawn to click any of the buttons?
    It reminds me too much of al lthe stay at home and work from home scam pages. I would take one look at this site and run from the beginning.
    What are the three main aspects of writing jobs listed on the site?
    Get paid to write articles and stories
    Help improve books & movie scripts
    Get Cash for writing blogposts
    Use your name and email to go to the next page. What do you see?
    Again it is way too much like all the others. BIG Money for little work or for doing what you love. I don’t trust it.
    After seeing examples of other people’s success, are you convinced to sign up?
    No. It is way to easy to come up with success stories that are not true. Wh ywould i pay some one to give me a job. It just doesn’t make any sense. There is no way mentioned on how to contact the seller if you are not happy. Who do I call? Where is the company from? Too fishy sounding.

    Please share any other feedback you may have.
    This site needs a major change to make it believeable and not just like all the other work from home sites. It needs to have contact info and real business contacts for people. Not just  an email to no one. I wouldn’t even think about joining this site because there is too many questions left unanswered. Good product if it is not a scam. I still don’t understand how employee pays for the job and not the employer.
     

  14. Visit https://www.realwritingjobs.com. What is your initial impression of what you see? Are you immediately drawn to click any of the buttons?
    I really like the way this website looks, it is easy to read and understand what the site is about. The wording is very easy to read. I definetely clicked on a the sign me up button but I didn’t like the fact that I had to put my credit card information in it too because it costs $2.95
    What are the three main aspects of writing jobs listed on the site?
    The three main aspects are writing blogs, writing articles and stories, and writing books and movie scripts.

    Use your name and email to go to the next page. What do you see?
    I used my name and email and I went to the next page and saw that you had to pay $2.95 and then you have to give your credit card information which was a big turn off for me since I don’t put my credit card information online and if this is a legit job then they never ask you for money.

    After seeing examples of other people’s success, are you convinced to sign up?
    I would never sign up for this site because I don’t feel comfortable with the fact that you have to pay for it. Even though it is a small amount of money, I just don’t feel comfortable with my credit card information on this site.

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