|
|
 |
 |
Home
For Writers
Articles
Getting Started in Column Writing |
Getting Started in Column Writing
By Mridu Khullar
You’ve written many articles for Websites, newsletters and now you’ve
even conquered the territory of getting published in a magazine. What’s the
next step, you ask? How to I make the editor ask for my work weekly or
monthly?
Enter: the column.
Before you march up to an editor’s office or send her unsolicited mail
asking to write regularly for a publication, learn all there is to know
about this form.
A column is written weekly, monthly or bi-monthly, and must be focused on
one particular topic. You have to be consistent in what you write, maintain
the same tone of voice, and stay focused on the issue at hand. If you’re
writing a column for the writing parent, don’t delve into issues of
parenting in general. Your readers will probably be parents who write, and
they will be more interested in learning how to find time for their writing,
rather than how to take care of their children.
A column can last from three to four months to ten or maybe even twenty
years.
When you decide to write a column, make sure that the topic you choose is of
interest to readers and will keep them coming back for more, week after
week. If your topic is boring or uninteresting, chances are you’ll have no
readers, and the editor will soon wrap up your column with a short goodbye
note.
Make sure that you can keep the commitment. Writing a column takes more than
just a bright idea and good writing. It needs dedication, discipline and the
ability to meet deadlines. If you can’t meet deadlines, you’ll soon be out
of a job, and out of the publication—for good. A columnist has to make sure
that she provides an on-topic, interesting, timely article each week (or
month), interesting enough to make the reader come back to read it.
If you decide to delve into the world of column writing, your best bet would
be to start with a regional daily or weekly newspaper. Not only will this
market be easier to break into, but will give you a lot of exposure. Columns
for cooking, astrology, inspiration and living in the city run frequently in
newspapers and are the best places for starting off. However, try to avoid
topics that have been done to death. Put a unique and interesting spin to a
topic, and you’re bound to get the editor’s interest.
Websites too are now beginning to open up to columns. Just like their print
counterparts, Websites, e-zines and even online versions of print magazines
ask for original material on a weekly or monthly basis. The biggest
advantage of writing online is the short acceptance and publication period.
The best way to query an editor about writing a column is by sending clips
of your work and your column topic. If the editor likes your query, you’ll
be asked to send in an article, and you’ll soon be on your way to publishing
glory. Keep in mind though, that column writing is not like writing an
article—it’s not *your* convenience and *your* time constraints that matter.
The only thing the editor wants from you is a good quality article each
week, submitted on time. Do that, and you’ll have a regular income from at
least one source.
|
Go To Top
 |
| |
|
 |
|