BREAK YOUR E-MAIL ADDICTION
Are you addicted to your e-mail? Don't be like this guy.
It's difficult not to check your e-mail several dozen to several hundred times a day. It automatically refreshes every 30 seconds or a minute, depending on your settings. Also, when a majority of your contact with the professional world is via e-mail, it makes you long for responses.
One way to avoid checking e-mail is simply to be out of e-mail range for an hour. Run errands, meet a friend for lunch, accidentally drop your BlackBerry; these are all viable options with obvious degrees of cost.
If you can't live without, at least leave your e-mail open in the toolbar on your desktop and let the auto refresh do it's job. In other words, don't look for messages unless you get an alert. After that, make yourself wait a few minutes to peek who has written you. Then, it will be like Christmas several times a day.
Thursday, March 29, 2007
CHANGING OF THE GUARD
Whether it's in front of Buckingham Palace or at a publishing company, the changing of the guard brings new personalities and a different guy you to deal with if you want to get in the front door.
Your editors are going to change if you write for a paper or magazine for longer than a year. It's a fact of the pbulishing world. The good news is that means an editor, who you have trouble working with, could be swapped out for an editor whom you love. And vice-versa.
The key is to introduce yourself properly to each new editor, find out about their background and what makes them happy.
After that, it should be smooth sailing, no matter whom you turn your copy in to....
Whether it's in front of Buckingham Palace or at a publishing company, the changing of the guard brings new personalities and a different guy you to deal with if you want to get in the front door.
Your editors are going to change if you write for a paper or magazine for longer than a year. It's a fact of the pbulishing world. The good news is that means an editor, who you have trouble working with, could be swapped out for an editor whom you love. And vice-versa.
The key is to introduce yourself properly to each new editor, find out about their background and what makes them happy.
After that, it should be smooth sailing, no matter whom you turn your copy in to....
Labels:
changing of the guard,
new editor,
query letters
Wednesday, March 28, 2007
INCREASE THE DEMAND FOR YOU
Pride goes before the fall. But pride can also infuse your work with new energy and a commitment to getting better.
Start refusing work. Explain that you're too busy or you need to be paid a higher rate. It just might be the answer to getting more work and making more money. This may sound counter-intuitive, but it's true.
For the first time in my freelance career, I've been turning down work on a regular basis. It's led to better opportunities and clients offering to bump up my per-word rate. You should only think about this strategy if you have other opportunities lined up or believe that your time would be better spent doing something else. In other words, don't threaten to walk unless you're ready to walk.
Sometimes the best way to get work is to create artificial demand. So, pretend you're the Nintendo Wii and keep your supply artifically low.
Pride goes before the fall. But pride can also infuse your work with new energy and a commitment to getting better.
Start refusing work. Explain that you're too busy or you need to be paid a higher rate. It just might be the answer to getting more work and making more money. This may sound counter-intuitive, but it's true.
For the first time in my freelance career, I've been turning down work on a regular basis. It's led to better opportunities and clients offering to bump up my per-word rate. You should only think about this strategy if you have other opportunities lined up or believe that your time would be better spent doing something else. In other words, don't threaten to walk unless you're ready to walk.
Sometimes the best way to get work is to create artificial demand. So, pretend you're the Nintendo Wii and keep your supply artifically low.
Friday, March 23, 2007
WRITE WHAT YOU LOVE
Everybody has pet projects. Lawyers have pro bono cases, chefs dabble with outlandish food combinations, and don't get your friend started on her golden doodle.
You should have a few things that are close to your heart, if not associated with huge paychecks. So, pick some topics you care about and pitch one such topic a week. It's how you can end up writing about your favorite food, volunteering time for a non-profit, or profiling a bizarre dating trend.
Also, often times your best writing comes from the things you feel most passionate about...I for one, can't get enough of marshmallow fluff. I'll work an angle into a pitch this week. What's your passion? What can you write about?
Everybody has pet projects. Lawyers have pro bono cases, chefs dabble with outlandish food combinations, and don't get your friend started on her golden doodle.
You should have a few things that are close to your heart, if not associated with huge paychecks. So, pick some topics you care about and pitch one such topic a week. It's how you can end up writing about your favorite food, volunteering time for a non-profit, or profiling a bizarre dating trend.
