Cover Story,Labor,Media/Marketing,The Work

I want to break free!


Media freelancing is big business in Dubai, but working on your own terms is not easy. Here are its pros and cons.


Comes with a price Comes with a price

Nov 9th, 2008 | print  |  email email  | Post a comment  |  Listen to the Article

Scott Macmillan

There’s something screwy with the market for freelance journalists in Dubai. Just ask Kathi Everden, a journalist who’s lived in what is now the Middle East’s media capital for 18 years – an eon and a half by the standards of the city’s transient population. Amazingly, she says freelance rates have remained more or less the same since she arrived.

As the then-editor of a travel magazine in the early 1990s, Everden paid writers about a dirham ($.27) per word, she says – perhaps 80 fils. A lot has changed since then: Bill Clinton became US president, Tupac was shot, and Dubai rents have risen a googol percent. Yet a dirham a word is still the going freelance rate at many – far too many – Dubai newspapers and magazines. “The rates for a lot of publications in Dubai haven’t changed in decades,” says Everden, who files most of her work to editors in the UK these days.

Experienced hacks, if they know what’s good for them, are able to talk it up to at least a dirham and a half, but even in the best of cases, freelance rates have fallen dramatically in inflation-adjusted terms. There appears to be little in the way of economic explanation: Demand for content has skyrocketed along with advertising revenue, and Dubai is now home to hundreds of magazines, TV stations and Web sites, published and broadcast in at least half a dozen languages. Most editors will tell you there’s still a shortage of good journalists. When The National launched in Abu Dhabi late last year, the daily had to import much of its talent from abroad.

The rates “seems to have been squeezed up to one and a half dirhams a word,” says Peter Cooper, who co-founded Middle East business news site AME Info and now freelances full-time. “To be economic, it needs to be two, with three at the upper level. There’s a tremendous shortage of freelancers. One gets offered all sorts of crap on a daily basis, and there’s only so much I can do.”

Cooper adds, “People still seem to expect an awful lot here. They want to sell real estate advertising for $5,000 a page and pay the journalist a pittance for the page opposite it.”

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6

 
Tagged as: , , , , , , , , ,

3 Responses »

  1. This article really helped, thank you.
    After talking to several people in Dubai (over the phone) on the topic, I googled the issue, and found your website. Glad I did.
    All my best.
    - HH

  2. Someone wise once said that peanuts will get you only monkeys, But did I also hear someone say that only monkeys will be attracted to peanuts? You get paid for the real sotry, and the real stories rarely get written out here. Even if they sometimes do, they rarely get published in the local media.
    The big guys of the global media keep reporting about the Middle East as they have always done: with a myopic vision concealed behind dark glasses. So, in sum, you will keep getting what you keep getting if you keep doing what you keep doing. Simple.

  3. Interesting article!

    I’m a freelancer, a hardened one at that. Last year I was referred by a good friend to check out http://www.contentsyndicate.com

    Obviously I was skeptical and wondering when they would ask for my credit card to sign up.

    Guess what? They don’t charge money. Its by invitation or referral basis. Its free.Their website (or online platform as they call it) does all the commissioning, payments, licensing, security etc. I post content regularly; besides get commissioned projects into my inbox.

    Because they operate on a global basis, payments are not limited to that measly ‘1 Dirham a word, circa 1994′

    Its a great service, very interesting business model, payments are a breeze, could be really big. Heard they won a lot of awards recently as well. Not surprised.

    And they’re based in Dubai! Well…thank god someone’s doing something outside real estate in that place.

