[Wamvan] Freelance Journalism tips
Dharra Budicha
dbudicha at sfu.ca
Mon Sep 26 16:35:17 PDT 2011
Bless you Joanna!!! Ah, that's awesome, thanks so much for sharing! Yeah, that course is a bit pricey for me at the moment... but I assumed that was open to UBC students only. Considering I go to SFU... not sure how that's going to work haha! But thank you for the tips, very informative... I'm going to go read them again!
How's Columbia J-school going so far? 'tis my dream school, you know :)
Cheers,
Dharra
----- Original Message -----
From: Joanna Chiu <chiu.joanna5 at gmail.com>
To: wamvan <wamvan at lists.resist.ca>
Sent: Sun, 25 Sep 2011 20:42:40 -0700 (PDT)
Subject: [Wamvan] Freelance Journalism tips
I meant to send this out earlier. They're notes I took from that course on
Freelance Article Writing Level 1 course I mentioned in my last post. Hope
fellow freelancers and aspiring writers on this list find some of this
helpful:
Freelance Journalism Class 1 Notes: INTRO
About freelance writing:
* Freelance journalists should always be on the lookout for new ideas,
but do not take it personally if editors reject their ideas
* Online writing doesn't pay as much as print (about 1/5th tops)
* It's a good time to start a career because the industry is in flux.
New writers can find different niches
* Magazine content is about 80% freelance, editors need to fill pages
* Benefit: 'Get paid to go to school'
Traits of a freelance writer:
* has a natural curiosity
* a reader
* eye for detail
* skeptical, questioning (even of own beliefs)
* fair and balanced
Freelance Writing Process:
1. Think of story idea
2. Develop idea, research
3. Convey idea to editor
4. Write article
Typical Pay and Word Count:
* In Canada, highest pay usually $1/word, in USA, $1.5/word
* Globe and Mail pays .5/word
* Articles used to be longer. Now features usually around 2500, and
front/back of magazines around 200-800
Developing Story Ideas
* Think of different angles on recent news stories
* Read publications in your field of interest
* Trade magazines can give insider information, which you can convey to
the public in a general interest piece
* University websites often have a lot of information on new research
* Use personal experience and friends' experiences
* Develop a strong and focused idea rather than propose a fact or broad
topic
* "I would like to write about x focusing on y"
* Once you have a story idea, think of who you could talk to for further
information
Local publications to look into:
* Globe and Mail (accepts travel writing)
* Georgia Straight
* Vancouver Magazine
Class 2 Notes: INTERVIEWS, STYLE AND EDITING
INTERVIEWS
If interviewees ask to see interview questions beforehand, tell them you
can’t show them the questions, but could tell them the gist of the article
Look for experts: people interviewed in similar articles, company profiles,
google “____association”
Look for people who have written books, articles, research on the topic, ask
friends for contacts
Politicians: pretty easy to contact at municipal level, tough for provincial
or federal (restrictive speaking policies, only Ministers could speak and
often unavailable)
If stuck, could use quotes from other media with credit.
Ex. ___ told the New York Times…
Keep track of contacts in a file (magazines want contact info) as well as
research sources
If you don’t have an assignment yet, let interviewees know it’s an early
stage for a quick interview
STYLE NOTES
1-9: spell out
10 and above: numerals (except if the number starts a sentence)
Apostrophes
1970s and CDs, not 1970’s and CD’s
but ‘70s and ‘80s okay
rock ‘n’ roll (because a and d missing)
____?” says Smith.
It is called the “vuvuzela”, and it’s hugely popular
Don’t use too many square bracket edits, can paraphrase instead
To leave out parts of a quote:
1. “_____,” says Smith, “________.” (but careful not to change meaning)
To leave out specific words:
“The dog bit the man … and it was terrible.” (omitted) (spaces on both
sides)
Use exclamation marks sparingly
“____,” he says excitedly is usually better than including an exclamation
mark
He said it was his “worst moment ever.” (don’t need comma before quote”
Director of Bill Smith says ____
Cm, ft
Use cannot, do not instead of can’t and don’t
Careful of canadian and american spelling
Canadian Oxford Dictionary has all canadian spelling
Americans more picky
Titles of books, movies, etc usually in italics
CD titles usually italics and song titles in quotes (check pub)
Every person should have their say is wrong
Every person should have his or her say
All people should have their say (way to rephrase to make smoother)
“The audience” is singular
The audience members sit in their seats.
For other languages, only italicize if it’s not in common usage
Ex. Don’t need for hors d’oeuvres
General Editing Tips
Check lead
Is the article making any assumptions about what people know?
Covered everything? Anything extraneous? Tangents
Check that tense is consistent
Check name spelling, and employment title
When asking friends for help, best to ask specific questions. Anything
confusing, missing?