Also, often times your best writing comes from the things you feel most passionate about...I for one, can't get enough of marshmallow fluff. I'll work an angle into a pitch this week. What's your passion? What can you write about?
Tuesday, March 20, 2007
YOU'RE NOT A MACHINE
If you divide your day up into time-blocks, you'll notice that you're more productive at certain hours. You might be a morning person, who is cheery without the aid of coffee. Or you're a night owl, still used to college hours and the glowing blue screen of a computer in the dark.
Either way, you've got a time that you can dash out work and operate at peak efficiency. Figure out when that is and schedule you're more important work at that time. Save organizing tasks and bill-paying for times when you'd rather be watching television. After lunch is a particularly sluggish time for me.
You're not a machine and neither is Ivan Drago. Rocky beat him because he chopped him down with a series of punishing hooks and punches. It's apparently devastating to a 6'1'' guy when a 5'2'' man lands an uppercut. You don't need to hit people. Just make a spreadsheet or something. Either that or train in the Siberian wilderness.
If you divide your day up into time-blocks, you'll notice that you're more productive at certain hours. You might be a morning person, who is cheery without the aid of coffee. Or you're a night owl, still used to college hours and the glowing blue screen of a computer in the dark.
Either way, you've got a time that you can dash out work and operate at peak efficiency. Figure out when that is and schedule you're more important work at that time. Save organizing tasks and bill-paying for times when you'd rather be watching television. After lunch is a particularly sluggish time for me.
You're not a machine and neither is Ivan Drago. Rocky beat him because he chopped him down with a series of punishing hooks and punches. It's apparently devastating to a 6'1'' guy when a 5'2'' man lands an uppercut. You don't need to hit people. Just make a spreadsheet or something. Either that or train in the Siberian wilderness.
Labels:
dividing your day,
productivity,
Rocky IV
Monday, March 19, 2007
PAYING IT FORWARD
Bring It On was better than Pay It Forward; but ultimately it's the message of the second movie that's going to get you ahead in the world of freelancing.
Whether you're just starting out or you're an experienced freelancer, you'll have colleagues. Fellow writers that you respect and know are working just as hard to put food in the mini-fridge. Therefore, you should recommend them whenver it's appropriate. If you can't take a job or you're not qualified, mention someone who is capable of getting it done.
You'd be amazed how often a simple recommendation comes back to you in the same manner on a different project. Regardless of your motivations, it's a chance for positive karma and a way to level the playing field a bit with editors and publications.
While there's nothing wrong with being feisty and sticking up for your rights, a la Bring it On, please avoid dancing to You're So Fine (Hey Mickey!).
Bring It On was better than Pay It Forward; but ultimately it's the message of the second movie that's going to get you ahead in the world of freelancing.
Whether you're just starting out or you're an experienced freelancer, you'll have colleagues. Fellow writers that you respect and know are working just as hard to put food in the mini-fridge. Therefore, you should recommend them whenver it's appropriate. If you can't take a job or you're not qualified, mention someone who is capable of getting it done.
You'd be amazed how often a simple recommendation comes back to you in the same manner on a different project. Regardless of your motivations, it's a chance for positive karma and a way to level the playing field a bit with editors and publications.
While there's nothing wrong with being feisty and sticking up for your rights, a la Bring it On, please avoid dancing to You're So Fine (Hey Mickey!).
Thursday, March 08, 2007
A GREAT REFERENCE COLLECTION
A great reference is the best way for anyone to start out in the freelancing world. In fact, you might as well start your own reference collection like your local library.
The key is to help people refer you. That means you have a writer's website and you let people know on a regular basis about what you're currently working on...
Whether you send out e-mails or post snarky blog entries (seriously, who would blog about a freelance writing career, anyway?), just find what suits your voice and lets potential references remember to recommend you.
A great reference is the best way for anyone to start out in the freelancing world. In fact, you might as well start your own reference collection like your local library.
The key is to help people refer you. That means you have a writer's website and you let people know on a regular basis about what you're currently working on...
Whether you send out e-mails or post snarky blog entries (seriously, who would blog about a freelance writing career, anyway?), just find what suits your voice and lets potential references remember to recommend you.
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