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'10 Authors Insider Tips
Cooking Up A Storey by Donna George Storey Have More Good Sex I Can Do Better ... Trying to Get the Feeling Plotting and Planning Character Profiles Discovery Draft Be Bad to Be Good E-Book Revolution Naked for Halloween Sex With Pilgrims FictionCraft by Louisa Burton The Music of Words The Balancing Act Your Fictional World Backstory & Foreshadowing The Fine Art of Submission by Shanna Germain Nailing the Query Letter Banish the Boring Bio Becoming a Market Master Become a Market Master, 2 Backstory & Foreshadowing Enticing An Editor, Part 1 Enticing An Editor, Part 2 Contracts, Money & More Serious about Smut by Vincent Diamond No More Horsing Around Short Stuff Selling Short Stories Editors' Pet Peeves Settings: Beyond Time & Place Beating Up Your Scenes Selling Your Books in Person Staying in the Saddle The Write Stuff by Ashley Lister Broken Rainbows Talk the Talk Equations 10 Commandments for Writing Plotting to Avoid Cover Story Rewriting '10 Smutters Lounge Ashley Lister Submits by Ashley Lister St Valentine's Day Renaming Body Parts Sex, Cigarettes & Erotic Fiction Between the Lines with Ashley Lister C. Sanchez-Garcia Emerald Kathleen Bradean Lucy Felthouse Neve Black PS Haven Tracey Shellito Tresart L. Sioux Cracking Foxy with Robert Buckley Plenty of Miles Left Don't Worry, Be Happy Fly the Unfriendly Skies Coffee Time Castrated Words Virtual vs. Actual Romance Bait The View from Gallows Hill Get All Worked Up with J.T. Benjamin The Fashion Industry The Same Old Same Old Writing Porn About the Closet ... About Spirituality Making Sense of Religion Worked Up About Monogamy What's Next All Worked Up About Nature Still All Worked Up... Sex Is All Metaphors by Jean Roberta Holiday Ghosts Love and Romance An "Interracial" Epic Trying to Make It Go Away Sexual Etiquette Sex and Children People Against Bad Things Virtual Acceptance His Cold Eyes, His Granite Jaw A Flash of Northern Light |
The Fine Art of Submission:How to Properly & Professionally Prepare,
Did you ever get the feeling that you're watching market deadlines whiz by as you're trying to finish up your stories? Or that you're always a step behind when it comes to sending stuff off? Wouldn't it be awesome if you could just hire someone to take care of all the marketing crap so you could focus on writing your next hot story? In lieu of that, why not set up a simple system to keep track of potential markets? Not only will it ensure you never miss a deadline, it will keep your submission time to a minimum while allowing you to focus more time on your writing. There are any number ways to keep yourself on track with the publications you want to submit to. I have one friend who prints everything out and keeps the markets in a big stack on her desk, the most recent on top. That system would make me go triple-insane, but it seems to work for her. I'm a technology whore, so I tend to do everything possible on my laptop. Either way, a good system—whether it's on paper or computer—just needs a few basic elements. 1. A Schedule. Start by making yourself a to-do item on your task list (Segue: you DO have some kind of organized task list for your writing, right? If not, I encourage you to find one, make one or steal one, ideally as soon as possible. Right now is good. I'll wait. Want a hint? Paper works if you aren't attached at the hip to your computer or phone. If you are attached, try a free task list option like Remember the Milk, Toodledo... there are a lot of them out there. Find one you like and use it.). Okay, now back to your regularly scheduled market news. So, make yourself a reoccurring to-do that says something like "Check Markets" and make it so that it will remind you when it comes due. Mine pings me on the first of the month via email so that I don't forget. 2. A Bookmark System. Have all of the market lists that you like bookmarked into a single folder called Markets or some such. On the day that you are pinged about checking your markets, go and do that. Check every market listing, and pull out any of them that appeal to you or that you might want to submit to or that you even think are interesting. Now, this is important: It doesn't matter how far away the due date is, or whether it's something you really will submit to, or whether you think you have a chance at all of getting accepted. If it's something that piques your interest, pull it out. The reason for this is you just never know what you're going to write, or how your tastes might change. 3. A Way to Keep Track. The next step is having some place to put all of those markets of interest. Otherwise, you're just going to pull them out and watch them disappear into the nether, or into a folder, or wherever it is that markets go to die. One option is to print them out. Another is to cut and paste the market info into your to-do list. My option of choice is to put them into a note-capture program. Here's the system that I personally use: 1. I use a free note-capture program called Evernote, which keeps track of my notes both on my laptop and on the web. Evernote (and many other programs) have an awesome feature that allows me to put a "clip it" button on my browser, so that every time I see a market that interests me, I just "clip it" right into Evernote's inbox. The clipping includes the entire market listing, including all relevant emails, guidelines and deadlines. 2. When I've gone through all the market listings and clipped everything that I found interesting, I go into Evernote's inbox, and I change every market title to read like this: Deadline Title. So, for an anthology about Male Nurses due on September 5th, 2010, it would read: 0915 Male Nurses. If it doesn't have a deadline, I just put the title in the subject line. 3. I then give every market a couple of tags. My tags are pretty general, and they include sexual orientation (hetero, gay, lesbian, bi, etc), slant (fantasy, cowboys, medical, etc), and length (short, novella, novel). Yes, this is time consuming and a pain in the butt. But later, when I finish a short story about two pretty boy angels getting it on, all I have to do is search for "fantasy" and "gay" and it will show me all the markets tagged with those terms. 