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Become
a Columnist: 10 Key Steps
By
Beth Mende Conny
Columns
are a great way to share information and ideas, promote
your business and philosophy, and have some fun in the
process. But that's just part of their appeal. They also
help you develop your "voice" and writing
muscle, so you can move more confidently toward equally
ambitious projects, be they articles or books.
How do you createand marketa winning column
that attracts a loyal following? Read on!
1.
Understand the genre.
Shorter than most newspaper and magazine articles,
columns generally run between 350 and 1,000 words. Their
writing is tight, light, and bright, and their subject
area, like their format, is predictable (e.g., personal
development, politics, parenting, gardening). The columns
themselves, however, are unpredictable, meaning fresh.
Readers know they'll be getting new information and
insights with each installment, and so they return for
more.
2.
Learn from the masters.
Follow the work of three to five established columnists
over a several-week period. Or, go to your local library
or bookstore for the collected works of favorite
columnists. Read actively to discover key tricks of the
trade. Study how columnists organize their work, open and
close their pieces, interweave quotes and statistics.
Observe how each has a "voice," or style, that
is as distinctive as a fingerprint. Note what you like
and don't likeand why.
3.
Determine your goals.
As mentioned, columns can be great vehicles for promoting
your service or cause. But they'll only get you where you
want to go if you know where you're going. Accordingly,
take a few moments to determine where you want to be one,
two, or three years or more from now. In what ways can a
column support your efforts, further your goals, and keep
you on track?
4.
Question yourself.
Articles are distinct units; when they're done, they're
done. Not so columns; finish one and another dozen or two
are waiting in the wings to be written. Your audience and
editor literally await your next installment, and so you
must deliver, be it daily, weekly, or monthly. So here's
the key question you must ask and answer: Do you have
what it takes to produce a column over time, given your
busy schedule and competing priorities?
5.
Serve others.
The successful column has a dedicated readership. These
folks take time out of their busy schedules because they
need something from you, be it information, insight, or
entertainment. As a columnist, it's your job to give them
all they wantand more. And you do this by
identifying the many ways you can be of service to them.
The greater your willingness to serve their specific and
individual needs, the greater your column's relevancy and
popularity.
6.
Attract the right reader.
Different strokes for different folksand different
columns as well. That's because all columns appeal to
somewhat narrow (though not necessarily small) groups of
individuals. To attract the right group for you, pinpoint
their key characteristics. For example, what's their age
and sex? Their educational and economic level? Their
political and spiritual beliefs? Where do they live and
work? The more specific you can be, the greater your
ability to "talk your reader's talk," not just
in terms of subject matter but word choice.
7.
Play with format.
Columns may be short, but they've got lots of room for
creativity. Anything goes ... as long as it works for
readers and is replicative. Play with several formats
before zeroing in on one. Study what other columnists
have done (see No. 2 above), and use their work as a
template. Or create a wholly new format tailored
precisely to your audience and message. The key is to
experiment and to have your content and format mesh
seamlessly.
8.
Develop your prototypes.
Once you determine your format, write five to seven
sample columns. This serves two purposes. First, you will
get your feet wet, shake out all bugs, and polish your
writing style. (The more distinctive the style, the more
unique the column.) Second, you will create a
representative sample of your work, which you can then
market or launch; editors, after all, want to see a
column's treatment over time, not just a single column.
9.
Choose your marketing approach.
Columns can be marketed in a number of different ways.
You can distribute your work through syndicates, for
example, which are companies that serve as your
sales/marketing/PR teams in one and which take a cut of
the proceeds. Or you can self-syndicate your work by
going directly to individual newspapers, magazines, or
Web sites. You also can launch your column via your own
e-mail or snail mail newsletter, or Web site. (There are
pros and cons to each of these approaches, as discussed
in the WriteDirections.com teleclass "Become a
Columnist"; some, like working through syndicates,
are more of a long shot than, say, self-syndication.)
10.
Be patient.
Columns take time to develop, so if you're looking for
quick results, look elsewhere. Like a fine wine, they
tend to get better with time. Their scope deepens, their
writing improves, their audience builds. These things
take time and patience; however, if you're truly willing
to make the investment, the payoffs can be enormous.
©
Copyright Beth Mende Conny. All Rights Reserved.
Beth Mende
Conny is the founder and co-president of WriteDirections.com. She has published
more than three dozen books and collections, and works
with individuals and businesses to jump-start their
creative projects. She can be contacted at Beth@WriteDirections.com.
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