Friday, April 15, 2011

When a New Editor Takes over a Magazine, Take Note!

I recently referred to a certain local parenting magazine as "Fort Knox" to a couple of other writers, as my way of saying they seem to be impossible to break into as a writer. For over a year, I've sent the editor queries to possibly six different story ideas and never got any sort of reply. And in every issue, I see the same few freelance writers with multiple stories published. I know there are many factors, but I began to wonder if the editor gave new writers a shot at all.  I've written before about how the advice to "start locally" hasn't worked for me, and I got published first in non-local publications.   But a few days ago, I noticed this local "Fort Knox" magazine underwent a change in editorship, and I wondered if a new editor might grant me a different response.

Well, a mere day after I sent a query yesterday, the new editor did indeed write back! She found my idea intriguing and asked a couple of questions about how I envisioned writing it, as well as my payment requirements. I answered her today; we shall see what comes of it!

The down side is the pay. Their maximum payment is truly is lower than I've been paid by any other traditional publisher. But if I could get into writing for this magazine regularly, it could equal more money in th bank for my time when considering how long it takes me to cold-query other higher paying magazines, hoping to eventually get a sale.

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

Monday, March 14, 2011

How to Get the Right Magazine Editor's Attention

Yes, writing a good query letter is essential, and I think I'm doing this fairly well, based on the fact that I've gotten responses. And I thought I was doing all I could. But I just upped my game.

I hate using the phone. I'd much rather rely on printed information in writers' market books. But I've read many times how success is better met as a freelance writer if I have a name of an editor to direct an unsolicited manuscript to, rather than just addressing envelopes and query letters with "Dear Editor."

I just found this great free resource: http://www.marketlist.com/. I never gave the Market List much mind because its tagline said it was for genre writers--but I found out accidentally that it also has listings for everyday magazines too! I looked up my parenting magazines, American Baby and Parents, and was given accurate phone numbers for editorial offices. (I've found magazine websites don't like to provide numbers unless for subscription purposes, and the printed Writer's Market info was outdated...)

So today I made 2 calls, and so far, they've paid off in at least saving time. In both cases, the person answering the phone asked what my manuscript was about, then recommended an editor's name. In one case, I was asked if I preferred email or regular mail. And this was for a magazine that doesn't publish email addresses and asks writers to send everything via snail mail. I asked how the editor preferred to receive submissions, and the woman told me email was good. So that saved me time and postage, plus it went directly to an editor who has a say on what gets published in the section I was hoping to break into.

I cannot know yet how much of a difference it'll make. In some weeks or months, I may be able to report what difference if any it makes, because I can compare it to a year ago, when I sent manuscripts to the big magazines without calling first.... I got nowhere. So this new tactic certainly can't lessen my odds of publication!

Update #1: the very next day, I got an email from a health editor at Parents magazine, asking me for more information. That's the first time I've gotten any response from the big national magazines.

Update #2: March 28. I had just been fearing I'd probably heard the last about the story, though the editor had inquired about it. But tonight, I just received another email from the editor, promising that she hadn't yet carefully read my response, but she was going to. So far, I'm saying I'm not sending another unsolicited manuscript until I call the magazine and get advisement on which editor to send it to!

Saturday, March 12, 2011

After a Year of Writing Online Content...My Review

As of March 4, 2011, I've officially been writing online content for a year. It's a crazy experiment, really, that grew out of my eagerness to write and impatience waiting to hear from print magazines about manuscripts I sent out.

So was it worth my time to write articles on which I get paid based only on performance, related to how many times they're viewed? Here's my write up: What I've Learned After a Year Writing for Triond Sites

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

What's smarter? To do what you're told or to take a risk?

Okay, this may have been really gutsy, or really smart, or both. I'm not sure. I couldn't exactly find any professional advice on this at the moment. I just went against protocol; instead of sending an article query to the editor listed as the person to send things to, I sent it to the editor who replied back to me on a previous occasion. I've certainly read that a writer should always utilize any positive interactions with editors to try to get published again, so I'm hoping that trumps the other things I've read: do what a magazine asks.

I won't name the magazine, but it's known as one of the glossies in Christian publishing, and though I was not in fact published by them yet, an editor who read my pitch last summer wrote back within  a day or two, saying it made her cry and she wanted to know more. She took my query to a staff meeting, and unfortunately, not everyone agreed to go with my story. What I didn't know then was that the magazine really is one I really had no business trying yet--most of its writers are authors of books or on the speaking circuit. I am amazed the strength of my story alone got me, a starting freelance writer with little credit to my name, the time of day.

So yes, trying them again, and to that editor I impacted before directly, may be pushing it. But maybe it will lead somewhere good. And I just couldn't shake the feeling that my article fits directly what they want to publish on the topic and I haven't yet figure out another magazine that might be interested...

So only time can tell (up to 8 weeks, the magazine says) if that was a wise strategy or I just annoyed the editor.


Articles I've published:
Because I've been writing for over a year now, here are some links to some of my stuff published last March:
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

Treating Depression with Natural or Alternative Medicine

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Dealing with Criticism and Taking a Break with Fiction

 I'm dedicating the next week to working on my novel. I do have a bit to finish on a magazine article, but I've run out of ink, so until I can get to a store, I cannot print it out to send in the mail yet anyway. I've written lately about my new strategies to find time to write, and this week's altered schedule for my family may lead to a bit more time.

