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 Monday, May 04, 2009
Are You Ready to Be a Bestselling Author? Then Listen to Alec Baldwin
Posted by Jane
When I'm feeling stressed at work, I love watching this clip from Glengarry Glen Ross, where Blake (played by Alec Baldwin) walks into a real-estate office on a rainy night to give everyone a little "pep" talk. (Warning: Strong language ahead.)
I've never had a sales job (and never want a sales job!), but listening to this reminds me of the ground rules about working in any business. For writers who are trying to succeed at writing as a business, maybe you'll find this helpful too. Below I've extracted the writing pearls of wisdom from the best parts of Blake's talk. Note: I have cleaned up the language to keep this at least PG-13. Blake Let me have your attention for a moment! So you're talking about what? You're talking about that sale you shot, some SOB that doesn't want to buy, somebody that doesn't want what you're selling, some broad you're trying to screw and so forth. Let's talk about something important. Are they all here?
Lesson #1. Where You Expend Your Energy Is VitalIf you want to sit around and complain about your situation, is that helping you succeed? No. If you go to a writers conference or critique group, or to an online forum, are you the type of person who's just there to air complaints and talk about how rough you've had it? ("You're talking about that pitch you shot, some editor that doesn't want to buy, somebody that doesn't want your novel?") It's time for self-reflection. How can you be productive with your time, and put your energy into something positive? Blake Let's talk about something important! (to Levene) Put that coffee down!! Coffee's for closers only. Do you think I'm messing with you? I am not messing with you.
Lesson #2. Coffee Is for ClosersActually, there is no lesson here. It's just one of the best lines of the whole scene. Blake ... The good news is -- you're fired. The bad news is you've got, all you got, just one week to regain your jobs, starting tonight. Starting with tonight's sit. Oh, have I got your attention now? Good. 'Cause we're adding a little something to this months sales contest. As you all know, first prize is a Cadillac Eldorado. Anyone want to see second prize? Second prize's a set of steak knives. Third prize is you're fired.
You got leads. Mitch and Murray paid good money. Get their names to sell them! You can't close the leads you're given, you can't close, hit the bricks pal and beat it 'cause you are going out!!!
Lesson #3. Know When to Fire YourselfIn sales, call volume is important. The more calls you make, the more sales you make. It's important to spend time on the phone. In writing, butt-in-chair is important. The more consistent time you spend writing, the better you get, the more you produce. Think about how much time you spend on your writing. Do you deserve to be fired, or are you proud of your production? In publishing, pitching is important. Have you found the right leads? Or are you indiscriminately opening up a market directory and sending generic queries? Do you buckle under rejection, or can you keep going? If you can't face rejection, if you can't learn to pitch agents/editors, you will indeed hit the bricks, at least in terms of writing as a business pursuit. Blake … you drove a Hyundai to get here tonight, I drove a eighty thousand dollar BMW. That's my name!! (to Levene) And your name is "you're wanting." And you can't play in a man's game. You can't close them. (at a near whisper) And you go home and tell your wife your troubles. (to everyone again) Because only one thing counts in this life! Get them to sign on the line which is dotted! You hear me?
Lesson #4. Success Calls for Thick SkinWriters who can't be edited, who faint at red marks on the page, who think their writing can't be improved (yet in the same breath complain that editors don't edit any more): You can't effectively play at this publishing game if you're this sensitive. If you can't adjust and compromise (when necessary) to close a deal, it's time to exit the game. Of course, if you're asked to compromise so much that it's a bad deal, find yourself another lead. (Blake flips over a blackboard which has two sets of letters on it: ABC, and AIDA.) Blake A-B-C. A-always, B-be, C-closing. Always be closing! Always be closing!! A-I-D-A. Attention, interest, decision, action. Attention -- do I have your attention? Interest -- are you interested? I know you are. You close or you hit the bricks! Decision -- have you made your decision for Christ?!! And action. A-I-D-A.
Lesson #5. Always Be ClosingBefore you even write the first word of your manuscript, you should have an audience/readership in mind, and know how to close agents/publishers on buying your work, but more importantly, your readers. AIDA! Blake You think this is abuse? You can't take this -- how can you take the abuse you get on a sit?! You don't like it -- leave. I can go out there tonight with the materials you got, make myself fifteen thousand dollars! Tonight! In two hours! Can you? Can you? Go and do likewise! A-I-D-A!! Get mad you SOBs! Get mad!!
