It's not that I haven't been aware of what's keeping me from meeting my writing goals. I know. And I'm going to tell you in this blog, which is why I'm still somewhat hesitant to publish it. Because my problem is not awareness--it's about the next step--commitment, and publishing is nearly like asking for accountability.
In honor of the new year, Writer's Digest had an article about revamping your writing routine--check if what you're doing is working for you, and adjust as necessary. Then last week, I went to a writer's retreat with author Susan Gregg Gilmore (Searching for Salvation at the Dairy Queen and The Improper Life of Bezellia Grove) and she asked what do all writers have in common? Her answer was, a routine. I remember her photo in the power point presentation: an alarm clock with six o'clock blazing. It happens to be the time I used to get up at regularly.
So I confess, this is a problem. I went through many changes last fall. My husband changed his work schedule and that affected mine. Illness and back pain thrown in, and I lost a lot of time. I used to write during 2 scheduled times a day. I got up at 6 and could get an hour of writing in before the kids were up. I wrote again during nap time. I thought, when my husband started a job that required more travel, that I'd get more writing done during the evening hours when he was off somewhere else in the world and my kids were asleep. However, that hasn't really happened. Not only have I not accomplished extra writing, I haven't even been sticking to my two scheduled times when my husband is home. Sometimes I just didn't want to get up, or was honestly not well and needed to sleep. (I also went through bout of insomnia, and I knew I had to sleep in to compensate in order to survive the day of being, essentially, a single parent.)
My husband is currently not traveling, but his new job has flexible hours. Instead of having to get up at 6, he can decide to not go in until an hour later, and turn off his alarm and sleep until 7. Sounds nice in the moment, but then, when I get up with him later, the kids are up, and that's it for any hopes of mine at getting any writing done.
My other problem is my afternoon habits. I appreciated when Gilmore talked about how she starts with facebook, twitter, email, etc. "A warm-up," she called it. I get that. I can't go from the stress of putting two (usually) cranky kids down to nap, immediatley into typing words for my novel. I need a way to decompress and switch gears. I have been checking facebook and answering email to do that. The problem is, an hour slips by, the kids can be up in 30 minutes, and my writing time has just been squandered. I did the same often when I had opportunity to write in the evenings when my husband was traveling.
If I'm ever going to meet my deadline of finishing a first draft of the novel in July, I've got to get a handle on this again. I've got to commit to getting up early when my husband is home, evne if it means I respond to the alarm when he just turns it off for his own purposes. And during nap-time, I've got to limit myself by time. I need to allow myself the facebooking, but, honestly, I get kinda numb and keep scrolling down mindlessly. I even start searching for mindless things to do just because I feel fried and don't know how to transition to the real writing. But I need to limit all that, even if it means setting a timer for15 minutes!
So that's one of the biggest things I got from my writing retreat at Aaron's Books in Lititz. It's not earth-shattering. It's not some great writer's trick to cut in half the amount of work my novel needs. But it's fundamental, crucial. My level of self-discipline will make or break my writing career.
At least that's half my problem. The other half, I'll save for another post. That one's even harder to confess because I'm not sure I have the strength to attempt holding myself to it.
Other writing I've published:
Natural Deodorants: Do Any Work as Effectively as Popular Commercial Brands?
Organic Food: Eight Benefits for You and Your Children
High Fructose Corn Syrup: Thirteen Reasons to Avoid It
Job Search: How to Make Your Application Climb to The Top of The Pile
My adventures in freelancing for magazines and working on a novel while my little ones sleep...
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Prescription: Writer's Retreat, 1 dose for three consecutive days
I said I was going to cut back on freelancing for magazines to devote more time to completing the first draft of my novel by July. Followers also probably wondered if I was sticking to that goal at all, based on my posts about taking on more assignments! Yes, I've been shooting my novel in the foot with article success. In December particularly, I took too many assignments and barely touched the novel.
So how can I get myself back on track with my goal to complete the first draft by this summer? When I know I say it, and then still keep taking more freelancing opportunities?
It's just that I really like freelancing. It's that magazine article writing is very manageable, finite, and comes with a firm reward and pay at the end. I like the satisfaction of completing something and getting paid (however low it may be at some publications...) I get weary sometimes of writing something to difficult, so long-term that I can barely see the light at the end of the tunnel. Freelancing revived my love of writing, many times--but there is too much of a good thing. I said I'd stop seeking new assignments after Christmas. That too has not been true. I was seduced multiple times by call-outs for a few magazines.
