E-Courses for Writers

Oct1

Wednesday Fun Contest: How Renegade Are You (Not)?

Renegade writers know that some rules are made to be broken — but not all. One page query rule: Break it. Don’t send queries written in crayon on bar napkins: Keep it.

What writing/freelancing rule have you discovered it’s better not to break? Did you try breaking a rule and it backfired on you, or was it a rule you instinctually knew to keep?

Post your experiences in the Comments section below. The best response will win a free copy of TextExpander, a Mac program that lets you use customized abbreviations for your frequently-used text strings and images. I’ve saved hours and hours of typing thanks to this neat tool.

Comments must be posted by 5 pm ET on Friday, October 3 to be eligible for the contest. [lf]


13 Responses to “Wednesday Fun Contest: How Renegade Are You (Not)?”

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  1. Get a Gravatar!

    Marian collins

    Said this on October 1st, 2008 at 10:35am:

    This is a writing thing that some will debate. I’ve promised myself to never start a sentence with “And” or “But” even though it’s now considered acceptable. I just can’t do it when sometimes, I even want to.

  2. Get a Gravatar!

    Marijke

    Said this on October 1st, 2008 at 10:46am:

    Interesting question.

    I was told a long time ago not to bother people with freelance offers if they were advertising to fill a full-time position. I’ve broken this ‘rule’ many times because I learned that sometimes the employers would be happy to use a freelancer until they fill the position or they need freelancers in addition to the position they are advertising for.

    I’ve only once, very recently, received a nasty reply from the advertising person. I figure that if they don’t want it, they’ll just toss it. It’s gotten me a few short-term gigs.

    Marijke
    http://www.helpmyhurt.com
    http://www.wombwithin.com

  3. Get a Gravatar!

    Star

    Said this on October 1st, 2008 at 1:04pm:

    Drat-wish I had known the crayon thing sooner! I break one rule pretty often–I send breezy
    queries with a few teasers–not some big long outline, list of intended sources, etc. I used to do the latter, but when these were shot down, I had lost a lot of time. Some editors like this, some (cough, Edutopia, cough) don’t. But if they like one of say, three, I respond in hours with more detail–keep the ball rolling.

  4. Get a Gravatar!

    LindaFormichelli

    Said this on October 1st, 2008 at 1:21pm:

    Guys, don’t forget that the contest is on rules you would NOT break!

  5. Get a Gravatar!

    Cathleen McCarthy

    Said this on October 1st, 2008 at 2:41pm:

    (Why is it so much easier for us to think of rules we WOULD break? I guess we’re all renegades at heart.)

    OK, one rule I would not break: missing a deadline *without sufficient notice.* (I don’t think there’s anything wrong with asking for an extension, as long as you ask far enough in advance that the editor can say “no.”)

    I also try desperately to avoid using my personal life as an excuse for screwing up. I was late with revisions on a story last year because I was awaiting results of a biopsy and my brain was frozen with panic. I STILL regret mentioning that (I just said “medical issue”) to my editor. My feeling is that everybody has their stuff but if you make a promise, you should honor it. That’s the essence of being a pro, IMO.

    Cathleen

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    Marijke

    Said this on October 1st, 2008 at 2:46pm:

    oops, I may write well, I don’t always read well!!! ;-)

    Ok, one rule I’d never break is “research your target.” I always put something in my LOI that indicates that I know what the company does so they don’t think I just pulled the name out of hat. It’s more than putting the person’s name, it’s identifying something the company has done or does, stuff like that.

  7. Get a Gravatar!

    Jen A. Miller

    Said this on October 1st, 2008 at 3:27pm:

    Do. Not. Miss. Deadline.

    Ever. Ever ever.

  8. Get a Gravatar!

    Sarah

    Said this on October 1st, 2008 at 5:33pm:

    Do not query a national magazine when you do not have clips.

  9. Get a Gravatar!

    Alyson

    Said this on October 1st, 2008 at 8:13pm:

    Know your market: it’s fine to send an article on chicken keeping to ‘earth mother, eco families magazine’ but not to ‘eco-political, enviro-hyper-conciousness magazine’…sometimes the differences between the two are subtle, but they are very important.

  10. Get a Gravatar!

    Susan

    Said this on October 1st, 2008 at 9:11pm:

    Read many, many back issues. I usually do, or at least put in keywords to see if they’ve covered it in their archives. But once I pitched an article and they were currently running the same idea. It was on the stands and the editor called me out on it and sent me a not very friendly note about it.

  11. Get a Gravatar!

    Erik Sherman

    Said this on October 2nd, 2008 at 11:55am:

    Send the invoice with the article. If they got one, they got the other and you don’t have to remember to send it later.

  12. Get a Gravatar!

    Creative Link Love and Blasting Writer’s Block - Quiet Rebel Writer

    Said this on October 3rd, 2008 at 9:17am:

    [...] How Renegade Are You? at The Renegade Writer [...]

  13. Get a Gravatar!

    The Renegade Writer Blog » Blog Archive » Winner of the Wednesday Fun Contest

    Said this on October 4th, 2008 at 10:23am:

    [...] past Wednesday we ran a contest called How Renegade Are You (Not)? about which writing rule you would never break. Thanks to everyone who [...]


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