Lesson #6. Get MadSometimes it's necessary to get angry or fired up (over rejection, over poor treatment from a publisher/agent, over lack of sales) to get the more successful outcome you want. You can't sit back and play the victim and expect to be successful. Don't expect others to do the work for you. Are you making the most of the tools you have? Could someone else do better with your tools, if they had more confidence, energy, and drive? Blake The money's out there, you pick it up, it's yours. You don't--I have no sympathy for you. You wanna go out on those sits tonight and close, close, it's yours. If not you're going to be shining my shoes. Bunch of losers sitting around in a bar, (in a mocking weak voice): "Oh yeah, I used to be a salesman, it's a tough racket."
Lesson #7. Writing and Publishing Is a Tough Racket. So What?The percentage of writers who eventually get published is very small. The percentage of writers who publish and manage to make a living at it is even more miniscule. But there are new authors who manage to do it everyday, through traditional and nontraditional (self-publishing) means. You can complain all you want about it being a tough or unfair racket, but that doesn't get you any closer to success. If you want to be in the game, these are the rules. Would you know what to do with good luck if you got it? I hope so! Go and close! Getting Published
Monday, May 04, 2009 4:24:38 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) Trackback
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 Friday, May 01, 2009
Best Tweets for Writers (week ending 5/1/09)
Posted by Jane
 I
watch
Twitter, so you don't have to. Visit every Friday for the week's best Tweets. (If I missed a great Tweet, leave
it in the Comments.)
Best of Twitter
Friday, May 01, 2009 3:58:43 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) Trackback
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 Thursday, April 30, 2009
Warning: You Don't Want to Miss the Best Content of the Year
Posted by Jane
 This week marks the 1-year anniversary of this blog, There Are No Rules. I am still finding the right combination of content and perspective that will help you, so on this anniversary, I offer this invitation: - What questions, topics, and subjects do you want me to cover in the year ahead?
- What do you need the most help with?
- What has been most helpful to you in the past year, to help you advance your writing career (from anywhere!)?
- What would you like more of?
- What could you do without?
- What information do you usually remember most from this blog? Why do you read it?
Everyone who comments on this post (and includes their e-mail address), will receive, in PDF form, my presentations and handouts from my talks on how to succeed as a writer in a transformational time in publishing. The best commenter (as judged by me!) will have a choice of a 15-minute phone consultation, a query letter critique, or a first-page critique.Now, to celebrate my best content from the past year, in case you missed it! 2 Most Popular Posts of All Time8 Articles/Posts All Writers Should Have Read in 2008 FYI, if you're a blogger, you should know by now that list posts almost always perform better than all others.
On Being One of 100,000+ People Stranded in Thailand Of course a tale of my misadventure would do well! As the Brazen Careerist has said, it's the personal element that often brings your readers back for more. (True?)
Series PostsSave Time Tips (using Google tools and other tech solutions). After the first tip that's linked here, look for two more tips immediately after.
How to Avoid Sabotaging Your Writing Career (1-7) Here's #7, with a link to the others at the bottom of the post.
10 Years in Publishing: What I've Learned (1-5) Here's #5. Click on nearest preceding days for 1-4.
Biggest Traffic Generator in One DayMy Big Rant on Self-Publishing
Best Practical Answers/Solutions for Writers5 Questions to Ask Yourself After Hearing: We Can't Sell Enough to Justify Publishing It
Useful Google Tools You've Never Heard Of
The Essential Components of an (Unpublished) Author's Website
Best Big-Picture Views for WritersDo Writers' Futures Lie in Indie E-Publishing Platforms?
How Writers Can Start Blogging in a Meaningful Way
Fiction Writers Need Platforms, Too
The 3 Types of Writer—Which Are You?
Posts With Hidden Content You Might've MissedWD Editors' Intensive Cheat Sheet (great links to how-to-get-published, plus how to get connected)
Recap: Harriette Austin Writers Conference (red flags in first 15 pages, PDF download of my workshop on honing a great nonfiction book concept)
Get a List of All the Sites I Follow
Best FunHow Many Editors to Screw in a Lightbulb?
Time to Get a Tattoo?