When I set my July goal for the novel draft, I thought I was being generous, thinking I could even finish by January. It's now February...
I needed some accountability and encouragement, clearly! So I went to a three-day fiction writing retreat though Aaron's Bookstore in Lititz, PA, featuring editor Kate Kennedy and author Susan Gregg Gilmore (Searching for Salvation at the Dairy Queen and The Improper Life of Bezellia Grove).I hoped it'd energize me towards completing my novel.
So far, so good. As I drove home last night from the conference, my mind was at warp speed entertaining new possibilities for getting my characters to that end--my mind thinking about basic equestrian knowledge, Shakespeare's Much Ado about Nothing that I'll have to brush up on, and beach scenes. I got up at 6 with my husband this morning and put in over an hour toward moving my novel towards its end in the plot.
And now I'm going to take that inspiration and work some more this afternoon. But I hope, in later posts, to share what I learned at the writing retreat. But for now, I've got to use my drive to write for the novel!
Articles I've published recently:
Job Search: How to Make Your Application Climb to The Top of The Pile
Lyme Disease and Autism Patients Prescribed Diets Free of Genetically Modified Foods
How Much Genetically Modified Food Do You Eat?
Prostate Cancer: Nutrients for Prevention and Defense
So how can I get myself back on track with my goal to complete the first draft by this summer? When I know I say it, and then still keep taking more freelancing opportunities?
It's just that I really like freelancing. It's that magazine article writing is very manageable, finite, and comes with a firm reward and pay at the end. I like the satisfaction of completing something and getting paid (however low it may be at some publications...) I get weary sometimes of writing something to difficult, so long-term that I can barely see the light at the end of the tunnel. Freelancing revived my love of writing, many times--but there is too much of a good thing. I said I'd stop seeking new assignments after Christmas. That too has not been true. I was seduced multiple times by call-outs for a few magazines.
When I set my July goal for the novel draft, I thought I was being generous, thinking I could even finish by January. It's now February...
I needed some accountability and encouragement, clearly! So I went to a three-day fiction writing retreat though Aaron's Bookstore in Lititz, PA, featuring editor Kate Kennedy and author Susan Gregg Gilmore (Searching for Salvation at the Dairy Queen and The Improper Life of Bezellia Grove).I hoped it'd energize me towards completing my novel.
So far, so good. As I drove home last night from the conference, my mind was at warp speed entertaining new possibilities for getting my characters to that end--my mind thinking about basic equestrian knowledge, Shakespeare's Much Ado about Nothing that I'll have to brush up on, and beach scenes. I got up at 6 with my husband this morning and put in over an hour toward moving my novel towards its end in the plot.
And now I'm going to take that inspiration and work some more this afternoon. But I hope, in later posts, to share what I learned at the writing retreat. But for now, I've got to use my drive to write for the novel!
Articles I've published recently:
Job Search: How to Make Your Application Climb to The Top of The Pile
Lyme Disease and Autism Patients Prescribed Diets Free of Genetically Modified Foods
How Much Genetically Modified Food Do You Eat?
Prostate Cancer: Nutrients for Prevention and Defense
Thursday, January 19, 2012
A Day Well Spent Following My Own Advice
Today I actually did what I say I want to do: I worked on my novel for about 30-40 minutes this morning, after my husband went to work. Then during the kids' nap, I edited a quick (literally an hour or less of work) article in response to a magazine's call for articles on eating at restaurants with kids, then sent out an article I wrote nearly 2 years ago to an anthology calling for submissions on the topic.
See, my goal is to stop writing so many new articles, and instead redirect the time to 1) my novel and 2) finding homes for the articles already done.
I tell myself the article on eating out with kids was OK because it was not time-consuming; I'm just trying not to rope myself into 10, 20, 40 hours of work on an article that may never see the light falling on a printed page. Or even for one that will get printed, because I've got this goal to complete my novel draft in July!
All in all, this was a good writing day--a day when I feel accomplished, having finally obeyed my own pronouncements about my priorities. These days are rare...
Keep writing! We'll all get there if we keep writing!
See, my goal is to stop writing so many new articles, and instead redirect the time to 1) my novel and 2) finding homes for the articles already done.
