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THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ART AND COMMERCIAL WRITING Have you heard writers complain that they aren't able to sell their writing? It isn't easy but it is possible to make a steady income, at least a good "cottage industry" out of your writing. However, it takes the right mind set. If art is what you do for yourself, commercial writing is what you do with a particular audience, editor or publisher in mind. Art, if you wish, is from the heart. Commercial writing is for a particular audience. That doesn't mean you can't sell your art. Nor does it mean commercial writing is "heartless." Rather, it should alert those who wish to get published to the need to know their markets. An educated writer targets submissions to particular outlets. It isn't fair to complain if you send your work out blindly and get rejected. Imagine you send writing with a "liberal" use of language to a "conservative" magazine. It would be unlikely you would make a match. You might as well send poems that rhyme "posies" and "rosies" to an experimental poetry magazine. You'd be speaking the wrong language! Clearly, the directories that list magazines and outlets for writing are of great use. They describe the general requirements as outlined by the editors. However, as often the magazine will say "We are interested in publishing only the best"--whether that is poetry, stories, opinion pieces, etc. What "the best" is, naturally, is subjective. You'd do best to find and read a sample of work before sending to a magazine or publisher. If you have "commercial" aspirations, study the contents--not just the table of contents but the advertising and layout. Ask who reads the magazine. Think what you need to do to match your writing to that special audience. Because magazines and publishers survive and thrive by targeting their publications to special markets, you need to analyze the audience. Often you can get the guidelines for publication from the magazine either by sending a SASE or going on line. Best of all, if you are an artist, you will be able to write for yourself and match your creations to various markets. You may be that special talent which appeals to a wide audience. If writing is a song, marketing is the dance and after all, you ought to take pleasure in it! |
| For comments or questions contact webmaster: Dr. David B. Axelrod, axelrodthepoet@yahoo.com |