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Help
--- My Writing's Not Selling!
by Angela Booth
If
the definition of insanity is to keep doing what's not working in the
confident expectation that it WILL work, then writers and other creatives
are nuts.
When you're a writer, you write and you market your work. That's it. It's
exactly the same process for Stephen King as it is for Stephen Brand-New-Writer.
You dig a hole and you keep digging until they bury you in it or you hit
a gold mine.
That's what makes a life in the arts so challenging. If you're a creative,
you create, and you sell. That's all. This counter-intuitive process leads
many writers on an endless quest for the "secret". There has
to be something else, they think. It's too simple. There has to be more
to selling your work than that.
The bad news is that there's no more to it. And that's also the good news.
=> The good news - Every word you write makes you a better
writer
Write every day. Write constantly. You've heard it all before, you're
sick of hearing it. You don't want to write every day until you get some
guarantees that it's not all for nothing. After all, your partner has
threatened to throw the computer out the window, and you want some semblance
of a normal social life before you die.
It's true, every word you write makes you a better writer, and you don't
get to be a better writer without putting in the time writing those words.
Dig out some old files. Go back five years, if you've been writing that
long. If you've been writing for less than five years, go back and read
your first efforts. Does your beginning work make you cringe?
Your improvement has been incremental. The more you write, the better
your writing gets.
Along with writing, you should also read and study other writers. Take
writing courses. The big benefit of a writing course is that you're forced
to write.
But that's not enough.
=> The bad news - Selling is often a matter of luck
Here comes the bad news. Selling is often a matter of luck. New writers
like to believe that editors and agents are super-human beings who know
everything. They certainly know better than writers. (Big wry smile.)
Editors and agents have problems even as you and I do. They have jobs
to do, and they want to do them as easily and as quickly as they can,
with the least amount of hassle. This means that when you send an article
proposal to a magazine and another writer sends a similar idea, if the
publication has worked with him before, he gets the job. It may not be
fair, but to the magazine he's a known quantity. They know what to expect
with him. On the other hand, if there's a book on the topic and the agent
calls to offer the serial rights for less than it would cost to hire either
of you, you both lose out.
Rejection is a fact of the creative life. Many genre novelists have written
ten complete novels before the first one sold, and that sale was often
a matter of luck. That novel was in the right place at the right time,
so to speak. Let's see, at 80 to 100 thousand words per novel, that's
close to a million words, before a single word sold. Of course, once a
novel sells, the editor and the writer's agent will encourage the writer
to dig out those past efforts, revamp them, and chances are they will
be published too. (So if you're filling a couple of filing cabinets with
unsold manuscripts, take heart. Look on them as your retirement fund.
:-))
Many writers have to continue for years, doing what isn't working. They
have no guarantee that it will EVER work. But if they stop digging that
hole, they'll never strike gold.
=> How to survive until you sell (and forever afterward)
Firstly, don't forget to trust the process. It works. You create, and
you market your work. That's all.
However, you also must:
* keep up with what's selling, so that you're not selling a bicycle in
the rocket age. This doesn't mean you hop on every passing bandwagon.
Trust yourself. If you're writing a multi-generational family saga-type
novel and only chicklit Bridget Jones clones are selling, keep writing.
The wheel turns. If you write from your heart, you will sell;
* get a life aside from your writing. If you refuse to live your life,
your creative well will soon dry up. Keep living and keep writing. If
you can't yet support yourself with your writing, take heart. Look on
your day job as material. For a writer, everything is material;
* take chances. Write what's fun for you --- or what's painful for you.
Take whatever happens to you, and use it. It's all material. If you've
been writing for ten years and haven't sold a word, write about that.
(I'm not kidding);
* have fun with your writing. Never get so keyed up to sell, sell, sell
that you stop enjoying what you're doing. At least 80 per cent of your
writing must be writing you'd do for pleasure, even if they weren't paying
you. I enjoy copywriting, it's a game to me, and I get as much enjoyment
out of writing copy as I do out of crossword puzzles. Find out what you
enjoy writing, and focus your efforts on that.
* try new stuff. Investigate other kinds of writing you might enjoy.
Our free Your EveryDay Write ezine helps you to investigate new formats
for your work. It also helps you to keep your writing fun, and to stay
motivated. We've covered topics ranging from pre-writing to self-esteem:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/YourEveryDayWrite
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!
http://www.digital-e.biz/
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