I tell myself the article on eating out with kids was OK because it was not time-consuming; I'm just trying not to rope myself into 10, 20, 40 hours of work on an article that may never see the light falling on a printed page. Or even for one that will get printed, because I've got this goal to complete my novel draft in July!
All in all, this was a good writing day--a day when I feel accomplished, having finally obeyed my own pronouncements about my priorities. These days are rare...
Keep writing! We'll all get there if we keep writing!
Saturday, January 14, 2012
Perseverance--most important skill for selling your writing?
I was giving up on the article. I'd written it a year ago, and had failed to sell it to the few magazines I thought would be interested. The topic was herbal remedies for common ailments--typical things like colds, fevers, poison ivy, etc. As has happened before, I was just behind the trend, not right on it. Parents magazine had just done a similar multi-page article, and Kiwi magazine was addressing the topic regularly through a monthly column. After magazines I thought would be interested declined, I even tried a small website that published things for natural-minded mommies, and I got no response even then. I'd thought my article would be an easier sell than my longer articles; I rarely write short, and this was around 800 words.
My default plan of publication is publishing online through a content writing site; I've really fallen off writing for them; the financial rewards are far below what I'm making in other print arenas. But if I can't sell an article to a magazine, it's a good last-ditch effort to make something, rather than nothing, off of an article. So that was my plan--but I was slow in getting it done (even though the sooner I'd place the article on the site, the sooner it could earn....)
Meanwhile, while I was "not getting around to it," a local magazine editor responded to a list of article ideas I'd sent her a while back. She pulled 3 of my 5 suggestions and said she wanted me to write on them--2 due in mere weeks, another for later in the year. She said she was doing a special issue in March/April on green living, so my 2 natural/green-lifestyle ideas (natural makeup/skin care products and natural birth prep) fit what she was looking for. With 3 assignments snagged, I felt pretty good--I'd never gotten as much repeat business from a client yet. Then the next day, a germ of an idea grew in my mind. If the editor was looking for green lifestyle ideas, what about my herbal medicine cabinet article I was about to give up on?
Now, this editor doesn't accept already-written articles--she doesn't even operate through the traditional query system that magazines use. She's a newspaper gal and the magazine is produced by the newspaper, so it's a different style altogether. But I gave it a shot anyway--retitled the article "Greening your first aid kit", explained I'd already been working on it and wondered if she might find it interesting for the March/April issue.
Her response: "I love it. Just throw in a couple quotes from local natural health professionals, and it's done."
So I'd gotten 4 assignments! And one almost done!
And to think, I'd almost given up on that article. I'd almost turned it in for chump change, but now, I've gotten considerably more already direct-deposited into my bank account for it! Not to mention, I've gotten an article out to the reading public on a topic I'm very passionate about and think is important info.
So here's the lesson: Keep looking for other places to sell; don't give up!
Other articles I've published.
Treating Depression with Natural or Alternative Medicine
Is Lyme Disease Lurking in Your Unexplained Symptoms?
Baby Food: Save money by Making Your Own
Potty Training: Cloth Diapers vs. Disposables
Cloth Diapers Versus Disposables: Switching Systems
My default plan of publication is publishing online through a content writing site; I've really fallen off writing for them; the financial rewards are far below what I'm making in other print arenas. But if I can't sell an article to a magazine, it's a good last-ditch effort to make something, rather than nothing, off of an article. So that was my plan--but I was slow in getting it done (even though the sooner I'd place the article on the site, the sooner it could earn....)
Meanwhile, while I was "not getting around to it," a local magazine editor responded to a list of article ideas I'd sent her a while back. She pulled 3 of my 5 suggestions and said she wanted me to write on them--2 due in mere weeks, another for later in the year. She said she was doing a special issue in March/April on green living, so my 2 natural/green-lifestyle ideas (natural makeup/skin care products and natural birth prep) fit what she was looking for. With 3 assignments snagged, I felt pretty good--I'd never gotten as much repeat business from a client yet. Then the next day, a germ of an idea grew in my mind. If the editor was looking for green lifestyle ideas, what about my herbal medicine cabinet article I was about to give up on?
Now, this editor doesn't accept already-written articles--she doesn't even operate through the traditional query system that magazines use. She's a newspaper gal and the magazine is produced by the newspaper, so it's a different style altogether. But I gave it a shot anyway--retitled the article "Greening your first aid kit", explained I'd already been working on it and wondered if she might find it interesting for the March/April issue.
