My guest post today is from Writers Relief and perfectly fits today’s word – Pander – definition: to provide gratification or satisfaction for another’s desires. In other words making our submission ‘hit all the right buttons’ for a publisher or agent.
5 Tips For Making Quality Submissions
Whether you’re new to the writing biz or a seasoned veteran, there’s no escaping the fact that your work is going to get rejected at some point by someone—or perhaps many someones.
The fact is, you can’t control whether or not a literary agent or editor accepts your work. What you can control is the quality of the work in question and how you go about sending it out. Hone your craft and submit great writing that will make it just a little bit harder for people to say no.
Here are a few tips on how to make quality submissions and turn those rejections into acceptances:
1. Write, write, and write some more.
As writers, most of us are emotionally attached to what we’ve created. It’s easy to fall in love with one particular piece and become…well, a little obsessed with trying to get it published. But you’ll quickly run out of places to submit to if you send out the same work over and over again.
If you’ve exhausted your markets with no results for a particular piece, set it aside and try sending a few other pieces out—one of them might surprise you.
2. Practice makes perfect.
Contrary to what many believe, no one is born a perfect writer. Your writing ability is like a knife—sharpen it!
The more techniques you try and the more risks you allow yourself to take with your writing, the better you’ll be able to gauge your own strengths and weaknesses.
Once you know that, you’ll be able to assess what’s worth spending your time on and what’s worth putting aside so you can grow.
3. Format and proofread everything.
Make sure it’s PERFECT! The importance of this step cannot be stressed enough.
Editors and agents have always been inundated with hundreds of submissions a day. The convenience of electronic submissions has raised that number into the thousands, so tossing submissions that are obviously sloppy into the slush pile is often an editor’s or agent’s first line of defense against a tidal wave of paperwork.
Get your hands on a grammar book and befriend your spell-checker ASAP!
Of course, if proofreading isn’t your forte, Writer’s Relief’s proofreaders can help.
4. Do your research.
Why spend hours making submissions to journals or literary agencies that aren’t even interested in your particular kind of work in the first place?
Don’t send your work out willy-nilly. Be logical about it. As you come across journals to which you’d like to submit your short prose or poetry, take a moment to read their submission guidelines and read some of the writing they’ve already published.
If you’re querying agents, pay attention to what they ask for in a query packet and scope out what kinds of books they tend to represent. You wouldn’t send a novel about drug addicts to an agent specializing in romance, would you?
There will be a much higher chance of your work actually getting looked at if it’s appropriate for each market, which will ultimately help your work find a home.
(By the way, if you don’t feel like doing all of the research work on your own, or if you’d rather spend your limited free time writing, let Writer’s Relief help you with that. We’ve been helping writers successfully connect with agents and editors since 1994.)
And remember…
5. Don’t let it get to you.
It’s easy to feel downtrodden by the entire submission process, especially if you’re a new writer. Having your work rejected by a number of agents or editors doesn’t mean that they absolutely hated it and/or you. Literary agents and editors aren’t cackling with delight as they send out rejections to hundreds of authors—they’re just trying to find the most appropriate works for publication, and they have nothing against you.
So keep at it. If your writing is in the best shape it can possibly be, and if you’re making responsible, well-researched submissions, your day will come soon enough!
And if any of the above sounds daunting, remember that Writer’s Relief offers assistance in all aspects of the submission process. Our submission strategists are ready to help you stay encouraged and get your writing published!
April 21, 2013 at 11:21 pm
Great tips, especially #5!
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April 22, 2013 at 6:27 am
Glad you liked them
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March 4, 2013 at 10:03 pm
Useful tips and great variety. Nice blog.
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March 4, 2013 at 10:54 pm
Thank you
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March 4, 2013 at 6:16 pm
Thanks for following my blog, Mandy. Enjoyed reading yours.
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March 4, 2013 at 7:32 pm
Thank you for returning the follow.
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March 4, 2013 at 7:54 pm
My pleasure! I look forward to reading your thoughts! 🙂
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March 1, 2013 at 12:42 am
Great tips Mandy! 🙂
Xx
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February 27, 2013 at 6:49 am
I like the comment that writing is like a knife and needs sharpening! A great analogy!
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February 27, 2013 at 6:51 am
Glad you like it & thanks for popping over here.
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