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You Are Not
A Writer. You Are A Business
by Lee
Masterson
"Writing
is the only profession where no one considers you
ridiculous if you earn no money." - Jules Renard
It's silly, isn't it? Honest writers being made to feel
guilty if they 'sell out' (otherwise known as
compromising art for the sake of money). And yet it
happens every day.
There seems to be a sad belief in the mindset of many
writers that in order to be a true writer, one must live
on almost no income at all, striving day and night for
the perfection of his or her 'Art'.
To some writers, 'art' is defined by writing a
brilliant feature piece for a top-class magazine and
receiving copious awards for the content within.
For others, 'art' means living on pittance until
the day the One Award-Winning Piece is written, thus
landing the starving author in the lap of luxury and
ending all her troubles.
Neither of the writers in the above examples is earning a
comfortable living consistently from his or her writing.
They are too busy creating art.
Of course, the same starving writers could probably have
been living quite comfortably from alternative writing
efforts, if either of them had thought of writing in
general as a viable business proposition. You see, just
because Starving Writer wants to earn a full-time income
from writing for only top-class magazines, there is
simply nothing wrong with supplementing his or her income
with OTHER writing endeavors until that huge
contract arrives.
Writing alternative things can actually boost your
writing career as well as boost your writing income - all
before you've even sold one feature piece. An editor
might become tempted to buy your articles, based purely
on the strength of a short humor piece you wrote. An
editor might be tempted to buy other pieces of writing
just because he liked your filler pieces. A publisher
might be more willing to print larger print-runs of your
self-help books because you already have established
publishing credits.
These things all stem from your writing and still don't
'compromise your art'. In other words, writing purely so
you can receive money is not a bad thing. In fact, it
could actually kick-start your career.
This is because writing is a business.
That's right! A BUSINESS.
I'll explain further.
You are not "getting published". You are Selling a
Product (your book,
article, feature, short-story, etc)
You are not "receiving rejections". You are
being told your product is not right for that
customer (editor) at the moment.
You are not "selling out" if you compromise
your art. You are creating cashflow for your business.
Am I making sense yet? Creativity aside, writing as a
hobby is a competitive business. Writing for a living is
cut-throat. Let me show you...
Your products
(articles) are competing with thousands of other
products, all packaged just like yours.
You're fighting for
the attention of one customer (your editor) right
alongside your own business competitors (all those other
writers who submitted manuscripts!)
You must show your
business manager (your publisher or editor) that your
products are popular enough (selling well) so they will
keep purchasing more.
You must entice a
sales manager (agent) to get you the very best business
manager (publisher) possible, so that you can sell more
of your own product (Your non-fiction book).
It all sounds so clinical, doesn't it? That's because it
is. Publishing is a business - like any other. Sales and
profits dictate much of the business-activity that comes
from the publishers, agents and editors. Why should a
writer think of his or her business any differently?
Running
Your Business
Now that we all understand that writing for a living is
the same as running your own business, let's look at why
it's okay to run your business profitably.
Cashflow:
All business are made or broken by the amount of cashflow
they have (or don't have!). It has been said that
cashflow is the life-blood of all businesses - and yet so
many people are confused by what cashflow really IS.
Cashflow is NOT profit and it's NOT the amount of money
you took out of your account as income.
Cashflow
is the amount of money coming in from business activity
and the amount of money going out on business
expenditure.
If the amount of money coming in exceeds the amount going
out - then you're making a profit.
If the amount of money going out exceeds the amount
coming in - then you're making a loss.
It's really that simple!
The trick is to monitor every amount of money that moves
within your business structure - in and out - and then
improve on each transaction so that your business grows.
Now let's put Starving Writer into the equation.
Let's say Starving Writer gives up her day job to write
full time. She knows she's going to write a blockbuster
non-fiction book and get a six-figure advance from
Bucking Huge Publishing House. So she decides to live off
her savings until the advance arrives in the mail. Four
months later, Starving Writer has no savings left and her
blockbuster book is not even finished, let alone sold.
There's no money left to pay the bills. Starving Writer
has two choices to make: return to her regular day-job or
marry a rich guy!
In this example, Starving Writer BEGAN her writing
business with a negative cashflow. i.e. she had no
incoming cashflow, but plenty of outgoing cashflow,
creating a negative cashflow position for her writing
business activities.
Let's create a new writer for our next example. We'll
call him Mercenary Writer.
You see, Mercenary Writer only writes for money. In fact,
he'll write ANYTHING for money. He's a happy sell-out, in
fact.
When Mercenary Writer decided he wanted to write the
Nobel Peace Prize winning manuscript, he knew that he'd
need to have enough time and money put aside to create
his masterpiece. He also knew that his current day-job
would never allow him the time or energy to complete it.
So he created a business blue-print. He knew that he
would need to spend a portion of his time on
money-creating writing. Another portion of his time would
need to be set aside for business 'stuff' (account
keeping, new-market hunting, reprint submissions etc).
Yet another portion would need to be scheduled for
promotion of his existing pieces in print and another
portion still would need to be arranged to sit down and
create his masterpiece novel.
Once the finer points of his plan-of-attack had been
honed, he began writing short articles and selling them
to magazines, periodicals and web-magazines. He learned
that one of the magazines that published one of his
articles also paid a small amount of money for jokes,
recipes and cute sayings. Figuring that writing one of
each would only take him a few minutes out of his day,
Mercenary Writer submitted some of those, too. Luckily,
he'd already done this same excercise the week before and
there were several small checks in the mail box already.
Mercenary Writer learned the value of 'reprinting' and
selling different types of rights around the world, in as
many formats as possible and across several different
currencies. He also wrote things he didn't particularly
like, because the pay rate was great and it still got him
another published credit to show future editors and
agents. In his scheduled time slot, he created his
masterpiece.
In this example, Mercenary Writer is still keen to create
his 'art' - but he's willing to sacrifice some of his
time to establish a viable writing business at the same
time.
In this example, Mercenary Writer began his writing
business with positive cashflow. He worked hard to set
aside enough time to keep his cashflow consistent, while
still writing his Nobel Peace Prize winning manuscript.
Both of the above examples are over-simplified, but they
do outline the difference between a person who
wants to be a writer and a writer who wants to earn a
living from writing.
Which one are you?
;)
©
Copyright Lee Masterson. All rights reserved.
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