    TA

Leave a Reply

ad logo




Earn AED10,000 or stay alone
The UAE is planning to impose a minimum salary requirement of AED10,000 for expatriates who want to bring their families into the country.
Jul 02, 2009 | Cover Story, Labor, Nation, The Life, news
Rising oil prices: good or bad news?
The International Energy Agency has said that rapidly increasing oil prices may not be great news for the economy.
Jun 30, 2009 | Cover Story, Dubai, International, Nation, The Life, The Work, economy
The Joy of Beirut
International production house Joy Films has great expectations as it officially launches in Lebanon.
Jun 29, 2009 | Cover Story, International, Media/Marketing, The Work, lebanon
Emaar’s merger: Will it change Dubai’s property scene?
Analysts argue that though the move is a positive one, it will not have an impact on the market in the short term.
Jun 28, 2009 | Cover Story, Dubai, Real Estate, The Work
The rise of radio, Part II
The downturn may have an upside for one overlooked advertising medium, Part II.
Jun 25, 2009 | Cover Story, Nation, The Work, advertising

5 links between UK football clubs and the UAE
A member of the ruling family in the UAE has denied buying a stake in an English premier league club. But the ties between the UAE and football clubs in the UK seem to be building.
Jun 24, 2009 | Cover Story, Nation, Sport, The Work

The rise of radio, Part I
The downturn may have an upside for one overlooked advertising medium, Part I.
Jun 24, 2009 | Cover Story, Nation, The Work, advertising

Deyaar in hot water
Former Deyaar employees have been accused of orchestrating a web of fraud and bribery by a team of prosecutors appointed by Sheikh Mohammed. This is getting serious.
Jun 22, 2009 | Cover Story, Crime, Dubai, Real Estate, The Work
Will there be an exodus from Dubai?
The UAE labor minister said that the job market in the UAE has been affected by the global financial crisis. But is the worst yet to come?
Jun 18, 2009 | Cover Story, Dubai, Labor, The Work

Where’s Dubai headed?
A list of recent quotes from people and companies predicting what the emirate can look forward to in the near future.
Jun 17, 2009 | Cover Story, Dubai, The Work, economy

Prince Alwaleed jumped the gun
Emaar accused Kingdom Holding of announcing their agreement before the details of the deal were finalized.
Jun 16, 2009 | Cover Story, Deals, Real Estate, Regional, The Work

Looking to the skies
Nothing big is expected from the Paris Air Show this year, as the global airline industry is going through a turbulent phase because of the financial crisis.
Jun 15, 2009 | Cover Story, International, The Work, transport

Where’s online journalism headed?
Online journalism is evolving, but as Samar Fatany, a Saudi radio journalist, asks is the Gulf ready to accept developments in information technologies.
Jun 15, 2009 | Cover Story, Media, Media/Marketing, Regional, The Work

Emaar denies Saudi deal
The property developer denied on Sunday that it will build Saudi’s kilometer-high tower. So much for yesterday’s market rally.
Jun 15, 2009 | Article, Cover Story, Real Estate, Regional, The Work

Bashing the Dubai-bashers
The emirate has just established a media office to spread the good word around, and try and curb negative reports about Dubai.
Jun 14, 2009 | Cover Story, Dubai, Media/Marketing, The Work

Missing the boat, Part II
Countries around the world are scrambling to jump on board the hugely lucrative halal sector, except, that is, Arab countries, Part II.
Jun 14, 2009 | Cover Story, Regional, The Work, case studies, investments

Missing the boat, Part I
Countries around the world are scrambling to jump on board the hugely lucrative halal sector, except, that is, Arab countries, Part I.
Jun 11, 2009 | Cover Story, Regional, The Work, case studies, investments

Dubai’s retailers: down but not out
The financial crisis is squeezing retailers’ profits in Dubai hard, with many now complaining about their high rents. Are new claims that spending in the city will soon pick up again accurate?
Jun 10, 2009 | Cover Story, Dubai, Retail, The Work

Calling all nerds, Part II
With few signs of homegrown Silicon Valleys on the horizon, Gulf states are spending billions more to attract high-tech knowhow, Part II.
Jun 10, 2009 | Cover Story, Regional, The Work, technology

The Middle East’s weapons of cash destruction
Reports claim that Saudi and the UAE are spending huge amounts of money stockpiling military weapons. Why?
Jun 10, 2009 | Cover Story, Regional, The Work, investments