Wednesday, March 17, 2010

So I gain credibility, then what? Web empire? Swimming in the mainstream?

Focused, strongly branded blogs can grow up to be web portals, like Beth Whitman's Wanderlust and Lipstick, which now boasts a handful of columnists. Mixing features and practical information, her site's part magazine, part guidebook, part all-singing, all-dancing multimedia extravaganza.

Early adopter Tom Brosnahan offers authors advice on transforming into publishers. His Writers Website Planner, though old-school design-wise, remains a great resource. ProPublica's "crowdsorcerer" also offers valuable tips, especially about involving readers in your endeavor.

Increasingly the line blurs between journalists and online authors, including bloggers. Pay, prestige and infrastructure no longer clearly divide the two tribes. Frequency and informality often are the only distinctions, along with publishing self-sufficiency: that net DIY ethos.

That said, many bloggers still set their cap on breaking into the mainstream media, like our class poster-girl Mardi Michels. Not only has she been a featured chef at the Foodbuzz Blogger Festival 2009, she's now freelancing for the Food Network Canada's website.

Should you take that route, I highly recommend a portfolio website, independent of your blog. Professional touches include a custom domain name and a homepage with your bio and perhaps links to key writing samples. Both Blogger and Wordpress offer static pages, making it easy to whip up a site via a familiar interface.

Include that site in your pitch (aka query) letters. Editors want to know three things first and foremost: why this article now by you. They're looking for:

  • A strong story angle
  • Timeliness
  • Expertise or unusual access

Other components that help:

  • Past publication credits, especially in similar publications
  • Familiarity with their outlet ("show don't tell" that by suggesting a department or theme issue)
  • Photos or multimedia available

Whenever possible, address your letter to a specific person. Look up an editor’s name in the masthead or a writer’s handbook. Or pick up the phone and ring the office: even the most harried secretary will pass along a name (get the correct spelling too). He or she also might be able to suggest the best department head to contact. If in doubt, aim high, but not for the editor-in-chief of a large publication (who is presumably monster-busy). Deputy and associate editors are a good bet.

Establish your credentials. Why are you qualified to write this piece? Toot your own horn. Stress any elements that build your authority: your location, occupation, hobby or ethnicity, etc.

Never undermine yourself with comments like: "I’m just a blogger" or "I always wanted to be a writer". Be bold and plucky. And remember the old maxim: if you haven’t anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. Really, it’s wiser to stay quiet if you have no publication credits or relevant experience: just let your phenomenal pitch speak for itself.

Editors often ask new authors to write "on speculation". It’s the writer’s equivalent of an audition: a chance to prove yourself. Just that. No promises. You’re only paid if the article is accepted and published.

Common spec candidates include anthology essays, short pieces (under 750 words) or funny ones (it’s hard to convey humor’s magic in a query). Some newspapers and magazines only examine finished product, like the Los Angeles Times travel section and the Christian Science Monitor's Home Front department. Always check writer’s guidelines to determine policy.

Speculation helps new talent. Here’s a chance to leapfrog over the old-boy’s or girl’s network, skip the name-dropping publication credits and dazzle them into a commission. Many experienced journalists refuse to play this game, potentially wasting precious time and effort. But hey, that helps emerging authors, who aren't pitching against veterans like Dave Barry, Bill Bryson and Susan Orlean. Less competition!

Research your market before pitching. This helps you strike the right tone, but also ensures a publication is worth your time. Legitimate outlets bloom online from Salon to Slate and MSNBC, certainly. But most offer lower rates than their comparable print cousins.

Beware sites that feed off authors' ambitions from micro-bid assignment sites to profit-sharing schemes like Examiner.com and Today.com, which feature a range of unedited bloggers under one banner. Once the companies have taken their cuts of Google Adsense and other advertising revenue, writers I've spoken to rarely see more than pennies. And clips from outlets like that can hinder more than help ... An emerging author is better off guest-blogging, posting on her own site or volunteering for a reputable webzine.

The point is to get into print, establish yourself as a professional writer and gain experience. Eventually the paid work will muscle out the freebies.

Such an apprenticeship isn't considered kosher universally. Some journalists believe it devalues the whole trade, undermining standard rates, which generally haven't risen in decades. I see the issues as separate: professional writers deserve professional wages. Beginners deserve the opportunity to experiment and expand. An editor willing to work with less polished prose deserves a discounted rate. Just don't underbid colleagues struggling to survive: give work away to worthy nonprofits or new, struggling outlets, not multinational corporations cheaping the editorial budget.

A book's my dream: bring it on!

Book deals are a logical leap for many bloggers: after all, love of expression brought most of us here. And nothing says prestige like perfect-bound dead-trees on a shelf... though perhaps e-readers and e-paper will successfully shift the medium into pixels.

Week one, we discussed some bloggers who made the leap, like novelist Rebecca Agiewich, as well as some who cross-pollinate cheerfully like career-expert Michelle Goodman. As she noted:

Those of us who value eating have adapted, branching into online markets, magazine work, trade publications, corporate work, consulting, editing, et cetera. You know, diversify or starve.

