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Friday, January 16, 2015

Author Pamela Thibodeaux Discusses the R's of Writing

Today we have a special treat for our readers. Author Pamela Thibodeaux is our guest blogger at Author Expressions. She’s offering some helpful information and advice for fellow writers.


(W)rite the best piece you can! There are hundreds possibly thousands of markets out there. It goes without saying that writing your best is important whether it’s an article, essay or novel.

Research. Once you sell your piece and the limits of your contract have expired, start looking for similar markets to submit to, including those outside the United States. Say you’ve written an essay for Working Mother, try iparenting.com, a Canadian market that has several publications on the subject. If you’ve published in print, try online markets and vise-versa.

Rework. Can you add or take away from your original piece and sell it to another publication? Perhaps you’ve written an essay for a secular magazine, can you add the faith factor and sell it to a Christian market or vise-versa?

Revise. Can you revise your article or essay to fit a whole new market altogether? 
My essay Perfect Love was initially published in the Feb. 2001 issue of The Romantic Bower Ezine. One year later, a call for submissions came for a compilation called Crumbs in the Keyboard; Stories From Courageous Women who Juggle Life & Writing.  By simply adding a commentary to the article that acclimated it to fit the purpose of the Crumbs project, the story was published in this anthology.

Rewrite. Can you rewrite your piece with a different POV so that it’ll work elsewhere? I did. My short story Angel of the Day was published in Nov. 2000 issue of The Romantic Bower Ezine. I revised the entire story from the hero’s POV, changed the title, added a hint of sizzle and a splash of sensuality and created a whole new story. The new version, Cathy’s Angel was published by Pelican Book Group and is still available.

Revamp. Can you cut out the tips and advice of a long piece and submit that elsewhere?  I have. Several of my longer writing related articles have been shortened to bare bones and submitted to various publications for pay.

Record-keeping. If you have more than one article, short story or essay that you’re trying to market, it is imperative that you keep records of your submissions so that you don’t duplicate them. It looks unprofessional of you to send the same piece to the same place once it’s been rejected. Now, if you’ve implemented one or more of the above steps to better fit a particular publication, then by all means query. A simple paper, notebook or document listing the submissions and indicating what’s been accepted where, works well. Also, keep accurate records of your income and expenses for tax purposes.

Renegotiate. Most newsletters and websites have a reprint rate so it’s unprofessional and unnecessary to argue the point. For those that don’t list a reprint rate, offer to take less than their normal payment since it is a reprint or perhaps trade articles for advertising.

Remember, in this business money isn’t everything. Marketability is. Publishers want to know how marketable you are; therefore, clips mean experience, experience means exposure and exposure means one step closer to publication!

So learn the R’s of writing. Added together they equal Revenue.


Award-winning author, Pamela S. Thibodeaux is the Co-Founder and a lifetime member of Bayou Writers Group in Lake Charles, Louisiana. Multi-published in romantic fiction as well as creative non-fiction, her writing has been tagged as, “Inspirational with an Edge!” ™ and reviewed as “steamier and grittier than the typical Christian novel without decreasing the message.”

Links:
Website address: http://www.pamelathibodeaux.com  
Twitter: http://twitter.com/psthib @psthib


Title: Circles of Fate
URL for Cover: http://bit.ly/169kX2S


Blurb: Set at the tail end of the Vietnam War era, Circles of Fate takes the reader from Fort Benning, Georgia to Thibodaux, Louisiana. A romantic saga, this gripping novel covers nearly twenty years in the lives of Shaunna Chatman and Todd Jameson. Constantly thrown together and torn apart by fate, the two are repeatedly forced to choose between love and duty, right and wrong, standing on faith or succumbing to the world’s viewpoint on life, love, marriage and fidelity. With intriguing twists and turns, fate brings together a cast of characters whose lives will forever be entwined. Through it all is the hand of God as He works all things together for the good of those who love Him and are called according to His purpose.

Purchase Links:
Create Space: http://bit.ly/1qRN3cb
Smashwords: http://bit.ly/136qK7n

 Pam, thanks for being our guest today. Comments for Pam welcome here!



13 comments:

Maris said...

Great tips, Pam. I'm going to look at a couple of pieces I had published years ago and see if they might still have life in them.

Maris said...

Great tips, Pam. I'm going to look at a couple of pieces I had published years ago and see if they might still have life in them.

Pamela S Thibodeaux said...

Thanks for stopping by Maris! I've done the same thing numerous times and you never know when you can revise the article into a blog post or whatever.

Good luck!
PamT

marilyn leach said...

It's good timing, Pamela, that you should mention record-keeping, something I've done in halves, but recently considered I need to do better. Thanks for your tips.

Susan Coryell said...

Solid advice1 Thanks.

Pamela S Thibodeaux said...

Thanks Marilyn and Susan for stopping by. Yeah, Marilyn, I'm bad about putting that off too...and I've worked as an accountant and tax preparer LOL!

Thanks again for stopping by.
God Bless.
PamT

Robin Bayne said...

Great list! I used to do a similar one I called "Robin's Rs of Writing"--- yours is better :)

Judy Ann Davis said...

Great post. Great Advice. Thanks for sharing.

Pamela S Thibodeaux said...

Great minds and all that Robin ;-)

So glad you enjoyed the post Judy!

Thanks you two for stopping by and leaving a comment.
PamT

Karen McCullough said...

All very good points!

Bonnie D Tharp said...

Thanks for the great advice and for sharing it with us.

Pamela S Thibodeaux said...

Thanks Karen & Bonnie! My prayer always is that someone is blessed by what I write.

Good luck to both of you!
PamT

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