Secondly, I'm taking this break to work on my novel as a measure to heal. Last week was a tough one in my freelance non-fiction writing life, due to criticism. I see this pattern emerging, starting with when I was editing my high school newspaper for 2 years: my senior year, I started an underground literary magazine to balance out the journalism that kept me awake nights, in tangles with school board members, parents of school students, teachers and even my parents' friends. It continued in college, where I abandoned the newspaper altogether and instead set my sights on editing the literary journal, which I did by my senior year there. Creative writing is much safer, in my experience, and I use it as a salve to the exploits that writing nonfiction can lead to.

About 9 months ago, I wrote a blog entry about some significant controversy my freelancing led to (Lessons in Stress and Controversy), and it was the 2nd such skirmish since I began writing a year ago. And here I am again, and incidentally from the same source of criticism as one of the last two times. It doesn't get easier with time and experience. And it still remains that those closest to you can be the hardest source of criticism to deal with. Simply because it has more weight than some stranger's.

So here's to a week of trying to focus in my novel. I've got some interesting ideas and some details to strengthen the mystery in the book. All writing is a pleasure, and I don't particularly take more joy in fiction--maybe it's that my novel has yet to see light of day, so it's quite safe...for now. But should it ever get published...I'm sure it'd lead to some anxiety and criticism too!

in case you wondered what led to the criticism and conflict last week, it was the publication of Are Antibiotics During Labor Effective at Preventing Group B Strep? A friend who is a midwife told me I needed thick skin to publish about things in her world, and she was right.


Other articles I've published lately:


Power Your Electronics with Your Body's Own Movement? The nPower PEG, The First Kinetic Energy Recharger

Harnessing The Power of Waves--a Cheaper, Greener Solution to Energy Crisis

Doctor Finds Nutrient Depletion Causes Depression

Miscarriage Labor and Delivery

An Antioxidant in Chocolate Found to Help Neurological Damage after Stroke

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Problems Getting Paid in British Pounds!

Note to self: Don't get paid in British Pounds!

After making multiple phone calls to my bank, and waiting for them to check with superiors and call me back, I was told the tellers at my local branch could handle cashing my check issues by a British magazine, payment for an article I wrote. The only thing was that I had to be there in person.

So I did that. But the teller did not have any idea what to do. I waited until one of the personnel in a private office was done with an appointment She said she just had to make a couple calls, but it could be cashed, after a fee. But then, before all was said and done, she said I had to wait until April to cash it! It was issued with a date of "4/1/2011." I explained that that is the way Europeans write out dates--day of the month first, followed by month. In Europe, that's Jan, 4, though to us it looks like April 1. The bank employee said she did understand that, but their machines would not be able to get around reading that date and would reject the check.

My choices: Ask the magazine to reissue a check with the date written the "American way" or just wait until April first to cash my check.

Note to self: avoid this, and the processing fee, in the future; see if magazines can issue checks written in American dollars.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

How to Find More Time to Write

I was just reading a book where a writer talked about finding 9 hours a week to write (beyond his full-time job and family responsibilities), just by utilizing 15-20 minute segments here and there. It sounds nice, but it's hard trying to get my writing muscles to work under such constraints!

In my previous post, I talked about how much of the time I used to write has disappeared, but I've been slowly rearranging my life to find more time, and this post is about what success I've finally managed in finding time.

Back in September, my husband requested I get up early with him so we could do breakfast together, alone. As much as I hate early morning, I also found it gave me a bit of writing time after breakfasting and showering. But lately, as my situation has changed, I've been utilizing the early mornings to the max:

1) I put off the shower for another time during the day and instead start writing as soon as my husband leaves for work. Some days the kids sleep for an hour after my husband leaves; other days they don't.

2) I designate it as TV time when they wake up early, instead of letting them watch TV later in the morning as I used to, just to let me finish whatever I was in the midst of.

3) I prepare breakfast casseroles at night for my kids' breakfasts that I simply heat in the oven the next morning, or put steel-cut oats on the stove, letting me write while it cooks itself!

4) I've made nap time writing more predictable (after a series of weeks when my preschooler awoke after merely 45 minutes) by using a sleep training clock for him. He's now able to tell, for himself, if it's time to get up yet or whether he needs to stay in his room, try to sleep more, or quietly read a book until the clock's monkey's eyes open. This way, I've been getting one hour and forty-five minutes to write in the afternoon, sometimes shortened or interrupted by my youngest's early waking, but having to deal with only one child's early waking is much easier than two. It equals more days of writing afternoons!

5)I need to start taking an evening every couple weeks to go off by myself and write--but it's not been possible lately cuz with birthdays, Valentine's day, my writer's meetings and book club meetings. I've been gone once a week from the house already, using relatives as babysitters. Maybe after things calm down in a couple weeks, I can start writing 2 evenings a month. I very much need to get out of the house to do some of this work. My husband got me a gift card for a bookstore cafe as a Christmas gift, and I've not even used it yet!

Some weeks I ordain my morning writing segment for my novel alone, or for short articles for content websites, saving the afternoon time for magazine articles. Other times, if I have some sort of deadline, I work on only that piece until it's done. Here are some articles I've accomplished writing in my early mornings, with my new strategy for writing for content websites:

Harnessing The Power of Waves--a Cheaper, Greener Solution to Energy Crisis

How to Avoid Nutrient Depletion Caused by Your Prescription Drugs

Natural Family Planning: Success and Reliability?

Milk's Health Benefits: Highly Protective Against Diabetes and Best Sports Drink

Pregnancy Due Date: Why Do So Few Women Deliver That Day?