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Article Title:
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Improve Your Article Pitch With A One-Two Punch

Article Description:
====================

A good pitch letter is gold for landing a lucrative, high paying
magazine writing assignment. Learn how to uncover and pitch a
story on a topic that you KNOW will fit a future issue of the
magazine, and capture the editor's undivided attention. 


Additional Article Information:
===============================

567 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-07-09 11:12:00

Written By:     Susan M. Carter
Copyright:      2007
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Improve Your Article Pitch With A One-Two Punch
Copyright (c) 2007 Susan M. Carter
Writer Profits
http://www.writerprofits.com



A good pitch letter is gold for landing a lucrative, high paying
writing assignment for a magazine. And as any good writer knows,
reading and adhering to the publication's writers' guidelines
is a big plus when targeting your pitch. But if you really want
to capture the editor's attention, pitch a story on a topic that
you KNOW will fit a future issue of the magazine.

No, you don't need a crystal ball. You need the publication's
editorial calendar.

If you're not already aware of editorial calendars, read on. And
if you are aware of them, start using them TODAY to attract plum
assignments.

So what is the editorial calendar? An editorial calendar is an
outline of a year's worth of topics to be addressed in each
issue of the publication. The calendar is set months in advance
to be included in advertiser media kits. Sales reps for each
publication use media kits, containing editorial calendars, to
entice advertisers to spend their advertising dollars for very
specific focus issues. That same information is exactly what you
can use to design pitch letters to their respective editors.

In other words, through the editorial calendar editors tell you
exactly what stories they want - for each and every issue of the
entire year.

So when crafting your pitch letter hit 'em with:

Punch Number 1: An understanding of guidelines

A publication's guidelines will give potential writers valuable
details such as:

 * the length of articles the publication uses,
 * the target audience of the publication,
 * sample topics that the publication is likely to use,
 * regular columns that are staff-written and not open to
freelance writers,
 * additional information that would help a would-be writer
submit a story idea or proposal.

Followed by:

Punch Number 2: A pitch designed around a topic from the
editorial calendar

 * Search for content opportunities at least three issues ahead.
Print publications go to production well in advance of the
publication date. If you choose the next month's topic to pitch,
you will be too late.

 * Suggest tips as fillers. If your pitch DOES fit a topic that
is likely nearing production, forget the time-consuming exchange
for a pitch and response. Instead, prepare a tips sheet related
to the topic and send it in its entirety. It may get used as
filler to plug into unsold advertising space.

 * Tie off-topic pitches to the "big picture" theme. Editorial
calendars are planned at least six months in advance so the sales
team can begin to pitch well-matched topics to advertisers. This
means content is developed based on the big picture. Be mindful
of the specific focus but feel free to pitch stories that may be
off-topic yet support the theme of the issue.

 * Seek specialty opportunities. When you request editorial
calendars, be sure to ask about any special supplements (often
polybagged with a specific issue) planned for the upcoming year.

If you deliver quality work, editors will reward your foresight
and ability to pitch appropriate content by eventually offering
you assignments instead of waiting for you to pitch them. You can
even negotiate better pay once you have proven yourself.

Ready for an added bonus that puts you in line to score another
one-two punch? Since editors often move from publication to
publication, they take their rolodexes with them. Suddenly, you
have an advocate for assignments with a new publication, and a
history of delivering great work with the old one.




---------------------------------------------------------------------
Susan Carter is a freelance writer and self-publishing 
consultant. The above is a revised excerpt from her 
chapter in Writer Profits: How I Got the Gig – 15 
Writers Tell How They Get Paying Gigs and How You 
Can, Too. Visit http://www.writerprofits.com for 
information on how you can find writing assignments 
or become a published chapter author in the next volume 
of How I Got the Gig. 


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