Her response: "I love it. Just throw in a couple quotes from local natural health professionals, and it's done."
So I'd gotten 4 assignments! And one almost done!
And to think, I'd almost given up on that article. I'd almost turned it in for chump change, but now, I've gotten considerably more already direct-deposited into my bank account for it! Not to mention, I've gotten an article out to the reading public on a topic I'm very passionate about and think is important info.
So here's the lesson: Keep looking for other places to sell; don't give up!
Other articles I've published.
Treating Depression with Natural or Alternative Medicine
Is Lyme Disease Lurking in Your Unexplained Symptoms?
Baby Food: Save money by Making Your Own
Potty Training: Cloth Diapers vs. Disposables
Cloth Diapers Versus Disposables: Switching Systems
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Writing for Call-Outs Versus Cold-Query Freelancing
This summer has been one of making decisions, determinations, about my career as a writer. I've written past posts about what I think of writing online content after a year of trying it, another entry about writing regularly for a only a few publications, simplifying my life, and most recently, about how I've determined to place working on my novel as top writing priority, relegating article writing as something to do to deal with fiction writing block.
So I'm still basically sticking with those decisions, but with a little tweaking. OK, I do confess, I've not written as much on my novel as I wished. But I've also found I cannot write exclusively on only it. For me, writing such a long work of fiction takes a lot of mulling time. I don't always know the next step for my characters; I have to let them tell me (and they're not always revealing immediately). Also, I'm becoming increasingly aware of mood and atmosphere, and until I've decided on the mood I want to create in a scene, I can't write well. So I need other writing projects to work on while I let the novel simmer.
I've written a lot of new articles, though I told myself not to. However, I've made a smart, less-risky change in what I write: I am now writing in answer to call outs, rather than writing what I want and then doing the grueling work to find a magazine who hopefully might want to publish on that topic, from my point of view, and with my style. (This takes a blessed long time, as my post about it taking 13 months to sell one article. But that's not even the whole story--that was simply the first post I could write about the long-term nature of the business; I have other articles I've been trying to sell even longer--I've just not written about how long they took yet because I have yet to sell them!)
So now I'm writing on given topics or themes that publications say they are looking for. Since August, I've done everything from listing ideas for summer family fun for Thriving Family magazine to personal essays about buying a house and how positive thinking affects health for Chicken Soup anthologies. Obviously, my work is better targeted. I don't have the time though to search out these opportunities--that'd mean looking on the website of every publication in the Writer's Market monster book! But I've found a great website done by someone who loves to share all the market info she gathers. She posts, almost daily, what she finds, and her interests match mine pretty well, so I've found many call outs that I've been able to answer pretty easily. Also, some info is the kind that the public is not privy too--it's insider info that is known only to writers who've already been published by the publication.
This change really does impact the kind of writing I'm doing though--I'm writing fewer 3rd person magazine articles, and many more first-person experience kind of essays. That is an attractive change; it is easier in my current employment as stay-at-home-mom: not so much research!
Success rate: While it's too early to tell in most cases--I've done this only 6 weeks--I already got word back from one that my essay will be published, and is also in contention for one of the cash prizes as one of the top essays. For more data, I just have to wait.
Online articles I've published:
Veggie-loaded Meals Kids Like
Pampers' Myths and Facts Page About Environmental and Health Impacts: A Critique
Zucchini for Breakfast, Dinner and Dessert: Five New Ways to Use Up Summer Squash and Zucchini
How Much Genetically Modified Food Do You Eat?
Lyme Disease and Autism Patients Prescribed Diets Free of Genetically Modified Foods
http://www.christwriters.info/index/burning-the-midnight-oil-poetry-contest-sep-19-2011-7-06-35-pm-35
So I'm still basically sticking with those decisions, but with a little tweaking. OK, I do confess, I've not written as much on my novel as I wished. But I've also found I cannot write exclusively on only it. For me, writing such a long work of fiction takes a lot of mulling time. I don't always know the next step for my characters; I have to let them tell me (and they're not always revealing immediately). Also, I'm becoming increasingly aware of mood and atmosphere, and until I've decided on the mood I want to create in a scene, I can't write well. So I need other writing projects to work on while I let the novel simmer.
