Articles
SEASONıS GREETINGS:
Making the most of those treasured holiday moments, six
months in advance!
By Rusty Fischer
The editor of The Buzz On series reveals how your holiday material can earn
you extra bucks for the holidays, as long as youıre organized!
Ah, the holidays. Whether itıs mistletoe or jack-o-lanterns, Easter eggs or
fireworks, holiday memories, crafts, ideas, recipes and how-to articles are
a staple of most periodicalsı, newspapersı, Web sitesı, publishersı and book
packagersı yearly word count. But how do you cash in on this underrated
source of extra writing income? Simple:
Plan Ahead
First of all, a warning: Donıt expect to get rich writing for the holidays.
Not right away, anyway. While Charles Dickens and Washington Irving are
well-known for their holiday works, it might take you awhile to get the hang
of each and every potential marketıs picky style and tone. Still, if you
stick with it and make submitting holiday material a yearly tradition, your
backlog of published holiday clips, not to mention cashed holiday checks,
will continue to grow, well, like a bowl full of jelly!
The first step is to begin writing! Many freelancers simply see the holidays
as a frustrating time when their e-mails go unanswered and snail mail goes
undelivered because of unnecessary days off! The trick is to get in the
spirit and enjoy the holidays as a time of inspiration and creativity.
Naturally, unless you want to wait a whole year before submitting your work,
you need to anticipate how giddy and fun the upcoming holiday will be, in
order for you to write about it the necessary six to twelve weeks in which
publishers need it in advance!
To do this, drag out your Christmas carols in July or Easter decorations in
October. Sure, your family, friends and neighbors will think youıve lost
your marbles, but if this helps you write a cute holiday poem, short story,
or activity, youıll be the winner in the end.
Calendar Girls (and Guys)
One way to help you organize your writing for the holidays is to invest in
several cheap, dollar store calendars, such as the cheesy kinds with horsies
and flowers, or perhaps loot the after-Christmas sales for half-off
calendars in the New Year. This way, you know to set yourself some stringent
deadlines for that holiday-related material.
For instance, if that national womenıs magazine needs your Easter story by
August of the previous year, pencil it in on your "periodicals" calendar. If
that new anthology of spooky ghost stories needs your gothic ghost story
well in advance of its planned Halloween publication date, mark it in your
"books" calendar. And so on. While youıre at the dollar store, invest in
some seasonal stickers and use them to accentuate your gentle reminders.
Size DOES Matter!
As far as holidays go, Christmas is the 400-pound gorilla that Secretaryıs
Day and Kwanzaa are afraid of! Everyone has a cute Christmas poem or holiday
meditation to sell, and often magazines and anthologies, greeting card
companies and newspapers have file cabinets full of such seasonal stuff. So,
if your inspirational Christmas stories are falling on deaf ears, do a
little research into lesser-known or unpopular holidays. Certainly, your
clever story about a Christmas treasure hunt can be reworked to be a clever
story about a 4th of July treasure hunt!
Be creative, and donıt always go for the biggest holidays first. Remember,
Motherıs Day, Fatherıs Day, Martin Luther King Day, etc. are all holidays
that deserve to be explored more deeply by ambitious and talented freelance
writers such as yourself. And, while it may be difficult to find "Easter
carols" to inspire you, imagining selling your springtime short story might
just be all the inspiration you need!
Ho Ho Hurry Up!
Writing for the holidays isnıt easy. Finding just the right tone for
seasonal material is often tricky and every market sees the holidays
differently. It can be frustrating when one editor calls your Halloween
story too "fluffy," and another calls the same story too "spooky!" But as
the author of hundreds of published poems, stories, recipes and crafts, many
of which relate to the holidays, I can tell you that the exposure and payoff
can be well worth the fa la la frustration! So who cares if the Christmas
tree is already in the attic and the stockings are folded away neatly for
next year? Get out those Winter Solstice CDs and start writing today!
*****
Rusty Fischer is the author of FREEDOM TO FREELANCE: The Editor of
The Buzz
On Series Reveals How To FIND, GET and KEEP Your Next Freelance
Job,
available for sale as an eBook from
www.athinapublishing.com/fischer.htm.
If you would like to contribute an article please email: karen@author-network.com