Order now Mail

Web TermpaperEngine

Blogging
Book-review
Copywriting
Creative-writing
Essay
Publishing
Writing-tips
Copywriting

arrow Make Documenting Your Software Easier Than Ever Before
arrow Make More Money Self-Publishing Special Reports
arrow Make Your Website Talk: How To Install Streaming Audio On Your Site
arrow Making the Most of Digital Camera Memory Cards
arrow Many Writers, One Clear Voice
arrow Maximizing Your Book’s Earning Potential
arrow Mechanical Poetry Techniques
arrow Mechanical Poetry Techniques: Part Two
arrow Mechanical Poetry Techniques - Part Three
arrow Need a Great Idea? Feed Your Brain
arrow Need to write an article? 'Three' is a magic number!
arrow Networking Gold
arrow New recipe for your fresh paper pie
arrow No More Jargon!
arrow No Time To Write? Try a Ghostwriter
arrow Novel to Screenplay: The Challenges of Adaptation
arrow Once upon a time…Reflections on storytelling
arrow One Minute Marketing
arrow Online Copywriting vs. Writing Copy for Print
arrow Online Writing Workshop, “Writing for the Real World: A Refresher for Busy Professionals,” Begins September 13, 2004
arrow Oracle Financials Implementation in Brazil – consultant review, plus competition
arrow Overcoming Writer's Block
arrow Overcoming Writer's Block
arrow Part 1 of 5 - Have You Established Your Main Character At The Start?
arrow Part 2 of 5 - Have You Established Your Main Character At The Start?
arrow Part 3 of 5 - Have You Established Your Main Character At The Start?
arrow Part 4 of 5 - Have You Established Your Main Character At The Start?
arrow Part 5 of 5 - Have You Established Your Main Character At The Start?
arrow Passing Your CCNA and CCNP: Configuring And Troubleshooting Router-On-A-Stick
arrow Payment Methods On Ebay
arrow Platform Development Tip: #1 - Switch Writing Hats!
arrow Powerful Article Writing Strategies For Exploding Traffic And Link Popularity
arrow Power Of The Written Word (Part I )- Need of Expression
arrow Power Writing 101: Tips and Tricks to Get You Taken Seriously!
arrow Printer Ink Cartridges - Easier And Convenient
arrow Professional Traffic Building Tips
arrow Professional Writers Learn To Manage Their Emotions
arrow Profiting From Writing Your Own Ebook
arrow Publish or Perish: It’s Not Only for Academia, Part 1
arrow Publish or Perish: It’s Not Only for Academia, Part 2
arrow Quick Strategies For Writing Your Essay Under Pressure
arrow Quotations as expressions in life
arrow Raise Your Hand If You’d Consider Giving Up The Rights to Your Book Forever
arrow Rating eBook Compilers
arrow Reading in a Tree
arrow Refining Your Elevator Pitch
arrow Re-fresh, Re-hash, Re-write
arrow REMOTE MONITORING
arrow Screenplay Slug Lines - An Important Element of Screenwriting
arrow Seecrets On Writing: Free Requotable Quotes For Internet Writers
arrow Setting Your Novel: There's Gold in Your Own Backyard
arrow Seven Secrets of Writing a Book that Sells
arrow Seven Ways To Connect Your Writing And Your Life
arrow Short Story Writing Tips - Are Matters Getting Worse For Your Character?
arrow Short Story Writing Tips - Are Problems Escalating In Your Story?
arrow Short Story Writing Tips - Does The Resolution Of The Conflict Come From The Conflict?
arrow Short Story Writing Tips - Does The Conflict Affect Your Character?
arrow Short Story Writing Tips - Does Your Character Overcome The Conflict Himself?
arrow Short Story Writing Tips - Does Your Character Overcome Each Problem?
arrow Short Story Writing Tips - Is The Conflict Resolved By Another Force?
arrow Short Story Writing Tips - Is There Something At Stake For Your Character?
arrow Short Story Writing Tips - Is Your Conflict Resolved By Another Character?
arrow Short Story Writing Tips - Is Your Character Struggling?
arrow Simple Steps Lead To Successful Books
arrow Some FAQs for Aspiring Copywriters
arrow So You Need Some Inspiration? Try Some RPC: Risk, Passion and Creativity!
arrow So you want to be a copywriter?
arrow Space Debris: The Sky is Falling
arrow Starting a Freelance Writing Career (or Thoughts About Taking the Plunge)
arrow Starting a Writing Career (or How I Sifted Through the Muck and Found My Way)
