More Fantastic Advice From Query Challenge Participant Sheila Scarborough

www.inkthinkerblog.com — Back in February, Sheila Scarborough offered some wonderful advice for handling unexpected opportunities. Here’s what she has to say about deadlines, buckling down, and blogging:

I was hired for another blogging job, plus I’m finding that a couple of relationships with editors are paying off with assignment work. They’re starting to ask me to send in ideas, which is a strange feeling, let me tell you.

Here’s this month’s tip for Inkthinker readers — do really great work on a tight deadline, without whining, and you’ll be rewarded. I had one story that I turned in to a magazine in November, was told it would run in March, saw nothing when that month came and so followed up, was told, “whoops, editor wants some changes,” and those changes had to be done in only a few days, during a time when I was already really busy. Believe me, I was SO ANNOYED that they’d had this thing since November and now I had to run around killing myself, but I cheerfully responded.

A big thank you to the folks on the Mediabistro.com forum, who came through with some great ideas when I was stuck for sources. Got it all done, magazine was happy, and next thing I knew they asked me to do another piece. The deadline they gave for the new item was just impossible, given my workload, so I took a deep breath and (very politely) turned down work (!!) Here’s the thing — they came back and asked when I thought I could do the piece, I gave them a workable date and they said OK. Wow, I can negotiate with editors now!

I also want to put in a plug for blogging. I’m working on 4 different blogs right now, 3 of them pay, and the unpaid one most definitely led to the paid ones. I also have a blog post that may be turned into a print magazine article, a complete surprise to me since I’d never even considered pitching it to anyone. Blogging can be a very valuable part of a writer’s portfolio.

Sheila, I couldn’t have said it better myself. Congrats on your ongoing success! You’re positively inspirational — and your advice is dead on. :]

Do you have advice to share with Inkthinker readers? E-mail me!

__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer’s Digest Best Writer’s Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Contents Copyright © 2006-2014 Kristen King

0 comments

2007 Query Challege Success Story #20 (from Kara Williams)

www.inkthinkerblog.com — Received March 31, 2007

Another success story!

I sold a short travel article to the Dallas Morning News! It couldn’t have been a more pleasant process — from initial pitch to publication it was only 3 weeks. I’m thrilled to have landed a travel story (my dream niche) in a prominent Sunday travel newspaper section. Yay!

Here’s the link:
http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/fea/travel/lvca/stories/DN-notebreak_0325tra.ART.State.Edition1.445262c.html

Kara Williams

Way to go, Kara! That’s a great clip!

Do you have a 2007 Inkthinker Query Challenge Success Story? Great! E-mail me!
__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer’s Digest Best Writer’s Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Contents Copyright © 2006-2014 Kristen King

1 comment

2007 Query Challege Success Story #19 (from Tiffani Hill-Patterson)

www.inkthinkerblog.com — Received March 7, 2007

Hi, Kristen,

I’ve had two more queries accepted and a request for ideas! Yea!

Your queries were great. I like the idea of xxxxxx. Would you do 1,500 words for a later issue for X amount?

Also like the idea for August. How about this one at 1,000 words for about X amount?

Let me know – and if you have any ideas for the seniors edition, I welcome them.

I’m beyond excited! These are assignments Nos. 2 and 3 and a possible fourth from the same magazine. Woohoo!

So glad I took your challenge!
Tiffani

Way to go, Tiffani! And I bet you’ve got even more exciting news to report by now. Send me an update and I’ll be sure to post it ASAP!

Do you have a 2007 Inkthinker Query Challenge Success Story? Great! E-mail me!

__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer’s Digest Best Writer’s Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Contents Copyright © 2006-2014 Kristen King

0 comments

Two Queriers Met the Challenge!

www.inkthinkerblog.com

Jessica Mousseau and Susan Johnston have already met the 2007 query challenge, with more than 120 queries each! Who else is going to put me to shame before the end of the year?

And who’s going to win the prize for most queries sent in 2007?

__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer’s Digest Best Writer’s Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Contents Copyright © 2006-2014 Kristen King

1 comment

KK’s New Article Published in Science Editor

www.inkthinkerblog.com — My article “Wiki-what-ia? Approaching Encyclopedia Entries in the Electronic Age” is now live in the May/June issue of Science Editor, the journal of the Council of Science Editors. If you’re a CSE member, you can access it through the issue TOC.

Sneak peek:

With the era of e-communication in full swing, changes are showing up across the board in publishing. Editing and composition tools have morphed into something faster and more technologic, so it only makes sense that research tools would follow suit.

Enter Wikipedia (www.wikipedia.org), a free, collaboratively built online encyclopedia. Wikipedia, which was started in 2001, had nearly 1.5 million entries in English alone as of this writing and articles available in more than 100 languages.

Anyone with Internet access can edit, correct, or create entries, and more than 65,000 people around the world do so actively. Because of its wide content base and ready availability, Wikipedia is gaining speed as a resource for students and researchers. But does the communal, everyman approach to its writing make it a stronger source for information, or a weaker one?

And those of you who are CSE members, I’ll see you at the conference in Austin this weekend!

__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer’s Digest Best Writer’s Website Contest

Contents © Copyright 2007 Kristen King. All rights reserved.

Contents Copyright © 2006-2014 Kristen King

6 comments