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Christian Writers' Market Guide 2004 Do you want to get your work published–or keep your work published–but you don’t know where to start? With current information on over 1,200 markets for the written word, the Christian Writers’ Market Guide is an indispensable resource for Christian writers.

2004 Writer's Market  #1 tool for writers who want to get published.  You'll find detailed listings for more than 8,000 editors who buy what you write. Each entry includes crucial information for making contact in the most efficient, effective way, plus info on what each editor wants, how much they pay, and more.

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Create A Marketing Plan For Your Writing

Copyright © 2003 by Angela Booth


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Ideas that Sell

Training Your Creative Self: Five Tips for Ultra-Creativity

I Don't Know

 What to Write About

 

What marketing works best? All marketing works. But you need to keep at it, even when you seem to be getting zero results.

Let's imagine a couple of scenarios. Writer A wants to be a fulltime writer. She knows that in order to do this, she needs to sell X number of articles, and sell a book proposal a year. Writer A knows that in addition to writing the works, she will need to market them. Writer A creates a marketing plan. It takes
her 30 minutes on her computer. She decides that she will send out five article proposals a week, and she will research and write a book proposal.

She slots the time to do those things into her daily schedule. She knows that these tasks are non-negotiable. No matter what happens, she will perform those tasks every day. Even on her worst day, when her car breaks down, her child needs to go to the hospital, and she has a killer migraine.

Writer B wants to be a fulltime writer too. Like Writer A, she knows that she will have to sell X articles, and sell a book proposal. Writer B doesn’t make a plan. She gets started writing an article proposal. She realizes that she needs to gather research resources, and sends out five emails.

Next morning, she downloads her emails and is instantly depressed. No one has answered. She decides she'll give her prospective sources a few more days to reply. She goes on with her life. She'll get around to the writing when her sources reply.

A week later, one of the sources gets back to Writer B, who suddenly remembers that she was researching an article proposal. She rereads her notes. The idea has gone flat. She's no longer interested in writing it.

The point of these two scenarios is that real life is messy. It's easy to lose track of what you're doing if you don't have the process written down somewhere. This means, create a plan, and then create checklists and check them off every day to make sure that you keep working the plan.

QUESTIONS TO ANSWER IN YOUR MARKETING PLAN

 
Q: What kind of writing do you want to do and sell?

Make a list: copywriting, magazine feature articles, novels, nonfiction books, etc


 
Q: What's the market for each type of writing?

This section will take you the longest, especially if you're a new writer. It doesn't help that many writers' online discussion groups actively discourage talk about how much writers get paid. However, you CAN find out. Here are some URLs which help:

Writersmarket.com:

http://www.writersmarket.com/


Earnings for romance genre novelists:

http://www.geocities.com/donnacaubarreaux/RomanceEarnings.html

When all else fails, ask someone who's doing the kind of writing that you want to do.


 Q: What makes your writing unique?

This is a "know yourself" kind of question.


 
Q: How much can you produce?

You must make production goals part of your marketing plan. If you're a part-time writer, how many saleable words can you produce a week? 2000?

If you’re a full-time writer, set a goal of saleable words produced for each day. Make this a goal which is easily reachable.


Q:
Create a list of target markets

This is self-explanatory. It's a marketing database.



 
Q: How will you reach your target markets?

Email, mail, fax?



 
Q: What's your long-term monetary goal? How will you reach
that goal?

Please set a goal for three years from now, a year from now, for this month, for this week, and for today.

You're less likely to waste time if you know that the hour you spent on the phone cost you $90.



 Q: How much are you making from your writing now?

If you've yet to make your first sale, that's fine.

If you've been making the same amount for the past two years, that's a danger sign: you've hit a level that's too comfortable for you. You'll need to make a concerted effort to get out of your comfort zone.


There you have it. A basic marketing plan that will work for you.
Good luck. :-)

 

To read more articles by Angela Booth, visit the Digital-e Web site--Information for writers and creatives. Ebooks, free ezines, Creatives Club. Love to write? Turn your talent into a business!
Subscribers to our Creative Small Biz ezine receive a FREE writing manual. http://www.digital-e.biz/
 
   1001 Ways to Market Your Books for Authors & Publishers: Includes over 100 Special Marketing Tips Just for Authors,



 

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