The Writing Coach Podcast with Rebecca L. Weber - podcast cover

The Writing Coach Podcast with Rebecca L. Weber

Rebecca L. Weber coaches with the sustainable strategies, mindset shifts, and creative skills development she uses to help independent writers around the world. If you’ve got what it takes to make it as a freelance writer, but struggle with confidence, imposter syndrome, overwhelm, procrastination, time management, writer’s block, improving your craft, marketing, pitching, underearning, pursuing meaning in your work, or getting in your own way, this is the writing podcast for you. Learn, grow, and succeed as a freelancer by identifying the wants and needs of your editors, your readers, and yourself. Rebecca draws on her experience as a journalist covering social justice, the environment, international development, the arts, and travel for publications like CNN, the New York Times, Dwell, and Ebony.com. Download a free guide on how to pitch at www.rebeccalweber.com/5-proven-steps

Episodes

WCP123 Why you don’t followup

This episode isn’t a breakdown of why followups should be a part of your routine. Scheduling followups is so quick, easy, cheap, and effective, that NOT doing them basically means turning your back on multiple assignments, clients, and ultimately the growth of your freelance career. Instead, let’s focus on the hesitation, second guessing, and outright avoidance of following up. We’ll cover how to: -Recognize and debunk surface-level reasons for not following up, like “Editors get back to the wri...

Apr 22, 202113 minEp. 123

WCP122: Freelancing while sick

For many freelancers, when you get sick it becomes a question of finding hours or days when you’re able to push yourself to get things done vs. not getting paid, rather than taking actual time off. Today I’m talking about my own experience contracting coronavirus, and discussing how to care for yourself and your freelance writing business when you get sick in general. We look at getting rest, saying no, prioritizing, and transitioning back to full days while respecting your limitations. MENTIONE...

Apr 15, 202128 minEp. 122

WCP121 Mission: Accomplished

Who gets to decide if you’re accomplished or not? Is there somebody actually keeping score? Often one of the motivating reasons we set a goal is to feel accomplished. That can be a real challenge if it’s an emotion that’s unfamiliar to you. If you have a strong habit of naysaying what you do and repeatedly telling yourself that you’re not accomplished (yet/enough), reaching external milestones is unlikely to undo your habitual or default thoughts. Let’s examine how you’re defining accomplishment...

Apr 08, 202124 minEp. 121

WCP120 Priority power

Today’s episode continues where we left off last week, looking at the distinction between desire and commitment. You’ve decided to step out of the energy suck of both wanting and not wanting something, and shift into prioritization. Listen into how one of the writers I coach figured out how to prioritize time for writing and sending pitches. The actions themselves seem simple, but only after first clearing up the flawed thinking and emotional resistance she had about making it a priority. When y...

Apr 01, 202117 minEp. 120

WCP119 I want to, I want to not

This is the first of two episodes exploring the intersection of desire, commitment, and priorities. Is there something in your writing life that you strongly desire but haven’t committed to yet? Writers who mistake desire for commitment are actually committed to wanting to do something—request deadline extension, write a book, pitch a dream publication, earn 2x more than last year—rather than committed to making it happen. They want the thing. And they also don’t want it. Let’s explore if you’re...

Mar 25, 202112 minEp. 119

WCP Bonus Masterclass invitation

Join me on Tuesday, March 23, for a live masterclass on how to break into your dream publications. We’ll focus on proven strategies to get consistent, meaningful assignments that pay well. This isn't the conventional, so-called freelancing wisdom that leads to mediocre results. These are the same principles I teach my paying coaching clients, who have broken into the Guardian, the New York Times, Bustle, Conde Nast Traveler, the BBC, and so many more publications. Sign up for free at www.rebecca...

Mar 22, 20216 min

WCP118 Best and worst clients

Freelancers often think of the editors who don’t want to assign them stories, and of readers who don’t want to read their stories and angles, when writing pitches. I don’t mean the editors don’t want to assign the stories because the pitches need to be zhushed up. I mean they don’t want to work with the writer because it’s a bad match. And that if the freelancer had done a frank assessment, they’d realize that they don’t to write the kind of stories that pub does, or for the rates and terms they...

Mar 18, 202118 minEp. 118

WCP117 Evolve with your clients

The work you're doing now will tend to lead to similar work moving forward. Similar pay, topics, structures, publications, clients, etc. All of these tend to replicate if you’re not intentionally making changes and steering yourself in a new direction. You also have the possibility of continually building upon what you did last quarter or last year. This can be the thing that leads to feeling invigorated, interested, and engaged with your clients in creating something new and better than what yo...

Mar 11, 20219 minEp. 117

WCP116 Lights out

No electricity. No internet. They’re not one in the same, but when they overlap they make for a powerful Venn diagram. The extreme weather and increased pressures on infrastructure means we’re going to continue to see large areas lose power and connectivity. Here in South Africa, we’ve had plenty of chances to learn how to freelance efficiently both with some tech strategies and managing our own expectations during power outages. Let’s get into both so that you can keep getting your work done. D...

