Home
Articles
Market
Listings
Book
Reviews
Book Store
About Us
Links
Contact Us

|
|
The Language of Freelance Marketing
By Mridu Khullar
Newbies
usually enter the world of publishing with the notions of
submitting articles, receiving prompt replies and getting
published. After all, the next-door-neighbor did just
that, and now she has a byline and everything. Maybe your
neighbor's lucky. Maybe she's lying. In all probability,
she's established.
She probably spent the first few years of her career
querying and getting rejected just like you. After
countless rejections and what seemed like years of
effort, editors started recognizing her name. Her
constant queries made them think that she was in it for
good, and she wouldn't let them down if they trusted her
with an assignment. They did, and she didn't cave in. She
excelled at what she did, because this was the big break
she'd been waiting for. And once she was published, there
was no looking back.
For freelancers, knowing the basic terminology
"before" they begin can be a valuable lesson in
earning a few extra dollars in that initial stage. When I
started my freelancing career, I knew nothing of rights,
simultaneous submissions, querying or varying payment
rates. All I knew was - I could write. Everything else, I
learnt on the job. You will too. But just to make your
stay a little less frustrating, and a lot more enjoyable,
I've listed a few concepts that will help you immensely
as you contact editors and try to make them pay you for
your words.
Copyright
It's yours as soon as you have those words on paper. You
don't have to register copyright to claim it, though if
you're writing a novel or book, it's a wise investment.
Registered copyright is proof enough for a court of law,
and is extremely valuable in cases of dispute. However,
for short materials like articles or essays, copyright
needn't be registered. You can however, club a number of
essays and register them together.
Reprints
Reprints are articles, essays or pieces that have already
been published. If you own the copyright (more on that
later), and want to sell the piece again to another
publication, it will be termed as a reprint. Most
publications pay much less for reprints and some don't
accept them at all. However, for a freelancer, sometimes
reprints bring more income than original articles do.
Rights
Earlier, magazines asked for all rights to articles. Even
today, in many countries, including my own (India), most
magazines want to keep all the rights ensuring that the
articles in their magazine remain unique to them.
However, this trend no longer exists in America, Canada
and England, and is making headway into other nations as
well. Now, almost all magazines in these nations refrain
from asking for all rights to the work. Others have
opened their doors for reprints, which is a boon for
writers. Let's look at some of the different kinds of
rights.
*
All Rights:
This means that the article must not have been published
before, and cannot be used again after it has been
published in this particular publication. Never give up
all rights for a measly sum of money. If you're selling
all rights, make sure you're being paid what you deserve.
*
First Serial Rights:
These usually pertain to some country. For e.g., First
North American Serial Rights, or First British Serial
Rights. Although the article mustn't have been published
in the country prior to this, you are free to submit
elsewhere after publication.
*Electronic
Rights:
As more and more publications archive their articles
online, they are asking for electronic rights. This means
that they can carry your article online. Usually a
time-period is specified. Also, electronic rights are
usually non-exclusive, meaning that you can sell this
article elsewhere although it will continue to appear on
this publication's website.
*
CD-ROM Rights:
A fairly new addition to the list of rights, this means
that the publication is free to use your work on a
Compact Disk.
*
Anthology Rights:
Some publications publish yearly anthologies (collection
of articles or stories). In such cases, they ask for
these rights for possible inclusion of your work in their
anthology.
*
First-time Rights:
Your article must not have appeared anywhere worldwide.
You are, however, free to sell your work elsewhere after
publication.
*
One-time Rights:
Your work may have appeared elsewhere. Publications
asking for one-time rights require that you let them use
your work once. It may or may not have been published
before and you are free to use it after publication.
Payment
on Acceptance Vs. Payment on Publication
You've written an article and the editor has approved it.
Now comes the time to pay you. Well, not quite. Many
publications prefer to pay their writers on publication,
meaning when the article appears in print. In established
magazines, the time between acceptance and publication
can be months, so you may write an article in January,
and be paid for it in June. Always try to get paid on
acceptance.
Clips
When you write a query, the editor wants to see more than
just a good idea. She wants to know whether you can do it
justice, whether you'll be able to carry it through or
not. For this, she needs to see samples of your writing.
Published samples are termed as clips. Simply stated, you
photocopy the pages of approximately three magazines in
which your articles have appeared and send them to the
editor.
If you haven't been published, you'll still need to send
in samples of your writing. For this, write out an
article or two related to the subject of the magazine,
and send them off with your query.
Lead
Time
A magazine usually asks writers to submit their work well
in advance so that there are no last-minute goof-ups.
Magazines, especially reputed ones, cannot risk delaying
an issue because of a single writer. This period is
usually termed as lead-time. Although most magazines have
lead times of approximately three months, many have
periods of more than six months.
Kill
Fees
Editors are always "killing" articles that
they've assigned. To the writer, this could mean wasted
time, as well as money. To reimburse the writer for her
research and hours put in, magazines usually have a
20-50% kill fee. Simply put, if your query has been
accepted, but your article isn't published for some
reason, you'll be given a kill fee for your work.
Expenses
For your article, you may have to interview a subject. In
some cases, you may have to make long-distance calls or
spend a few bucks on travel, lunches and other expenses.
All such expenditures incurred for the assignment are
usually paid for by the publication. You should be very
clear on this before you get on the assignment. Usually,
editors will agree to reasonable expenditure refunds.
Bios
and Photos
Haven't you sometimes noticed how the author's picture or
contact information appears alongside the article? Yours
could do. Although this isn't always done, sometimes
editors may agree to put up a photo or a short bio beside
your article. It never hurts to ask.
Simultaneous
Submissions
Although this is something magazines advise against, it
isn't always feasible waiting three months for your hot
idea to strike a note with the editor you've submitted it
to. This is where simultaneous submissions come in.
Although I truly warn you against submitting the same
article to more than one publisher (I did it, and I
regretted it), I do advocate simultaneous queries.
Now that you're armed with the basic knowledge, you're
all set to go out into the big, bad world of publishing,
and show them what you've got. Good luck!
©
Copyright Mridu Khullar. All rights reserved
Mridu Khullar started out as a student in Technology but
ended up writing instead. Now Mridu's technology sessions
are limited to designing websites and removing food bits
from the keyboard. She is the Editor-in-Chief of www.WritersCrossing.com and her work has
been accepted in many national and international
publications such as Computers @ Home, Senior Connection,
India Post, College Bound, Metro Seven, Writers Weekly
and the anthology Life's Little Lessons among others.
Reach her at mridu@writerscrossing.com
|
|
|