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How
To Write List Articles Every Editor Will Love
Copyright
Beth Morrow
- All
Rights Reserved
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Outlining, drafting, revising…markets, queries and clips. The process of
creating an article for publication is a long one, subject to as many changes as
the day has minutes. Regardless of how you get those ideas onto paper, one
perpetual gate keeper holds the key to your seeing your work and byline: the
editor.
Ask ten editors what they’re looking for in a
list article and you’ll get ten very different responses based on the
readerships they serve. While their topics needs are specific to their audience,
the elements of a successful list article bridge publications. Read on to
discover three valuable secrets to help get your list articles into print from
the editors themselves.
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Fresh, new spins on old
standbys.
Editors are eternally in search of
a new angle on an old yet reader-favorite topic. “An excellent list article
gives a new twist to a common theme,” says Gregory Kompes, editor of the writing
ezine at FabulistFlash.com. “The list expands the possibilities for that idea,
yet stays on one basic concept.” C. Hope Clark, editor of several writing
newsletters at FundsForWriters.com, agrees. “What separates an excellent list
article from an average one is that the list is unusual to begin with. When
these items are aha! items that have not been done a million times, it makes for
an interesting read.” Clark also adds that “Novelty is important. [Good writers]
deliver a list with attitude, humor and a strong voice to make age-old, sage
advice sound fresh.”
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Tailor the length, tone,
verbiage and purpose of your article to reflect the publication.
Beth Erickson, editor of the
freelancer-focused Writing, Etc. at FilbertPublishing.com notes, “An excellent
list article targets our audience. I know, standard advice. But the majority of
queries do not fit this agenda. If you even remotely research the audience a
publication caters to, you’ll fly far ahead of any competition you may face.”
According to Cheryl Wright, editor of the Writer2Writer.com ezine, “One reason
for rejecting articles is that the writer doesn’t understand the subject matter
covered by my ezine.” Remember: editors are filters for the reader. Please them
and you’ll please the audience.
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Be the professional
writer they won’t forget.
“I genuinely appreciate
professionalism. I love enthusiasm. Send me a professional, enthusiastic writer
who knows my audience and you’ll find a very happy editor.” shares Erickson.
Monica Poling, editor of the
Writing Sparks newsletter from OnceWritten.com, mirrors Erickson’s sentiment. “I
automatically delete email without the sender’s name in the body of the email.
If the writer doesn’t realize they’re sending a business letter when querying me
I can’t be sure they understand other business practices.”
Regardless of the audience they
serve, editors want to work with writers who give the readers what they’ve come
to expect. “Make an editor’s life easier,” says Beth Erickson, “and you’ll have
a good shot at a long-term working relationship.”
About the
author:
Beth Morrow is a freelance writer who lives for
writing—and reading—list articles. Currently at work on final edits for a
business book, she hosts a daily blog for writers at
www.writer-in-progress.blogspot.com Visit her on the web at:
www.bethmorrow.com
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