Thursday, November 28, 2019
9 Tips from Writing a Query a Day How Seinfeld, Fleetwood Mac, and a Writer Inspired Me
9 Tips from Writing a Query a Day How Seinfeld, Fleetwood Mac, and a Writer Inspired Me As a freelance writer, I dislike when editors donââ¬â¢t respond to a query. That frustration hampers my marketing, deterring me from sending queries to major markets very often. My list of feature article ideas sat unused for a long time, longing for homes. Until now. Last month I stumbled onto a writerââ¬â¢s blog about making querying a numbers game where they suggested a class entitled ââ¬Å"30 Queries in 30 Days.â⬠That same day I read Jerry Seinfeldââ¬â¢s approach to productivity: Mark an x on the calendar every day youââ¬â¢ve finished your task, and never break the chain. (SEE: Mridu Khullar Relph mridukhullar.com/ecourse-30-days-30-queries ) Soon I was cranking up Fleetwood Macââ¬â¢s song ââ¬Å"The Chainâ⬠and establishing my calendar. As the band echoed ââ¬Å"You must never break the chain,â⬠I looked at February. Can I write 28 queries or submissions in 28 days? Did I need a class or should I just buckle down? I chose the latter. Hereââ¬â¢s what I learned from writing a query a day for a month: Ideas breed more ideas. Ever just brainstormed? The same creativity applies with queries. I started February with a list of 28 ideas, but ended with 40. As I would work with one query, I would think of another idea. Build it, and they will come. Surprise! I heard back from some national markets. If they said no, they said why. They consider professional queries. I have a journalism degree, worked at a CBS affiliate in college, and wrote for a federal agencyââ¬â¢s press office for a decade. As a freelancer, Iââ¬â¢ve had articles and essays published in locals, regionals, trades, anthologies. With clips and a website, you build infrastructure - voila, your last paragraph of a good query. Heââ¬â¢s just not that into you. When the editors donââ¬â¢t respond? Face the fact your idea is not for them. They know their readers better. Or theyââ¬â¢ve run something similar. Follow-up, then target the next market and revise. Your email works! Whenever I didnââ¬â¢t get an answer from a sporadic query, I wondered if my email was working or was considered spam on the other end. However, once I regularly sent queries daily, using the premise itââ¬â¢s a numbers game, I got more responses. (Though most havenââ¬â¢t responded yet.) The early bird doesnââ¬â¢t always catch the worm. Because youââ¬â¢re rushing to tailor a query Your paid subscriptions to freelance newsletters are worth it. I checked MediaBistro, TOTAL FFW, ASJA, and Freelance Success archives. Checked Writerââ¬â¢s Digest/Writerââ¬â¢s Market and the magazines masthead to get a editorial contact or email formula. A little help from your friends. When I emailed a writer-friend because she had written for a magazine I was querying, she warned me of issues there. Be helpful with other writers, and theyââ¬â¢ll reciprocate. Youââ¬â¢ll experience ââ¬Å"rejectance.â⬠Another writer-friend coined this term about acceptance in a rejection. Some editors asked for more ideas from me. Another editor gave me the lowdown on recent changes there. Some explained exactly why they couldnââ¬â¢t use it. Helpful rejections = rejectance! What doesnââ¬â¢t kill you makes you stronger. I heard some noââ¬â¢s. I was also asked to give away an article for free (no). When a door is closed, open a window; re-work it for another market. A February rejection is a March submission; think follow-up opportunities. While I wish I could say I have 28 yesses in my inbox, I cannot. But as I await answers, Iââ¬â¢ve beaten procrastination, released ideas, gained editorial contacts, generated leads, and felt productive marking an x on each day of my calendar. ââ¬Å"Never break the chainâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ or yada yada yada. Thanks, Jerry.
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