arrow Stimulate your Senses!
arrow Stories and Feelings
arrow Surefire Ways to Get Your Magazine Article Queries Accepted
arrow Tag, You're It! (Or, How To Write Slogans)
arrow Take Baby Steps In Your Writing To Yield A Book
arrow Taming The Book Proposal
arrow Tap the Creative Inside You
arrow Telepathy
arrow Ten Steps To Grow Website Traffic
arrow Ten Tips on Writing and Creativity
arrow The 10 Laws for Writing Letters that Get Results
arrow The Benefits of Freewriting
arrow The Benefits of Journal Writing
arrow The Bottomless Notebook
arrow The Difference Between Critiquing and Criticism
arrow The Domain Name Game
arrow The Importance Of Content – Adding A Weblog To Your Site
arrow The Key To Distributing Articles
arrow The Proof Is In The Proofing: 7 Tips To Develop Great Proofreading Skills
arrow The Psychology Of Effortless Writing
arrow The Published Novelist: Nine Essential Qualities
arrow The Purpose of Custom Writing
arrow The Search for the Story: One Writer's Approach to Fiction
arrow The Secret Source of Clear Content
arrow The Secret to Writing a Captivating Speech for Any Occasion
arrow The Storyteller, Volume I
arrow The Top Ten Secrets of Successful Authors
arrow The Truth About Article Marketing
arrow The Truth About Bunker
arrow The Truth Behind Musician Press Kits
arrow The Writer and the Web
arrow The Write Way to Market
arrow The Writing Game
arrow The Writing is in the Rewriting. Seven Steps to Getting it Right
arrow Tight Lines, Writers!
arrow Titles Sell Books
arrow Top 5 Rules of English Grammar
arrow Top 10 Strangest eBay Items Ever Sold
arrow Top Ten Checklist to Edit Your Articles
arrow Top Ten Tips Part 1
arrow Top Ten Tips (Part 2)
arrow Top Ten Ways to Write a Book That Sells
arrow Understanding The First Rule Of Writing—Before You Start The Great Bestseller
arrow Web Content Mass + Keyword Optimization + Links = SEO
arrow Web Content (Mass + Keywords) + Links = SEO
arrow Web Site Analysis - A Study in Damage Control
arrow Web Site Marketing Strategy - Article Submission To Article Directories
arrow What employers look for in freelance writers
arrow What Hurricane Katrina Can Teach Authors
arrow What is Creative Commons
arrow What’s Wrong With Proofreading?
arrow What to Write About
arrow Where Can I Publish My Book?
arrow Who Is Your Inner Critic?
arrow Who Makes Your Content Choices Clear?
arrow Why Ezine Articles Make Me Dance
arrow Why Google Indexing Requires A Complex Blend Of Skills
arrow Why Jerks Win At Direct Marketing
arrow Wireless Home Networking – Choosing The Right One
arrow Write Articles And Captivate Your Readers
arrow Write Articles, Get Noticed
arrow Writers Conferences: The best thing you can do for your writing career
arrow Write Strategy: Think, Believe, Attack
arrow Writing Articles - Advice For The Do-It-Yourself Webmaster
arrow Writing Articles as an Affordable Internet Marketing Method
arrow Writing As A Gift
arrow Writing eBooks
arrow Writing for People and for Search Engines
arrow Writing Good Screenplays (Part One)
arrow Writing Good Screenplays (Part Two)
arrow Writing The Blockbuster Book Proposal: How To Sell Your Non-Fiction Book
arrow Writing the Follow-up Novel -- You Aren’t Really a Sophomore
arrow Writing The Knockout Query Letter: How To Catch A Book Editor's Attention
arrow Writing Tip - Can The Conflict Be Resolved Immediately?
arrow Writing Tip - Can We See From Where The Conflict Arises?
arrow Writing Tip - Do You Look For The Easiest Way Out When Building Conflict?
arrow Writing Tip - Have You Established The Conflict In Your Story Immediately?
arrow Writing Tip - Is Your Conflict Interesting?
arrow Writing Tips for Article Writing
arrow Writing Tips - Is The Conflict Able To Be Resolved?
arrow Writing With Power: 5 Snappy Rules For Success
arrow Writing Your Articles: An Organized Framework for Success!
arrow WRITING YOUR LIFE STORY - Some Common Obstacles and How to Overcome Them
arrow You Can Write Poetry Today
arrow You Don't Need Inspiration!
arrow Your article headlines will make or break your business
arrow Your Writing Anxiety - 10 Ways to Bring Relief
arrow Zany Ideas That Increase Writing Productivity And Quality