4. Once that's done, I move the market into one of four folders: This Month (for things due on the next 30 days), This Year (self explanatory), 2011 (also self explanatory), Undated (Markets that don't have deadlines). I always have a folder that's at least a year out, because then I can throw any annual markets into the next year after this year's deadline passes, with a note to myself to check for new guidelines. 5. The markets are automatically set to sort by title, which means that every time I open a folder, I get a list of what's due from sooner to later (this is why it's important to use the dual-number system of months, like 04 for April, because otherwise it won't sort correctly). 6. At the beginning of every week, I look at the month's worth of upcoming markets and ask myself what I'm most interested in, what deadlines I'm mostly likely to actually hit, and if I have any reprints or rejected stories that I'd like to resubmit to any of them. Right now, my This Month folder has 22 markets in it. Obviously, there's no way I'm going to hit them all, but having them all in front of me helps me whittle them down into a doable list. This also means that I don't accidentally miss a deadline. 7. When I'm done with a market (meaning I've either submitted to it or realized I'm not going to be able to submit to it), I put it in a folder called Done-[Year], and I add a tag of Submitted or NotSubmitted. I don't trash them, because you never know when a deadline might get extended or when you'll need to double-check some information on an old market. Okay, that was a pretty complicated explanation for a really easy process. Don't let it fool you thoughonce you have a system down, and you do it regularly, you'll never miss a market again. The trick to it is finding a system that works for you. If you're a paper person, use paper. If you're a computer geek, use that. The key point is to find a system that is intuitive and easy, so that you will actually use it to get your work out into the world. Next month, part two of mastering the markets: All the tips and tricks you need for keeping track of what you sent, when you sent it and who you sent it to. Not to mention how much they owe you and when you can expect to get paid. SIDEBAR: ONLINE MARKETS There are a number of online market resources for erotica writers, not the least of which is ERWA. The ones that I use most often include:
Shanna Germain
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Copyright © 1996 and on, Erotica Readers Association, Inc. |
'10 Book Reviews
Anthologies Apocalypse Sex Review by Ashley Lister Bare Souls Review by Ashley Lister Best Women's Erotica 2010 Review by Jean Roberta can’t help the way that i feel Review by Ashley Lister Coming Together...C. Sanchez-Garcia Review by Ashley Lister Coming Together...M Christian Review by Kathleen Bradean Coming Together...Remittance Girl Review by Kathleen Bradean Erotic Brits Review by Lisabet Sarai Fairy Tale Lust Review by Lisabet Sarai Like a God's Kiss Review by Kristina Wright Like a Sacred Desire Review by Lisabet Sarai Like a Veil Review by Lisabet Sarai Making the Hook-Up Review by Ashley Lister Orgasmic Review by Kristina Wright Peep Show Review by Kristina Wright Please, Ma'am Review by Ashley Lister Spark My Moment Review by Ashley Lister Three In One Blow Review by Shanna Germain Unleashed Review by Ashley Lister Erotic Novels Backstage Passes Review by Kathleen Bradean Dommemoir Review by Ashley Lister Fire in the Blood Review by Jean Roberta Freak Parade Review by Jean Roberta I Came Up Stairs Review by Jean Roberta Marianne! A Journey... Review by Lisabet Sarai The Marketplace Review by Lisabet Sarai The Memorial Garden Review by Lisabet Sarai On Demand Review by Ashley Lister Once Bitten Review by Shanna Germain Rock My Socks Off Review by Ashley Lister The Tower and the Tears Review by Lynne Connolly Sensual Romance Coin Operated Review by Lynne Connolly Control Review by Lynne Connolly I Spy a Wicked Sin Review by Harriet Klausner Libertine's Kiss Review by Lynne Connolly The Master & the Muses Review by Lynne Connolly Naked Review by Lynne Connolly Rampant Review by Lynne Connolly Sinful Review by Lynne Connolly Tangled Web (MM Romance) Review by Vincent Diamond Tucker's Sin Review by Lynne Connolly Victor Review by Harriet Klausner Gay Erotica Best Gay Erotica '10 Review by Vincent Diamond Best Gay Romance 2010 Review by Vincent Diamond Biker Boys Review by Jay Lygon Necessary Madness Review by Kathleen Bradean Personal Demons Review by Lisabet Sarai The Royal Treatment Review by Kathleen Bradean Silver Foxes Review by Vincent Diamond Sodomy! Review by Jay Lygon Special Forces Review by Vincent Diamond A Sticky End Review by Jean Roberta Wired Hard 4 Review by Lisabet Sarai Lesbian Erotica Best Lesbian Roamnce 2010 Review by Jean Roberta Fast Girls Review by Ashley Lister Girl Crush Review by Jean Roberta Sometimes She Lets Me Review by Jean Roberta Non-Fiction Best Sex Writing 2010 Review by Ashley Lister A Brief History of Nakedness Review by Rob Hardy Condom Nation Review by Rob Hardy Dictionary of Semenyms Review by Donna G Storey Doctor of Love Review by Rob Hardy Florida’s Purge of Gay & Lesbian... Review by Rob Hardy John Holmes Review by Rob Hardy How Sex Works Review by Rob Hardy The Orgasm Answer Guide Review by Rob Hardy Screening Sex Review by Rob Hardy Sex at Dawn Review by Rob Hardy Whip Smart Review by Rob Hardy |
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