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Jewish World Review March 7, 2006 / 7 Adar, 5766
Making a living as a writer
By Marty Nemko
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http://www.JewishWorldReview.com |
The James Frey fiasco is just the latest tarnish on writers' credibility. Recall, for example, Doris Kearns Goodwin's plagiarism, New York Times reporter Jayson Blair's faked interviews, and 60 Minutes' Mary Mapes' false attacks on George Bush.
Should you be a professional writer?
2. Are you an endless source of story ideas?
3. The most valid evidence of your professional potential is not praise from friends or even teachers, but to ask yourself "How easy has it been, so far, to get people to pay you for your writing?"
4. Will you be willing to spend at least ten hours a week marketing your work, during which time, you'll probably, usually get ignored, rejected, or receive offers to write for near minimum wage, if not for free?
5. Are you willing to do business writing: newsletters, business reports, press releases, brochures, catalogs, annual reports, copy for e-commerce sites, and so on? Business writing is the most likely to be remunerative.
Top Ten Ways to Get Paid to Write
Yet the call to make a living as a writer remains loud for many of us. But should you try to make a go of it?
This self-assessment may help. The more yeses, the more optimistic you are justified in being:
1. Are you likely to be willing and able to create at least 200 words of professional-quality prose per hour, at least 15 hours a week, year in and year out?
Still want to take a shot at being a professional writer? Here are ways to maximize your chances of success: Most are derived from The Freelance Writer's Bible by David Trottier:
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Click HERE to purchase it at a discount. (Sales help fund JWR.).
A word about book writing. The odds are at least 1,000:1 against a first-time, non-celebrity novelist earning as much per hour from their novels as they could from flipping burgers at McDonald's. The odds are even worse for children's book authors and, of course, for poets. The Poet Laureate of the United States, Ted Kooser, in an NPR interview, asserted that it is impossible to make a living from poetry. I've even soured on how-to books, which is the most likely route to making money in book writing. Although I have had five how-to books published, which have sold over 200,000 copies, I don't plan to write any more books nor do I recommend you do unless you're a celebrity and/or have a major national platform: for example, you're a columnist in the U.S. News and World Report magazine. Today, ever more people get their information free, just-in-time, in bite-sized pieces on the Internet. And if they want a book and are willing to forego the public library, Amazon.com sells used copies at a deep discount. The author doesn't make a dime on any used book sales.
Writers, of course, know that their income potential is minimal, but many of them, perhaps wisely, prefer the writer's life poor than the straight life rich.
For more on how to make a living as a writer, see www.writersdigest.com and www.mediabistro.com.