Although I got my 9-to-5 start in newspapers, I’ve never been more than a sporadic contributor since going freelance in 1992. In the intervening years, I’ve hopped from freelancing for the book publishing biz to dotcoms and the corporate tech sector, back to magazines and newspapers and books, and lately, over to web news media — though to stay afloat, I still do some of each.

Yet still, she wants to work in publishing. "As an aside, it’s my firm believe that most people do. I mean, when was the last time you met a person who didn’t tell they wanted to write a book? When every last one of us is reading a Kindle or whatever the next space tablet is, wannabe writers and life coaches will still be saying they hope to see their name in print someday."

Two routes typically lead to book goodness: gather up all your samples, proven audience (reader stats and demographics) and draft a 30-to-50-page proposal. This could net you an agent, though some insist that's harder than actually selling a manuscript. And your agent, or potential publishers, may well have some strong views on how to revise that massive document you've slaved over. The process is big fun.

But it could land you a book deal. And then you'd be eligible for a Blooker award, the first prize for literature based upon online content.

Option two – self-publishing – also makes your volume eligible for a Blooker, provided perfect-bound hard copies exist (the contest doesn't accept e-books). This route's increasingly popular, as businesses like Amazon and Netflick shift smaller quantities of a wider range of products. The term "long tail" describes this phenomenon, coined by Chris Anderson in an October 2004 Wired magazine article. "Unlimited selection is revealing truths about what consumers want and how they want to get it in service after service, from DVDs at Netflix to music videos on Yahoo! Launch to songs in the iTunes Music Store and Rhapsody," he wrote. "People are going deep into the catalog, down the long, long list of available titles, far past what's available at Blockbuster Video, Tower Records, and Barnes & Noble. And the more they find, the more they like. As they wander further from the beaten path, they discover their taste is not as mainstream as they thought (or as they had been led to believe by marketing, a lack of alternatives, and a hit-driven culture)."

Thus DIY publishing – once dismissed as "vanity press" – is gaining fresh vitality.

I'll make my own book, thanks!


First, understand the difference between self-publishing with companies like Lulu versus print-on-demand ones like Blog2Print and Blurb, which can "slurp" a blog into a design template.

Blogger Marie Javins scored a traditional book deal – Stalking the Wild Dik-Dik – but still experiments with DIY options to chronicle recent entries. She reports: "It slurped just fine but if you want to make any photos decent resolution (300 dpi for paper), then you have to replace the blog ones and that takes time and effort. So my slurp is still sitting on my computer, where it has for a few years. I take it out once in a while and work on it, but the software is buggy and slow and I lose interest quickly."

Javins – who has professional graphic-design expertise – concludes: "I think the better choice might be to sort out how you can use InDesign with the blog slurp."

Before you agree to $99–900 worth of fees, look into:
* Up-front costs?
* Royalties?
* Setup fees?
* Who holds the ISSN?
* Minimum orders?
* Storage expenses?
* Cost breakdowns per unit?
* Reprint rights?
* Quality of work?
* Ease/difficulty of production?
* Site security?
* Customer service?
* Shipping costs?
* Distribution networks?

Learn more via The Northwest Independent Editors Guild meeting notes on Self Publishing, Book Publishers NW and classes by Sheryn Hara.

Make every word a thing of joy forever

Wherever your blog leads you, remember you are not a budgie preening in a mirror. You are part of a community, a conversation and the greatest information revolution since Gutenberg. Self-expression is admirable, absolutely, but your obligation is also to the reader: to inform, to entertain – or both.

We no longer have a bunch of suits answering to stockholders in control of our media diet. For every shakeup and mourned newspaper, we've been rewarded with fresh, strong voices in a more meritocratic realm.

As Joshua Benton pointed out at Neimanlab; The barriers to entry have tumbled; some of the most popular news sources online didn’t exist two years ago. Things that used to be an advantage — like huge investments sunk in things like printing presses and buildings and circulation departments — are now an albatross. Those three smart guys of FiveThirtyEight can draw a bigger and more engaged audience than a newsroom of hundreds.

An animated vision of the future from Casaleggio Associati:

 

Conferences and workshops for bloggers

As your writing career progresses, consider attending conferences and seminars. Poynter is highly renowned for media training. The Florida-based institute offers a backpack journalism workshop, yet hasn't embraced bloggers fully. The institute also hosts regional National Writers Workshops around America. These $85, two-day seminars emphasize narrative and are hands-down the best bang for your buck.

As media converges, consider mingling with the mainstream reporters. The Society of Professional Journalists hosts a yearly meeting, as well as awards, open to members. Its informal pub mixers are an excellent place to network, as are Mediabistro cocktail parties in major cities.

The Blog World Expo remains the largest trade show, meeting each autumn in the States. Keep an eye on indie web trends at SXSW and social media at SobCon. Subgenre conferences are springing up now like Foodbuzz Blogger Festival and the Travel Blogger Exchange, even Wine Bloggers symposia. Blogher celebrates all things geek chic and chick each July in Chicago. Others to consider include Wordcamp for WordPressers and the Successful and Outstanding Bloggers Conference.

Sorry these options are so US-centric, but, um, that's the way the cookie's crumbling at the moment. As Neal Stephenson jokes in his awesome novel Snow Crash, Americans still do four things better than anyone: music, movies, microcode and pizza delivery...