Want to guest blog here? I'd like to extend an invitation to writers (whether you blog or not): If you have tips, advice, success stories, or not-so-successful stories to share, let me know privately via e-mail, Facebook, or Twitter. ( You can also reach me through this portal.) I'm starting a guest series on Fridays and would love to feature all kinds of perspectives. Photo credit: Sandra F+W Life | General | Getting Published | Industry News & Trends
Thursday, April 30, 2009 4:20:20 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) Trackback
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 Friday, April 24, 2009
Best Tweets for Writers (4/24/09)
Posted by Jane
 I
watch
Twitter, so you don't have to. If I missed a great Tweet, leave
it in the Comments. From now on, I will run this feature on Fridays only. Best of Twitter
Friday, April 24, 2009 5:04:18 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) Trackback
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Monthly News from Glimmer Train
Posted by Jane
Glimmer Train has just chosen the winning stories for their February Very Short Fiction Award. This twice yearly competition is open to all writers for stories on any theme, with a word count range of 500-3,000. Monthly submission calendar may be viewed here. First placeRolaine Hochstein of New York, NY, wins $1200 for “Virtuous Woman”. Her story will be published in the Summer 2010 issue of Glimmer Train Stories, out in May 2010. Second placeAnne de Marcken of Olympia, WA, wins $500 for “Best Western”. Her story will also be published in an upcoming issue of Glimmer Train Stories, increasing her prize to $700. Third placeEvan Christopher Burton of New York, NY, wins $300 for “Levitation”. A PDF of the Top 25 winners can be found here. Also: Family Matters competition (deadline soon approaching! April 30). Glimmer Train hosts this competition quarterly, and first place is $1,200 and publication in the journal. It’s open to all writers for stories about family. Word count range 500-12,000. Click here for complete guidelines. -- If
you didn't know, Writer's Digest partnered with Glimmer Train to
publish two compilation volumes of the best stuff from their Writers Ask newsletter. Be sure to check them out.  General | Getting Published
Friday, April 24, 2009 10:17:37 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) Trackback
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Avoiding Red-Flag Mistakes on Your First Page
Posted by Jane
 Yesterday, I presented a webinar on how you can critically review your manuscript (particularly the
first pages) for red flags that lead to a rejection from an editor or
agent. My thanks to the 25 participants who were courageous
enough to allow us to critique their first pages. For my blog readers, here are the common problems that we identified during the webinar: - Flashback on first page
- Too much backstory or explanation, slowing story down
- Waiting for the protagonist to appear (or unclear protagonist)
- Starting with an alarm clock or ringing phone
- Lots of characters introduced on first page
- Ordinary day stuff (getting out of bed, walking to kitchen, etc)
- Ordinary crisis moment without distinct voice or twist
- Too much telling about the story, not enough showing
- Nothing happens -- no action or problem
- Interior monologue: in character's head, just lots of thinking, no acting or interaction with anyone else
- Predictable story start or story line without a unique take
- More of a journal entry (stream of consciousness), and not a story
- Wrong starting point; not starting at a point of change
- Too confusing, not enough reason or motivation to figure out what's happening
Here are other excellent resources: Agent/Query ResearchAgentQuery.com QueryShark
If
you attended the webinar, I hope
you found the information you were looking for. Don't forget to network
with me on Facebook, Twitter (@JaneFriedman), and LinkedIn; I regularly
post and share information of interest to writers seeking publication. Check out next online event! How to Land a Literary AgentFuture webinars also include: - The Dreaded Synopsis
- How to Get Your Poetry Published
Click here to view details on all upcoming online events.
Conferences/Events | Craft & Technique | Getting Published
Friday, April 24, 2009 9:47:33 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) Trackback
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 Thursday, April 23, 2009
Best Tweets for Writers (4/23/09)
Posted by Jane
Best of Twitter
Thursday, April 23, 2009 11:07:40 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) Trackback
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 Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Best Tweets for Writers (4/22/09)
Posted by Jane
Best of Twitter
Wednesday, April 22, 2009 8:16:48 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) Trackback
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 Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Best Tweets for Writers (4/21/09)
Posted by Jane
Best of Twitter
Tuesday, April 21, 2009 8:08:48 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) Trackback
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 Monday, April 20, 2009
Best Tweets for Writers (4/20/09)
Posted by Jane
Note on Twitter tools: See this great analysis of Tweetdeck vs. Seesmic. I
watch Twitter, so you don't have to. If I missed a great Tweet today, leave it in the Comments. Today's post includes items from the weekend. Most valuable Tweet of the day:I can honestly say it was something Writer's Digest noticed (but this isn't from our site): Inside look at a NYT bestselling author's royalty statement: (if you're writing for $$, you'll be disappointed) @WritersDigest
The rest: Looking for more social networking and updates from Writer's Digest? Best of Twitter
Monday, April 20, 2009 5:24:45 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) Trackback
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