Welcome!

Debbie Ridpath Ohi reads, writes and illustrates for young people.

**PLEASE PARDON THE CONSTRUCTION DUST. My website is in the process of being completely revamped, and my brand new site will be unveiled later in 2021! Stay tuned! ** 

Every once in a while, Debbie shares new art, writing and resources; subscribe below. Browse the archives here.

Instagram Twitter Facebook Youtube
My other social media.

Search DebbieOhi.com

You can also Search Inkygirl.com.

Current Projects

 

 

Search Blatherings

Use this search field to search Blatherings archives, or go back to the Main Blatherings page.

***Please note: You are browsing Debbie's personal blog. For her kidlit/YA writing & illustrating blog, see Inkygirl.com.

You can browse by date or entry title in my Blatherings archives here:

 1997 - 1998 - 1999 - 2000 - 2001 - 2002 - 2003 - 2004 - 2005 - 2006 2007 - 2008 - 2009 - 2010+ (current archives)

Login
I'm Bored Bonus Page
Downloads
« watercolours | Main | doctor »
Friday
Jan182002

marketing day

Ruth and me about 15 years ago


It was Marketing/Administration day yesterday (Marketing Day, calloo, callay...). I got the "once-a-week catch-up on finances and market research/query day" idea from an excellent article that author Kathryn Lay wrote for Inklings a while back. Entered and reconciled receipts in Quicken, did some market research, crafted and then sent out four electronic queries. Within a few hours, two magazines wrote back and said they wanted to see the articles, woohoo! I love the Internet.

Woohoo for now, anyway...in my fantasy writers' life I had imagined having dozens of queries circulating at a time. I guess (even in my fantasy) I didn't expect them to actually start saying "yes". :-) One even wrote back saying that yes, they'd like to see the article, but also added that I had a great query.

Highly encouraging, especially considering that I got pretty much zero response when I tried dipping my toe into the realm of magazine writing years ago, so was discouraged. I think the difference now is that I've had more nonfiction writing and editing experience, even if not all of it generated direct income (e.g. I wasn't paid directly for anything I wrote for my own publication :-)).

Which leads me to conclude that there's a lot to be said for just focussing on writing in the beginning of a freelance writing career, rather than just writing for income. The latter is a necessity, of course, if one wants to become a fulltime freelancer but as with any profession, there has to be a "training" period; in freelance writing, this would be a time where you concentrate on improving your writing and writing habits.

I'm spending a lot of time picking markets I know I could write for and writing queries tailored exactly for that market. I remember how much I hated getting sloppy queries as editor of Inkspot, where it was pretty obvious that the writer hadn't spent much time on the proposal and was likely sending off a hundred similar queries to any other electronic publications he/she could find.

If anyone else is interested in freelance writing for magazines, by the way, I highly recommend Moira Allen's The Writer's Guide To Queries, Pitches & Proposals.

I'm willing to take on some non-paying assignments to help build up my clippings file, but want to focus mostly on paying markets. Right now I have three articles to write (for pay) and four queries still circulating. My goal is to send out three new queries a week.

Meanwhile, I'm not forgetting about my true passion, my children's writing! :-) I'm staying on schedule with that so far, still plan to have two books completed by the end of the year. I do find it's still hard to switch mental writing gears when I go from my fiction writing to nonfiction, and vice versa. Any other writers out there who have a similar experience? I still haven't decided whether it's better to split each day between fiction and nonfiction, or divide days in the week (Monday is novel-writing, Tuesday is magazine-writing, etc.).

I'm still figuring this out as I go along; wish me luck. :-)

Blatherpics

Ruth and me, at Reid's cottage during a get-together of our university friends about 15 years ago (I'm on the left, Ruth's on the right). My hair was a LOT longer back then. :-)

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.
Editor Permission Required
You must have editing permission for this entry in order to post comments.