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2026

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to apply for and be accepted into. I applied and was accepted within 24 hours.</p><p id="c100">The website is all about developing a catalog for your writing. Meaning, you write a blog post about a topic of your choice, set a price for it, add it to your catalog of stories and then a client comes and purchases it from you. You can choose to either sell the full rights to the article or just a limited license.</p><p id="a5de">Constant Content likes their articles to be around 600 words — which isn’t really long at all — and broken down into blog style. So an intro, subtitles and a conclusion.</p><p id="8615">After submitting your story, the platform’s team of editors will look at your story, give you feedback if you need to change it and then add it to your catalog.</p><p id="c527">The platform takes a commission fee of 35% per article, but since you place the price tag on your own articles, you can take this into consideration for your pricing.</p><p id="b79c">I could go more in-depth about the writing platform, but this is all you need to know to get started.</p><h1 id="4d79">Is Constant Content Worth It?</h1><p id="e7a5">If you’re willing to write blog posts and let them sit until someone decides to buy them, <b>it is</b> worth it.</p><p id="acfa">If you have extra stories that won’t fit on your other blogging platforms, <b>it is </b>worth it.</p><p id="a842">If you want to make money sooner than later with your writing, it is <b>not</b> worth it.</p><p id="4f30">Constant Content is a waiting game. It’s like catching a fish, you cast your line of cataloged stories into a sea of clients and wait for a bite. If you do get a bite then you’ll make great money per word of your story. If not, you’ll have to continue waiting.</p><p id="3baf">The platform does tell you which topics are selling and gives you the titles of recently purchased stories. This helps a ton when deciding what to write about. But still, writing a story on the right topic doesn’t guarantee that your story will be bought.</p>

Options

<h1 id="79e9">My Experience With Constant Content</h1><p id="a823">At first, I didn’t like the idea of writing stories just for them to sit in my catalog and not be seen or purchased. I had a ton of story ideas that I don’t want to put on my Medium page and can’t put into a content mill request so it was a great place to put these stories up for sale.</p><p id="fef1">It’s like a garage sale for all of your loose story ideas, but you get paid well for each one of them. I don’t mind the 35% commission fee because I really liked that I can charge anything I want for my stories.</p><p id="8bd6">I’ve also found that the bigger your catalog is, the more likely clients will look at your work and purchase your stories.</p><p id="8ea8">I wrote a few stories that were quickly accepted and put on my catalog, but I didn’t see any action for about three weeks. That’s when one of my stories sold. It was a super simple story I wrote about car maintenance. It was a little more than 600 words and I priced it at $50. After commission, it earned me $37.50.</p><p id="a57d">I write on a variety of websites at this point. Content mills pay between 1 cent and 2 cents per word. A 600-word story usually gets me $6 or $12. To receive almost 40 bucks for a 600-word story was unreal to me. This is the only reason I will continue to add stories to Constant Content. The money is too good to pass up if your story actually sells.</p><p id="b8db">The $50 story I wrote was nothing special and the price tag was just a number off the top of my head. I see stories being sold on that platform for much more money than $50.</p><p id="d73e">Additionally, you can reach out to individual clients and gain freelancing clients through the website. It’s just an added bonus.</p><p id="8142">Overall, it’s a great place to make money if you have extra stories you don’t know what to do with and don’t mind waiting for them to be sold. If you’re looking to make money quickly with your writing then you should look elsewhere.</p></article></body>

How You Can Make Money Writing for Constant Content

A review for writers looking to make money online

Photo by Gift Habeshaw on Unsplash

With all of the platforms that are available to make money writing on, it can be difficult to determine which are actually worth your time.

Yes, you can write for a platform like Vocal.media but is it really worth your time? We already determined the answer was ‘no,’ unless you’re a paying member.

I love finding, signing up for and trying my hand at making money on different writing platforms. As a writer who loves writing — and money — finding new websites to write for and trying them out is the best.

With that said, I’ve been using the platform Constant Content for almost a month now and feel as though I have a good enough grip on it to write a review for other writers.

What is Constant Content?

It’s a platform that writers have to apply for and be accepted into. I applied and was accepted within 24 hours.

The website is all about developing a catalog for your writing. Meaning, you write a blog post about a topic of your choice, set a price for it, add it to your catalog of stories and then a client comes and purchases it from you. You can choose to either sell the full rights to the article or just a limited license.

Constant Content likes their articles to be around 600 words — which isn’t really long at all — and broken down into blog style. So an intro, subtitles and a conclusion.

After submitting your story, the platform’s team of editors will look at your story, give you feedback if you need to change it and then add it to your catalog.

The platform takes a commission fee of 35% per article, but since you place the price tag on your own articles, you can take this into consideration for your pricing.

I could go more in-depth about the writing platform, but this is all you need to know to get started.

Is Constant Content Worth It?

If you’re willing to write blog posts and let them sit until someone decides to buy them, it is worth it.

If you have extra stories that won’t fit on your other blogging platforms, it is worth it.

If you want to make money sooner than later with your writing, it is not worth it.

Constant Content is a waiting game. It’s like catching a fish, you cast your line of cataloged stories into a sea of clients and wait for a bite. If you do get a bite then you’ll make great money per word of your story. If not, you’ll have to continue waiting.

The platform does tell you which topics are selling and gives you the titles of recently purchased stories. This helps a ton when deciding what to write about. But still, writing a story on the right topic doesn’t guarantee that your story will be bought.

My Experience With Constant Content

At first, I didn’t like the idea of writing stories just for them to sit in my catalog and not be seen or purchased. I had a ton of story ideas that I don’t want to put on my Medium page and can’t put into a content mill request so it was a great place to put these stories up for sale.

It’s like a garage sale for all of your loose story ideas, but you get paid well for each one of them. I don’t mind the 35% commission fee because I really liked that I can charge anything I want for my stories.

I’ve also found that the bigger your catalog is, the more likely clients will look at your work and purchase your stories.

I wrote a few stories that were quickly accepted and put on my catalog, but I didn’t see any action for about three weeks. That’s when one of my stories sold. It was a super simple story I wrote about car maintenance. It was a little more than 600 words and I priced it at $50. After commission, it earned me $37.50.

I write on a variety of websites at this point. Content mills pay between 1 cent and 2 cents per word. A 600-word story usually gets me $6 or $12. To receive almost 40 bucks for a 600-word story was unreal to me. This is the only reason I will continue to add stories to Constant Content. The money is too good to pass up if your story actually sells.

The $50 story I wrote was nothing special and the price tag was just a number off the top of my head. I see stories being sold on that platform for much more money than $50.

Additionally, you can reach out to individual clients and gain freelancing clients through the website. It’s just an added bonus.

Overall, it’s a great place to make money if you have extra stories you don’t know what to do with and don’t mind waiting for them to be sold. If you’re looking to make money quickly with your writing then you should look elsewhere.

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