Admissions
Art and Music
Biographies
Creative Writing
History
Humanities
Literature
Politics
Science
Social Sciences
Social Issues
Other Topics

Tight Lines, Writers!


Warning: include(ads/adswhite.php) [function.include]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/termeng/public_html/copywriting/Tight-Lines-Writers.html on line 278

Warning: include(ads/adswhite.php) [function.include]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/termeng/public_html/copywriting/Tight-Lines-Writers.html on line 278

Warning: include() [function.include]: Failed opening 'ads/adswhite.php' for inclusion (include_path='.:/usr/lib/php:/usr/local/lib/php') in /home/termeng/public_html/copywriting/Tight-Lines-Writers.html on line 278

by: Jenna Glatzer


“Tight lines” is a good luck wish among fishermen. When you’ve hooked a fish, your line tightens up.

I was musing on this expression as my husband critiqued my lousy casting skills on our latest fishing expedition. Anthony’s as accurate a caster as they come. He can pinpoint a particular far-away reed and cast an inch in front of it.

We were going for bass, and he explained that bass like to hide out on the perimeters of a lake, under rocks and in between plants. Problem is, I can’t pinpoint anything. I aim my pole right and the line somehow flies left. I aim fifty feet away and it somehow shoots straight up in the air and plunks down five feet in front of the boat.

Fishing is part plain luck, but there’s a lot of strategizing to it, too. You have to pick the right spot, the right time of day, the right bait, the right rig, the right technique. You could just toss a worm out and hope something hits, but your odds are a lot better if you make the effort to put a tasty-looking treat right in front of the fish’s mouth.

Kind of like querying.

Oh, you knew there was a writing reference in here somewhere!

As I aimlessly hurled my plastic worm into the middle of the lake, I got more and more frustrated watching Anthony pull in fish. Smug show-off! But really, he was doing a much better job of appealing to his target than I was.

When you have a great idea, write a query, and toss it out to every editor you can think of, you’re the Jenna fisherwoman. You figure that if you just toss that line out there enough, some smart editor is going to come snatch it up. And sometimes you’ll get lucky, but more often, you’ll come up empty. What you really want is to be the Anthony fisherman.

So let’s go over those editor-luring techniques.

The Right Spot:

This is the most important part of the equation. You have to know where your idea will fit. Don’t assume that just because your topic is about weddings, it’ll be right for every wedding magazine. Pick a magazine genre and get to know it well. Read at least five or six wedding magazines, cover to cover, and jot down the names of the sections and columns. How long are the articles in each section? What is the tone? Is the magazine targeting brides on a budget or no-expense-is-too-silly ones? Which topics seem to come up in every issue? Know exactly where your article would fit within the magazine and be prepared to tell the editor.