Mar 04, 202127 minEp. 116

WCP Miniseries bonus: Break the cycle

Listen into some coaching I gave to a few alumni inside my small group coaching program, Freelance Writer Bootcamp, who have NOT been pitching their celebrity crush clients. You may be surprised to hear the coaching I give them about how to move forward and break their current patterns. MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE The pitching triad miniseries: WCP113 Believe me: Pitching triad miniseries (1 of 3) WCP114 Everyday dream clients: Pitching triad miniseries (2 of 3) WCP115 Pitching as a freelance supe...

Mar 01, 202111 min

WCP115 Pitching as a freelance superpower: Pitching triad miniseries (3 of 3)

The pitching triad focuses on three interconnected areas: trust in yourself, in your publication, and in your pitch. Today we’re focusing on the believing in your pitch. When you know pitching is one of your freelance superpowers, it can deepen your trust and belief in yourself and your ability to work with your ideal clients as well. Here are a few things we’ll explore: Why mid-career writers who are confident about their ability to complete an assignment once they have it fall into a common pi...

Feb 25, 202115 minEp. 115

WCP114 Everyday dream clients: Pitching triad miniseries (2 of 3)

Are you currently working on a pitch or assignment for your dream publication? Do you know that your ideal clients see you as an ideal freelancer for them? Are you confident that they’ll pay you well and promptly? If you answered “No” to any of these questions, it could indicate a lack of belief in your client and your connection with them. This will interfere with your ability to identify, attract, and retain the kind of long-term editorial relationships that you most want and that provide mean...

Feb 18, 202118 minEp. 114

WCP113 Believe me: The pitching triad miniseries (1 of 3)

The writers I coach ask me all the time what they should be doing. Whether they are trying to figure out a news hook for a seemingly evergreen story pitch or planning their annual financial goal, they want to know what specific actions to take. Today’s episode goes beyond any one goal or task, and it’s something that virtually every writer I’ve worked with could spend more time on: Building their belief in themselves. Many writers are running on less than half a tank of belief, which will only g...

Feb 11, 202131 minEp. 113

WCP112 15 Minutes of focus

It's been longer than I would've liked since the last episode. I've had coronavirus, and although my symptoms have been squarely in the mild category--I can breathe and take pills to keep my fever in check--I wasn’t recovered in a couple of weeks as I had anticipated. I thought long covid was for people who wound up in the hospital. Initially, it was a no brainer that I would pull back and avoid any work task that I feasibly could. No internal resistance because the body’s need for rest was so o...

Feb 09, 20217 minEp. 112

WCP111 Intentions and transitions

How do you prepare for your next task? Next project? Next month? Next year? Sometimes we give it no more thought than opening a new browser tab, and we’re absorbed from minute one. But sometimes we rub right up against resistance. Boring project. PITA client. The I-can’t-remember-where-I-left-off-and-I’d-rather-scroll- Instagram mood. Yes, we do the work, but it’s more fragmented, less focused, and all around less satisfying. Then there are the things we never actually start. The so-called dream...

Dec 01, 202028 minEp. 111

WCP110 Passive vs. active

You’ve had English teachers and editors ask you to use the active voice rather than the passive voice when writing. When presented with two sentences, one passive and one active, we almost always choose the active. So why do we keep writing our drafts in the passive voice? Our minds default repeatedly to seeing people as passive rather than active participants, in things large and small. We habitually avert our eyes and words from stating a direct cause. We’ve created strong passive habits. This...

Nov 13, 202019 minEp. 110

WCP Bonus: Pitch Imperfect Masterclass

Register for the free masterclass, taught live on Wednesday: www.rebeccalweber.com/masterclass Perfectionism is a gateway to procrastination. If you're holding yourself and your story ideas to an impossible standard, you're probably not sending out very many pitches. "Imperfect" doesn't mean half-baked, overwrought, or unsent pitches. Think original ideas that are relevant to the audience you're pitching ... and that are in the editors' inbox rather than collecting e-dust in your drafts folder. ...

Nov 10, 20204 min

WCP109 No complaints

If you decide to take on the complaint-free challenge, you’re guaranteed to learn something about yourself. It’s simple: No complaining to anybody you know IRL. No complaining to virtual strangers online. No complaining to yourself. (That one’s the hardest.) Complaining makes our work far less enjoyable. We engage less with our stories, we resent our clients, and we don’t appreciate ourselves. This negative framework doesn’t help us create solutions for the very problems we’re noticing. This sim...

Oct 30, 202016 minEp. 109

WCP108 Default to deliberate with Judith Gaton

Judith Gaton, style coach, author, and podcast host, joins us today to talk about the impact of how the way we get dressed impacts our sense of well being. This isn’t about getting dressed to the nines when you’re working from home (unless you want to!), but about being more deliberate in ways that support your writing life. Why too much freedom (AKA not changing out of your jammies all day) can be counterproductive to creative output Habit by default vs intention Small style uplevels you can tr...

Oct 22, 202035 minEp. 108

WCP107 The End

Habits can become so ingrained that we believe that they’re the way things are rather than a pattern we’ve started and that we can also end. Sometimes when it’s nearly time to turn in a piece, we’ll go over and over and over it again, working ourselves up in a way that produces diminishing returns for the procut and is the antithesis of self-care. One of my coaching clients did this regularly, along with the refrain that it was surely no good and that the last piece’s success was just a fluke--e...

