Creative Reviews discussion

This topic is about
The Writing Submission Schedule Guide Preview
Author Resources
>
The Writing Submission Schedule Guide Preview: seeking evaluators for a new publishing guide
date
newest »


You finish the (hopefully) last revision on your latest bit of short writing, and get it properly formatted. Now all the fun stops, because you now hav..."
Hey, Josh, not to rain on your parade--and yay, you, for trying to do this massive undertaking--but did you know this has already been done...sort of? There's a super-useful free database and guide to writing markets, how to find them, when to submit, etc. It's called Writing for Dollars and is run by a guy name Dan Case. He's been running it for a bazillion years :) Okay, maybe not a bazillion but a while.
To subscribe to WFD, you just submit your email address and he mails you notices when a new one is out and provides links on where to find the full articles (and links to the searchable database)
If nothing else, you might learn from his "lessons learned" right? Check out Writing for Dollars and see how Dan does things. He's had enormous success but he's not making money off it (he monetizes his web site ;-))
Interestingly enough, his most-recent issue (a "return" to publication after a hiatus) spoke directly to the dilemma of what to do when the summer schedules come to bear and make it seem like no one's buying. Ironically, however, the article talked about how writers are going on summer break and magazines DO still need submissions! haha, pretty funny huh?
-Friday
@phoenicianbooks
p.s. I'll go get your guide and try to look through it and give you feedback. Did you mention a cut off date for feedback? I didn't see it in your post so if you want to say you're taking comments until....in order to actually get your guide released on a schedule, please mention the date :)
p.p.s no awkward hugs; I'm a world-class hugger and if you get a hug, it's not gonna be awkward but I'm a recluse so only the animals who live with me get my superduper hugs ;-)
You finish the (hopefully) last revision on your latest bit of short writing, and get it properly formatted. Now all the fun stops, because you now have to go through the frustrating process of finding a journal, magazine, or contest to submit your writing to. You grab your Writer’s Market, or The Complete and Utter Ignoramus’ Guide to Publishing, or fire up the Newpages website and begin looking for a home for your writing. You browse for a period of time that is always longer than you had intended to browse, and if you’re lucky, perhaps afterward you have found a good candidate to research further.
So you check out their website to read some of their samples, to see if it might be a good match for the work you’re doing. Say you are exceptionally lucky, and find a promising journal on your first try; you get excited, and begin to imagine seeing your name in their print.
Then you check their submission guidelines, and see that they are not accepting submissions at this time.
Maybe they’ll be open in a month or two; maybe you’ll have to check back periodically to determine when they’ll be open for submissions. Either way you are either beginning the market research process all over again, and/or marking your calendar for later when you might choose to submit. Regardless, the process of publishing will always be a detraction from the time you have available to write.
This happened to me at the beginning of this summer, when I polished off some short stories I haven’t found a home for yet, and kept finding that many of the journals I was interested in were off for the summer. I looked online to see if there was a calendar, or schedule of submission periods already available, and found the web lacking. If I wanted an organized, chronological guide to literary journals and their submission schedules, I would have to make one myself.
I had some summer vacation hours to invest, so I got started on my guide. Several hours in two thoughts occurred to me: the first was, “If this guide will be useful to me, it will probably be useful to other writers;” the second was, “Dear Lord there are a lot of literary journals!” Putting these two thoughts together, I conceded that the guide would take more time than I had wanted to invest for it to be comprehensive, but perhaps I could put such a guide up for sale after I had finished, which would make my time worthwhile.
So I present The Writing Submission Schedule Guide Preview, recently self-published as an ebook on Smashwords. The beauty of ebooks on internet connected devices, is that each entry in the guide for a literary journal can contain a hyperlink. For example: In the Table of Contents you can click the current month, and be taken directly to the “chapter” showing what journals are accepting submissions in that month. Clicking on any of the journals’ titles will take you directly to their submission guidelines on their website.
As a preview, the guide ONLY includes Journals that begin with the letters A and B, from July to December 2012. The 2013 Guide, if there is enough interest to warrant it, would include the rest of the alphabet and calendar year.
Essentially I am test-marketing a limited version of my guide to fellow writers, to determine the following:
- Is this guide useful?
- Is it organized well?
- How easy or difficult is the guide to use?
- Would you use it? If so, what do you think would be a fair price to pay for a copy?
- What other information would you like to see included?
- Did you see any journals/magazines/e-zines/contests/etc. that I missed, that I should include?
- Do you see any mistakes I have made (I’m a one-man show here, so I suspect there are a few; another beautiful feature of ebooks is the ease of updating them with corrections/additions).
As a “Thank you” for contributing your constructive comments/suggestions/additions/etc., I will put your name on the Acknowledgements page of the guide, send you a coupon code for a free copy of the comprehensive 2013 Guide (granted there is enough interest to warrant its existence), and give you one of those handshakes that is pulled in for a quick, awkward hug, if I ever get the chance to meet you.
Unconstructive comments/suggestions/additions/etc. will receive rolled eyes and a disappointed shake of my head.
Click here to download a copy of the Writing Submission Schedule Guide Preview:
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view...
Thank you for your time and consideration!
Regards,
Josh Karaczewski