09 Mar 2008 03:49:55 | Sharon Hurley Hall
b>Making it as a freelance is not easy, especially if you
haven't been published before. However, with a bit of
persistence you can be successful. Here are a few tips to get
you started.
1. Ideally, you should know how to structure a news story or
feature article. With news, you'll need to include the who,
what, where, why, when and how of the story. With features,
you'll need to flesh the story out a bit and tell it in an
interesting way that's appropriate for the readers you're trying
to reach. After all, you'd write very different stories for the
New York Times and the Surfing Times, wouldn't you?
2. Freelancing is not an excuse to have lots of snack breaks.
Treat it like a job. Set some time aside each day to look
at newspapers and magazines, look at job sites and, most
importantly, do some writing. Keep copies of your
articles, of correspondence (whether email or snail mail) and of
all relevant bills so you can claim any tax relief or expenses
due to you. Make sure you have the right equipment:
telephone and mobile phone; PC or laptop; a dictaphone or other
recorder; a printer and a scanner.
3. Ideas are your bread and butter: keep having them.
Have you got any interests, hobbies or obsessions? Has anything
unusual happened to your friends or members of your family?
These are all good starting points for articles.
4. So how do you get an editor to give you a try? Look for work
in new magazines that don't have established links with
freelancers. They are more likely to give new writers a chance.
Read the magazine or paper to see what kinds of articles
they publish and suggest material that you think might be
appropriate. Look in the archives to make sure your idea hasn't
been published before and then send a query to the editor (by
email or snail mail depending on his or her preference). Do a
bit of legwork (by phone) and find out the editor's name so you
can address your query to the right person.
5. Your query should lead the editor into your story. My advice
is to write the lead and then say how you would develop
the story. Remember to include any information about specialist
sources you may have access to or areas of expertise. This will
help to convince the editor that you are serious. However, don't
give away so much of your material that the editor can
commission someone else to do it. Think of the extras you
can provide - sending photos and material for sidebars will make
the editor's life easier. Once you've got that commission, be
professional and deliver on time. If you let an editor
down once, you won't be hired again.
Finally, if you want to get paid on time, find out who's
responsible for paying you (it may be an accounting department
rather than the editor) so you can send your invoice in as soon
as the work is delivered. Try to get the details of the
commission in writing. If the editor won't send you a letter,
then you send one confirming the agreement you've made. That
way, you'll have some comeback if there's a query later.
If you do all this, there's a good chance that an editor will
give you a try. A final word of advice, though; if your article
is good enough to go in the magazine, it's good enough for an
editor to pay you. Don't work for nothing unless it's
absolutely unavoidable.
Good luck!
About Author :
Sharon Hurley Hall is a freelance writer, ghostwriter and
editor. Sharon worked in publishing for 18 years, writing
articles and editing and designing books and magazines. She has
also lectured on journalism. For more information or to contact
Sharon, visit doublehdesign.com