I've written a lot of new articles, though I told myself not to. However, I've made a smart, less-risky change in what I write: I am now writing in answer to call outs, rather than writing what I want and then doing the grueling work to find a magazine who hopefully might want to publish on that topic, from my point of view, and with my style. (This takes a blessed long time, as my post about it taking 13 months to sell one article. But that's not even the whole story--that was simply the first post I could write about the long-term nature of the business; I have other articles I've been trying to sell even longer--I've just not written about how long they took yet because I have yet to sell them!)
So now I'm writing on given topics or themes that publications say they are looking for. Since August, I've done everything from listing ideas for summer family fun for Thriving Family magazine to personal essays about buying a house and how positive thinking affects health for Chicken Soup anthologies. Obviously, my work is better targeted. I don't have the time though to search out these opportunities--that'd mean looking on the website of every publication in the Writer's Market monster book! But I've found a great website done by someone who loves to share all the market info she gathers. She posts, almost daily, what she finds, and her interests match mine pretty well, so I've found many call outs that I've been able to answer pretty easily. Also, some info is the kind that the public is not privy too--it's insider info that is known only to writers who've already been published by the publication.
This change really does impact the kind of writing I'm doing though--I'm writing fewer 3rd person magazine articles, and many more first-person experience kind of essays. That is an attractive change; it is easier in my current employment as stay-at-home-mom: not so much research!
Success rate: While it's too early to tell in most cases--I've done this only 6 weeks--I already got word back from one that my essay will be published, and is also in contention for one of the cash prizes as one of the top essays. For more data, I just have to wait.
Online articles I've published:
Veggie-loaded Meals Kids Like
Pampers' Myths and Facts Page About Environmental and Health Impacts: A Critique
Zucchini for Breakfast, Dinner and Dessert: Five New Ways to Use Up Summer Squash and Zucchini
How Much Genetically Modified Food Do You Eat?
Lyme Disease and Autism Patients Prescribed Diets Free of Genetically Modified Foods
http://www.christwriters.info/index/burning-the-midnight-oil-poetry-contest-sep-19-2011-7-06-35-pm-35
Friday, August 19, 2011
A Change in Direction: Stop Looking for New Markets!
Today I turned in my first assigned article for a local publication. It marks a transition n my writing goals, and has left me with some mixed feelings. It's helping me refine the big question I've had all along--should I try to build a freelancing career or whole-hog be putting my time into my novel?
I'm not under pressure to make a lot of $ right now--it's nice but not necessary. When else in life might I have time to work on my novel, getting it to the place I could try to publish it? But on the other hand, if I can build a freelancing business, that could be more reliable than trying to publish fiction.
I've been struggling with what direction to go, and so, I've spent over a year dividing my time, not just 2 ways, but even more ways, by trying to write for parenting magazines as well as devotionals, as well as online content stuff, trying to feel my way around which way I should commit to.
But when I line up my options (neither certain or predictable) with my goals and priorities for my family, kids and life, and my mission, I think I see a path emerging.
Funny I had mixed feelings about not needing to cold-query tons of publications anymore--because if I focus on a few publications that like my writing and have more work for me, the hunt is no longer necessary. At first I felt saddened by that--maybe because I hadn't achieved what I'd wanted to, getting published in certain big national publications, etc. But my main goal wasn't landing in big national publications; I guess it was getting to the place where I could get paid to write what I like to write about, and I'm there, for the moment.
So my new path is to focus on those 3 markets, and I'm trying to discipline myself to not write any new articles for other untried markets--except that I will keep trying to sell articles from the past year that haven't yet found a home... My hope is to then take the time I used to spend cold-querying publications and spend it working on my novel. I'm giving myself a deadline for the first full draft. A lofty goal, and yet I think I can do it.
A sample of my online articles:
Job Search: How to Make Your Application Climb to The Top of The Pile
I'm not under pressure to make a lot of $ right now--it's nice but not necessary. When else in life might I have time to work on my novel, getting it to the place I could try to publish it? But on the other hand, if I can build a freelancing business, that could be more reliable than trying to publish fiction.
I've been struggling with what direction to go, and so, I've spent over a year dividing my time, not just 2 ways, but even more ways, by trying to write for parenting magazines as well as devotionals, as well as online content stuff, trying to feel my way around which way I should commit to.
But when I line up my options (neither certain or predictable) with my goals and priorities for my family, kids and life, and my mission, I think I see a path emerging.
