I started my freelance writing side hustle making a penny a word. Now, I'm making $5K a month and couldn't be happier.
Tanveer Singh felt stuck in his corporate job. He started freelancing as a ghost writer making practically nothing but he never gave up.
Courtesy of Tanveer Singh
- I was unhappy in my corporate job, so when we went remote, I started freelancing on the side.
- My initial gigs didn't give me a byline and paid a measly $.01 a word, but I was too happy to care.
- I kept at it and never gave up. Eventually, I quit my corporate job.
I was following the conventional road to success — finishing college, getting my MBA, and joining a tech firm — but after four years in the same job, I felt trapped.
I live and work in India. When the pandemic hit in 2020, our office went fully remote and for the first time, I felt some sense of freedom.
So I stayed at the job for three more years, but everything changed when they called us back to the office.
I was freelancing long before I quit my full-time job
Working from home was better than working in the office, but I was still unhappy, so I decided to give freelance writing a shot as a side hustle.
The early ghostwriting projects I scored from Facebook groups paid a measly $0.01 a word, but I was enjoying my new side hustle too much to care.
Gradually, after about six months, I secured technical writing gigs that paid up to $0.10 cents a word — a big jump.
I finally got my first-ever byline in early 2021 at a gaming publication, where I earned about $18 an article.
Those clips helped me get my first big break in mid-2021, when I became a regular contributor to a "how-to" tech website where I was paid $100 an article, on average.
The RTO mandate brought me to a crossroads
By 2023, I was accustomed to a remote lifestyle and had even changed cities to move in with my partner.
So, when I heard murmurings about the RTO mandate, quitting my job became more than just wishful thinking.
It sounded cool in my head, but walking away from a substantial paycheck — compared to what I was making as a freelancer — wasn't easy.
When the RTO mandate became official, though, I took a leap of faith and quit in January 2023. It helped that I had a partner with a well-paying job who could help with finances.
By mid-2023, I had procured another steady client at a large tech publication, as a PC hardware writer.
Thanks to that, I hit my first major milestone at the end of 2023 — earning around $2,000 a month, roughly twice as much as I'd earned from my corporate job.
Freelancing full time gave me the mental space I never knew I was missing
The flexibility of being a freelancer meant I was working around 25 hours a week instead of 40.
I loved starting the morning at my own pace and having my daily coffee in peace before working on the day's articles.
I was also spending more time with my partner, enjoying sports and PC gaming, and going on international trips with family.
It took a year of freelancing full-time to feel settled
Everything fell into place in the first half of 2024, about a year after I started freelancing full time.
I'd increased my output at my two main clients and had boosted my earnings to $3,000 a month.
Around mid-2024, however, I suffered a major blow. I was let go from one of my main clients. I still had the other gig, though, and the blow turned out to be a blessing in disguise.
With that extra time, I began writing more for the larger tech website. By the end of 2024, I was making an average of $5,000 a month.
I should have quit my corporate job sooner
If my unusual career path has taught me anything, it's that I shouldn't have waited years to combine two of my biggest passions — writing and technology.
Sometimes, you don't know what you truly want until a life-changing event opens your eyes to it.
I guess what I was missing the most in my corporate job was not the money, but the freedom.
I will never go back to the office, even in a hybrid role — I cherish my current lifestyle too much to even consider it.