RESOURCES
Periodical Writers Association of Canada (PWAC)
Canadian Association of Journalists (CAJ)
Writers’ Union of Canada
Journalism school websites
Research ryerson, carleton, univ. of western ontario
June 29: MARKETING
Even with full rights, a magazine never owns your idea, so you can write
different articles on same topic (Efficient, but can get boring_
When working in same market with competing publications, you need to
disclose stuff that might be of concern to them and say how you would write
piece differently.
Careful of conflicts of interest (if you know an interviewee, careful about
what you say)
Once your piece is accepted, the contract is sent to you either in email
(accept by default) or faxed/scanned
*Queries*: strike a balance between making them perfect and sending them out
Important to take the leap to send queries
Know your customer, editor, readers, what they’re looking for, and writers’
guidelines
Can look at information magazines have available for advertisers
Subscribe to your top choice magazines to get to know the content
Either start with idea, then pitch or think of magazine, then think of
ideas, and pitch stories that would interest them
Keep query simple and to the point
Don’t forget to follow up!
Always pitch again to magazine that you wrote for to become a regular
contributor.
Ideally, editors will offer you work and you won’t have to keep querying.
In your last email to editor, can mention your next idea in the last
paragraph, but you still have to make the idea very compelling. Never get to
stop “selling” ideas.
Specializing vs. generalizing
Being an expert gives you an advantage
However, it limits you to publications that only want certain articles; it’s
hard to be just a specialist
Generalists appeal to broader range of editors
Usually, people are generalists with few different specialties (often
personal interests)
* *
WRITING AS BUSINESS
Home business: important to keep all receipts for things related to writing
(can write off on taxes).
Can write off part of home, heating, car, computer, books, supplies (ask
accountant for help)
Don’t need to register, just fill out self-employed form
Keep track of invoices/income
Don’t write off exaggerated expenses when you’ve made little income, has to
be relative
Writers’ websites helpful, check charles montgomery website, james mackinnon
for examples
Can change an article into book proposal
Tyee a good place to start
Make a goal of one query per week or something like that
Break into doable tasks
Bad to write for: Vancouver View sucks at paying writers
Careful about schemes online
Online, scams “you pay us, we’ll publish…”
Good magazine: http://www.vancouverreview.com/ good, quite smart, literary
writing competitions at legitimate publications okay with entry fees (some
come with subscription)
Writing with a day job very do-able
A lot of research/interview arrangements can be done through email
Workday could be very varied, need to be disciplined, try to schedule days,
block out times, realistic parameters
July 6: Guest Speaker John Ince (Editor at Vancouver Mag)
* *
GENERAL TIPS
Different ways to deliver stories, tell good stories in an interesting way
Look for ideas all day, be aware for things that are
interesting/scary/strange (use own emotions as a clue)
Stories often have central characters (either very representative of topic
or bucks trends. People doing stuff are more interesting than people)
Writers help people understand the world better, and impose a narrative on
the world
QUERY TIPS
Make it clear why you are sending query to particular editor
Be concise and supper accurate, explain why the story is suitable for mag.
Start query with an anecdotal lead
Okay to not tell all the info in the story, but pitch must deliver its
promises
Get a sense of who you’ll talk to
Give either general word count or indicate which section of mag you piece
would fit
Put your contact info again at the end of your letter
For timely stories, you can say that you could finish at a certain time.
Otherwise, editors will give you deadlines
Newspapers: speed is more important
Some pre-interviews are good and you can include quotes from interviews in
query
Show, don’t tell
Can start query or article at the heart of action then backtrack to explain
Don’t need a lot of lead up
Never show interviewees the article before publication. First allegiance to
readers
If the content is unflattering, it’s not libel.
Make sure you keep copies of recordings in case interviewees say that they
didn’t say something.
If story is about people, good to start with the people (ie. Don’t start by
describing the location)
Write as you would speak, read aloud to edit
Strong voice if you write naturally
When sending email queries, paste letter in email, and don’t send as an
attachment.
*QUERY TIPS: (Jennifer Van Evra) *
* *
Don’t mislead people or be meandering
Graph means paragraph
Nutgraph: tells what story is about, gives away the story, should be subtle
Use characters to confirm facts instead of just stating them
Transitions should be invisible between characters’ stories and informative
sections
Stories usually end with summary or look to the future
At end of queries, explain what sets you apart from other writers, and what
may make you particularly qualified to write the story. Editors will expect
you to be an expert on the topic
Your query’s writing should reflect the tone of the publication
Basic Query outline:
1st paragraph: Lead, hook interest
2nd: Spill the beans about what the article’s about
3rd How you will do it, who you will talk to, etc.
By end of query, the editor should have a good sense of what the finished
article will be like, but be careful not to write the article in your query
Suggest title of article
Humour’s usually good
Say whether it will be a short piece, short feature, or full length feature
It’s worth it to contact interviewees in proposal stage, but sometimes,
interviews fall through.
MISC NOTES
To get interview contacts, use friends, facebook, forums, list serves,
google
* *
Vancouver magazine “top stories” profile characters that introduces us to a
bigger world
Most people don’t mind meeting for interviews outside of 9-5 hours
* *
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