Ten Winning
Habits of Frequently Published Writers, Part I
How to get published more!
Are you ready to sign off on your first project or publish more
of what you have already written? Have you been wondering who will
publish your work? The publishing industy is changing in the new
millineum and doesn’t appear ready to stop changing. It is
estimated that in the next 10 years, 50 percent of all books will
be self-published or published by smaller presses. Even so, it should
not exempt us from the pursuit of excellence in our craft through
sound writing rules and business etiquette.
With that said the way to more published writing credits
is basically the same as Anne Wayman says, "Write well
and write often." If you want to get published more by
industry respected magazines and even enter into the competition
for the attention of traditional book publishers, you may
want to examine some of your writing habits. There are some
habits those writers who consistently get published share.
If you want to join the winner’s circle of frequently
published writers develop these habits:
Habit #1 Develop and maintain a strong sense of professionalism
Frequently published writers know they are not just creative
artists. They know publishing is a business. They realize
as a writer they supply a product to the publisher or directly
to the customer. The writer that comes to terms with producing
their writing as a product develops a professional attitude.
He seeks to develop the most excellent product that will satisfy
the demands of its consumers. The professional writer follows
the basic rules of business etiquette. For example, they use
crisp, clean paper for letterhead. They never handwrite letters
or manuscripts. They always include a SASE with each query.
Habit #2 Write your best, always.
Unseasoned writers and those who lack professionalism always seem
to be saving their best effort for later. Other writers who save
their best for the next project often procrastinate themselves out
of enough time to do a good job. Some feel the buyer has left them
no profit, so they give them what they feel they paid for.
The solution though it may not be quickly is to always do your best.
This practice works well with the universal law that says, ‘What
you give comes back around to you.” When you continually give
your best – the best is always coming to you – the best
assignments, the best rewards, and the best credit. So write your
best and expect the best.
Habit #3 Tap your passions and spread your joy to
the world
Most writers who publish often are passionate people. They
make the most of their passions through their writing topics.
As many of you do, the author has varied interests. She has
had to streamline and focus more than several times over the
years. The greater the numbers of things you attempt to focus
on the less effective you become. Two of her passions have
burned brightly in her life in the last decade her writing
and web development business. So its no surprise her published
credits line up in the writing arena and internet/computer
category. Identify your passions and you will rake in the
publishing credits. Your joy will be contagious with editors
contacting you to publish your work.
Habit #4 Write compelling leads and hook your editors
and readers
The lead often called the “hook,’ because it hooks
the reader – is the first few sentences or paragraphs
of whatever you are writing. The job of the hook is to draw
the reader in to read more. Frequently published authors realize
strong leads are not just for good journalism. Strong leads
are for plain good writing. Use strong leads with everything
you write, from non-fiction articles to good stories, from
query letters to book proposals.
Use a compelling lead at the beginning of every chapter in
both non-fiction and fiction. If you are writing an article,
write a strong hook each time you transition to a new idea.
A strong hook for an article may make the difference between
selling it to an editor and not selling it.
There are different kinds of leads. Stories that set a scene
or mood, startling facts, interesting statistics that spark
interest are often components of a strong lead. The question
lead entices readers to keep reading to learn the answer.
Habit #5 Develop Sizzling Titles and Headings
Successful writers sizzle their titles and headings. They
know the title may well be 90% of the pulling power for their
project. An excellent title is short. The best selling titles
are benefit driven. Don’t forget to heat them up with
emotion. Use terms your audience can relate to. Use action
words and verbs. Quantify change with ways and time limits.
Use one or two word ideas to tell a story. Pledge change.
Spark interest. Instead of How to Write an E-book a client
author chose the title Ten Secrets to Write Your E-book Like
a Winner. She quantified change, sparked interest and branded
her title.
Have a meeting of the minds with friends or associates. Let
them help you choose the best title from the list. Find out
which will make them want to read your project. Pinpoint the
sizzling one and the same title may capture your editor’s
attention as well.
In the beginning, the acceptances are slow and sporadic
for the successful and unsuccessful writer alike. But the
difference is the successful writer keeps submitting. On a
regular basic they see their work published because of their
investment and persistence. Start with 1-3, keep submitting,
and be persistent until you are invited into the winner’s
circle of frequently published writers.
Ten Winning Habits of the Frequently
Published, Part II
© Earma Brown, 13 year author and business owner
helps small business owners and writers who want to write their
best book now! Author of “Write
Your Best Book Now”, she mentors other writers and business
professionals through her monthly ezine “iScribe” at
http://www.writetowin.org
Subscribe now at
iscribe@writetowin.org
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