Funny I had mixed feelings about not needing to cold-query tons of publications anymore--because if I focus on a few publications that like my writing and have more work for me, the hunt is no longer necessary. At first I felt saddened by that--maybe because I hadn't achieved what I'd wanted to, getting published in certain big national publications, etc. But my main goal wasn't landing in big national publications; I guess it was getting to the place where I could get paid to write what I like to write about, and I'm there, for the moment.
So my new path is to focus on those 3 markets, and I'm trying to discipline myself to not write any new articles for other untried markets--except that I will keep trying to sell articles from the past year that haven't yet found a home... My hope is to then take the time I used to spend cold-querying publications and spend it working on my novel. I'm giving myself a deadline for the first full draft. A lofty goal, and yet I think I can do it.
A sample of my online articles:
Job Search: How to Make Your Application Climb to The Top of The Pile
Friday, July 22, 2011
13 months to sell an article--the long journey of one eventual success
What is typical for the cold-querying freelancer? I'm not sure yet, but I can share my first long-term shopping-an-article story. A few of my experiences are shorter, better. Most are still in progress, and I don't know yet if they will succeed or fail. But all I'm learning is teaching me being a freelance writer is akin to being a marathon runner.
May 10, 2010, I sent out a story about toddler tantrums entitled "Changing my heart to change my son's angry outbursts." I sent this article, part how-to, part personal experience, to a Christian publication targeted to families. I received a response the very same day! The editor was very interested, but said it'd be a few weeks to see if they could fit it into a magazine issue soon or if they would want to use it online, perhaps on their facebook page. I followed up months later, to inquire of the status, and was told they hadn't found a place for it, would like to hold it for a year to see if they could find a use for it, and added that I was within my rights to shop it elsewhere in the meantime. So I did.
When you're starting freelance writing, you hear often about resending--if one place says no, you just resend it--keep the articles in circulation! However, as I learned, it's not that simple. I had a 1200+ word article that may or may not be printed in a year; I decided I should try other publications, but those with the same audience wanted articles no longer than 600 words.
"Just re-sending it" was not "just so simple." I put hours into splitting that article into two different articles--one's a third-person sort of how-to article on dealing with preschool temper tantrums, and the other a first-person experience story of what I tried with my child. In July I sent one to the premier Christian magazine for moms of preschoolers, and the other one I sent to an online family magazine available by subscription only.
In September, I received a favorably reply from the preschooler-centered magazine, but I heard a similar disclaimer--they weren't sure when they could use it as their themes didn't quite fit it, but they'd like to hold it for a year, and I had rights to shop it around in the meantime.
By December, having heard nothing more from any version of the article I'd sent out, I tried my 4th market. This time it was a secular parenting magazine, though a smaller national one, and one where the editor had written me back about every query I'd ever sent her--she was very atypical. I decided to send the query letter first, not the article, because I'd have to rewrite it significantly, taking out the Bible verses and such that were a core part of my articles at that point. I figured it was better to know if the editor was even interested in the topic before putting any more work into this project unnecessarily.
To my surprise, the editor of that magazine, for the first time, never responded. Then, juggling and writing twenty-some other articles, I forgot about this one for a while. But I never did hear anything from two magazines who said they wanted to buy it, but were waiting for the right timing.
So April or May 2011, a year after my first send-out, I wrote a query letter on the idea to the editor of a parenting magazine in England which had published an article of mine last winter. I thought the topic might appeal to that editor, because one small piece of my story was in using breathing techniques to calm my son down, and in a recent issue of the magazine, had seen those very techniques mentioned, but as new ideas, yet undescribed. I figured, if the editor were interest, I could rewrite the article to put more emphasis on that.
Within days, maybe even the same day, the editor said she was indeed interested in seeing the article. I sent it to her, with more time put in to rewrite it, and within a few weeks, she wrote back that she was seriously considering it for the August issue, and was taking it to the meeting for the final decision. A few weeks after that, she wrote to say she wanted to buy it for that issue, officially.
But I still wasn't done with the work. I put in perhaps an hour more on it, making side bars, as I had suggested I could, to better give instructions on the breathing exercises I mentioned.
All said, I finally sold that piece--one of my best, in my estimation. I received the printed magazine in the mail the other day. But I've lost track of the hours I put into it, through the multiple rewrites, not to mention the marketing side of it. I made a little over $200 for it. I wasn't likely to make much more than that for any magazine I'd sent it to, but the amount of time and work it took me to get it there--well, I might be scared if I found out how much I really made on that one, per hour.