Oct 15, 202018 minEp. 107

WCP106 Nobody wants your pitch

I don’t mean that editors don’t want your pitch because the story angle isn’t clear, that there’s no news hook, and that you don’t have a string of impressive clips in your bio. You can learn how to handle all of that. What I mean is that editors want what a pitch promises. Understand this, and you’ll be better able to communicate in way that establishes trust and value in your editorial relationship. Follow me on Instagram: @freelancewriterbootcamp Apply to work with me in my small group coachi...

Oct 12, 202034 minEp. 106

WCP105 Should-free pitching

When it comes to pitching, a surprising number of mid-career freelancers really aren’t sure what to do. They may have a basic, intermediary, or theoretical understanding of pitching that doesn’t yield reliable results with competitive publications. Getting clear about this is way more effective for building internal motivation than telling yourself you should be pitching, that you should be getting more work, or that you should have figured it all out by now. Follow me on Instagram: @freelancewr...

Oct 08, 202024 minEp. 105

WCP104 When to pitch

Freelance writers often spend a lot of time trying to decide when to pitch. Learn when the very best time to pitch is, plus what you can do with the time you used to spend asking this question. Follow me on Instagram: @freelancewriterbootcamp Apply to work with me in my small group coaching program: www.FreelanceWriterBootcamp.com Break into your dream publications. Earn more money. Cover stories that matter. In my small group coaching program, you’ll learn the same proven processes that have he...

Oct 06, 202021 minEp. 104

WCP103 Urgency

Should you follow up on the story you pitched more quickly than you used to pre-pandemic? Yes, if the story itself must be told urgently. No, if you personally have a sense of urgency about knowing what your next assignment will be. Freelancers often conflate these two very different kinds of urgency. Let’s get clear about introducing urgency into an article while feeling focused, curious, confident, or calm; and how acting from a place of anxiety/panic/urgency doesn’t lead to good decision maki...

Sep 11, 202015 minEp. 103

WCP102 Mother tongue with Beatriz Miranda, Agnieszka Pikulicka- Wilczewska, and Yolisa Qunta

Today we’re looking at the challenges and opportunities for multilingual writers. We speak with freelancers from Brazil, Poland, and South Africa, who have all used their locations and language skills to build relationships with editors overseas. This is a fascinating discussion for everyone interested in developing a better understanding of international coverage. -Centering local stories for foreign audiences (i.e. not allowing an “othering” or so-called exotic gaze) and making sure that edito...

Sep 05, 202050 minEp. 102

WCP101 Ask back

The way we think about and prepare questions shapes our conversations, our stories, and our own learning. Today I’m teaching a thinking technique that will redirect you back to yourself and your own knowledge. This will allow you to show up with an extra layer or two of understanding whenever you ask a question. I’ll show you three different examples of how to Ask Back: Requesting an interview from a reluctant source, preparing interview questions, and getting the most out of a coaching session....

Aug 20, 202020 minEp. 101

WCP 100 Call for pitches

When an editor posts a call for pitches, freelancers sometimes respond the way they would to the siren’s call. The writers retweet them, share them, subscribe to newsletters with them. After weeks of saying they’ll get around to pitching, they suddenly snap to attention. Typically, the writer skips over analyzing (or even reading) the publication, and sends out a half-developed idea to join the hundreds of others in an inbox queue. As popular as calls for pitches are, they rarely lead to what wr...

Aug 14, 202018 minEp. 100

WCP99 Risky business

Are you telling yourself you’re all in and willing to do anything … unless it involves anxiety, doubt, boredom, or frustration? Deciding to do things when you’re not in the mood (especially if you’re never likely to be in the mood) is the key to growing your freelance career. If you avoid risk, you avoid success as well as failure. Let’s look at how and when to take risks. DOWNLOAD MY FREE GUIDE ON HOW TO PITCH Click here to download 5 proven steps to writing pitches that sell. TWO WAYS TO WORK ...

Aug 07, 202014 minEp. 99

WCP98 3 things your editor isn’t thinking about you

Usually when we talk about mindset work, we’re focusing on what you’re thinking and how it impacts you. It sort of has to be that way, since the only thoughts you have control over are your own. ;) A lot of freelance writers spend a lot of creative energy thinking about what their editors think … and then let those imaginary thoughts of somebody else stop them. Today I’m going to debunk three of the most common thoughts that freelance writers imagine their editors are having about them, which wi...

Jul 31, 202018 minEp. 98

WCP97 Setting freelance writer goals, Vol. V: Celebrations

The way I teach writers to set and achieve their goals since I shared my method back in episode 20 has evolved. This is an important update for writers who reach their goals but don’t feel as good about them as they thought they might. By definition, when we’re striving to reach a goal, we haven’t made it yet--and constantly telling ourselves that we aren’t there yet can make it hard to fully acknowledge and internalize the accomplishment when we do reach it. Today we look at why intentionally m...

Jul 23, 202014 minEp. 97