The Right Time:

Magazines have long lead times (the time between an article’s acceptance and the time when it’s published), sometimes a year or more, but typically more like four to six months. Your great Christmas pitch is not going to get accepted in October. Think ahead and pitch ahead. Want to pitch an article about picking a flattering swimsuit or how to choose a summer camp? Do it in the early winter or you might as well wait until the following year.

The Right Bait:

This is your query itself, and it has to be irresistible. A small weed stuck to your lure will tip off the bass that it’s fake. Every sentence of your query has to reek of professionalism. Mimic the tone of the article in your query. The first paragraph of the query should read like the first paragraph of your proposed article. Include samples of your research and names of those you plan to interview. Throw in a juicy quotation from one of them if possible.

The Right Rig:

These are your clips. If your query doesn’t work, the clips probably won’t even be read. But if your query is good, your clips can make or break the deal. Don’t blow it by including samples from your blog, Epinions, WriteforCash, your high school newspaper, or an e-zine that runs anything people send in. This will automatically tell the editor that you have no professional experience. Even if that’s the case, you don’t want to flaunt it. Build up those clips any way you can, preferably in print (community newspapers, regional magazines, and trade magazines are less competitive than national consumer magazines, and all respectable places to earn clips).

Understand that if you’ve never proven yourself in a particular area of writing (health writing, let’s say), you probably won’t get a plum feature assignment that requires heavy research. Either write the article on spec to show you can handle it, or start by pitching shorter, front-of-the-book items to prove your chops.

The Right Technique:

Some editors prefer longer queries, some prefer shorter. Some accept reprints, some don’t. Some are okay with simultaneous submissions, multiple submissions, e-mail queries, and informal letters of introduction – some aren’t. You’ll learn some of these things in the writers’ guidelines that you find on a magazine’s website or in the Writer’s Market or the American Directory of Writer’s Guidelines. Others, you can find out by networking with writers on message boards like http://absolutewrite.com/forums/ and www.mediabistro.com/bbs, or joining groups like www.freelancesuccess.com and www.asja.org. And some you’ll learn along the way through trial and error. There is no one-size-fits-all technique that’ll work for all editors. About all they seem to agree on is that they hate it when their names are misspelled!

My biggest mistake as a beginning freelancer was the same as my biggest fishing trouble: I didn’t target well. I’d come up with an idea and send it to every editor I could find in the Writer’s Market who sounded remotely appropriate for my topic, whether I’d read the magazines or not.

Now I know that it’s a sign of respect for my profession and my industry if I take the time to study the detailed guidelines editors provide every month: their magazines. Before I can figure out how to bait my hook, I first need to find out what the fish are biting. And if I’m feeling strapped for cash, I don’t even need to buy copies – I can head to the library and spend my afternoon reading and taking notes there.

Part of the thrill of fishing is that you don’t catch a fish every time you throw your line out. It wouldn’t feel like an accomplishment if you did. Sometimes, you can do everything right – the perfect cast, the perfect spot – and not even feel a nibble. When this happens with a query, there may be something going on behind the scenes you don’t know about: Maybe they’ve recently assigned an article on your topic, or the section is about to be redesigned, or the editor’s budget for freelancers just got slashed.

What matters is that you get that line back in the water fast, and target your next mark just as carefully. Soon, you’ll reel in assignments with ease.

Tight lines, writers!

About the author:
Jenna Glatzer is the editor of http://www.absolutewrite.com(pick up a FREE list of agents looking for new writers!) and the author of 14 books, including MAKE A REAL LIVING AS A FREELANCE WRITER, which comes with a FREE Editors' Cheat Sheet. She's also Celine Dion's authorized biographer. Visit Jenna at http://www.jennaglatzer.com


Circulated by Article Emporium



©Copyrighted by Termpaper Engine All Rights Reserved 2006