This certainly is a business you do only if you really love the writing.
Samples of my work online:
Omega-3 Fatty Acids Protect Against Obesity?
High Fructose Corn Syrup: Thirteen Reasons to Avoid It
Fire Retardants Found in Babies' Umbilical Cord Blood Associated with Developmental Delays
Whole Wheat Bread with Honey or Molasses, for a Bread Machine
Lyme Disease and Autism Patients Prescribed Diets Free of Genetically Modified Foods
May 10, 2010, I sent out a story about toddler tantrums entitled "Changing my heart to change my son's angry outbursts." I sent this article, part how-to, part personal experience, to a Christian publication targeted to families. I received a response the very same day! The editor was very interested, but said it'd be a few weeks to see if they could fit it into a magazine issue soon or if they would want to use it online, perhaps on their facebook page. I followed up months later, to inquire of the status, and was told they hadn't found a place for it, would like to hold it for a year to see if they could find a use for it, and added that I was within my rights to shop it elsewhere in the meantime. So I did.
When you're starting freelance writing, you hear often about resending--if one place says no, you just resend it--keep the articles in circulation! However, as I learned, it's not that simple. I had a 1200+ word article that may or may not be printed in a year; I decided I should try other publications, but those with the same audience wanted articles no longer than 600 words.
"Just re-sending it" was not "just so simple." I put hours into splitting that article into two different articles--one's a third-person sort of how-to article on dealing with preschool temper tantrums, and the other a first-person experience story of what I tried with my child. In July I sent one to the premier Christian magazine for moms of preschoolers, and the other one I sent to an online family magazine available by subscription only.
In September, I received a favorably reply from the preschooler-centered magazine, but I heard a similar disclaimer--they weren't sure when they could use it as their themes didn't quite fit it, but they'd like to hold it for a year, and I had rights to shop it around in the meantime.
By December, having heard nothing more from any version of the article I'd sent out, I tried my 4th market. This time it was a secular parenting magazine, though a smaller national one, and one where the editor had written me back about every query I'd ever sent her--she was very atypical. I decided to send the query letter first, not the article, because I'd have to rewrite it significantly, taking out the Bible verses and such that were a core part of my articles at that point. I figured it was better to know if the editor was even interested in the topic before putting any more work into this project unnecessarily.
To my surprise, the editor of that magazine, for the first time, never responded. Then, juggling and writing twenty-some other articles, I forgot about this one for a while. But I never did hear anything from two magazines who said they wanted to buy it, but were waiting for the right timing.
So April or May 2011, a year after my first send-out, I wrote a query letter on the idea to the editor of a parenting magazine in England which had published an article of mine last winter. I thought the topic might appeal to that editor, because one small piece of my story was in using breathing techniques to calm my son down, and in a recent issue of the magazine, had seen those very techniques mentioned, but as new ideas, yet undescribed. I figured, if the editor were interest, I could rewrite the article to put more emphasis on that.
Within days, maybe even the same day, the editor said she was indeed interested in seeing the article. I sent it to her, with more time put in to rewrite it, and within a few weeks, she wrote back that she was seriously considering it for the August issue, and was taking it to the meeting for the final decision. A few weeks after that, she wrote to say she wanted to buy it for that issue, officially.
But I still wasn't done with the work. I put in perhaps an hour more on it, making side bars, as I had suggested I could, to better give instructions on the breathing exercises I mentioned.
All said, I finally sold that piece--one of my best, in my estimation. I received the printed magazine in the mail the other day. But I've lost track of the hours I put into it, through the multiple rewrites, not to mention the marketing side of it. I made a little over $200 for it. I wasn't likely to make much more than that for any magazine I'd sent it to, but the amount of time and work it took me to get it there--well, I might be scared if I found out how much I really made on that one, per hour.
This certainly is a business you do only if you really love the writing.
Samples of my work online:
Omega-3 Fatty Acids Protect Against Obesity?
High Fructose Corn Syrup: Thirteen Reasons to Avoid It
Fire Retardants Found in Babies' Umbilical Cord Blood Associated with Developmental Delays
Whole Wheat Bread with Honey or Molasses, for a Bread Machine
Lyme Disease and Autism Patients Prescribed Diets Free of Genetically Modified Foods
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