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Deadlines
Can Be A Writer's Best Friend |
by:
Bonnie
Boots |
SUMMARY:
A commitment to meeting deadlines can make
any writer a winner with the editors and
lead to personal and professional growth.
Deadlines Can Be A Writer's Best Friend
By Bonnie Boots
I click the "send" button on my e-mail and
my article is instantly transmitted to a
magazine. Minutes later, I have a reply
from the editor. It reads "Snappy writing
and five days before deadline! Thanks, Bonnie.
You're an editors dream."
I believe I'm a good writer, but more important,
at least as far as editors are concerned,
I'm a disciplined writer. I never miss a
deadline. I hear other writers grousing
about deadlines, even disregarding them
until an unhappy editor prods them. That's
a shame, because respecting deadlines can
help you mature personally and professionally.
The word "deadline" can be traced back to
the Civil War when prisoners were sometimes
secured with nothing more than a line drawn
in the dirt. Cross that line, they were
told, and you're dead! I take deadlines
just as seriously. Even during the most
trying personal circumstances, I meet my
writing commitments. Once, I even wrote
a newspaper column as I sat with a dying
parent. It was hard, very hard to focus
my thoughts and write, but the personal
strength I conjured that day translated
into writing so powerful it brought my career
to a new level.
As I wrote that day I wasn't thinking about
winning awards. I was thinking of only one
thing: I had to meet my deadline. Writing
each word was a struggle. When I'd finish
a sentence, I'd rest, feeling like I'd just
made it another fifty feet up Mount Everest.
When I completed that column, my personal
resources were spent. Like a horse that's
been whipped to reach the finish line, I
was exhausted physically and emotionally
and wondered where I'd ever find the strength
to write again.
The next week, however, habit kicked in
and I kicked out another column. In fact,
I never missed a column through one of the
most traumatic events of my life. Such is
the power of established, disciplined writing
habits.
The discipline I developed by always meeting
deadlines has served me well both personally
and professionally. Personally, it's given
me the power to persevere through circumstances
that might otherwise have crushed me. Professionally,
it's given me a reputation among editors
as a writer that can be relied on. I've
had editors carry my name with them as they
moved from publication to publication, even
calling me for work I had no background
in, simply because they knew I was one hundred
percent reliable.
One editor worked on dozens of different
magazines during my association with her,
calling me to write about topics ranging
from doll designers to antique autos. When
I protested I knew nothing about cars, she
scolded me, saying, "I don't need a mechanical
expert. I have a dozen. What I need is one
writer that can actually meet a deadline."
Editors resent having to baby-sit writers,
calling to coax, coddle, even threaten writers
to get them moving toward their deadline.
"It's like herding cats!" one editor wailed.
Yet, often, that's where an editor's time
and energy are spent. Imagine the good impression
you'll make by being a writer that's mature
enough to take your work and responsibilities
seriously. You may have less experience
than other writers, but editors will see
you as a real professional. You may have
less talent than other writers, but editors
will see you as something better than genius-they'll
see you as a writer that delivers on deadline.
BONNIE BOOTS (www.BonnieBoots.com)is an
award-winning writer and designer who says
all writers should show off their talent
by wearing their Write Side Out! Her wise
and witty product line of gear that shows
the world you're a writer is at www.writesideout.com
About the author:
BONNIE BOOTS (www.BonnieBoots.com)is an
award-winning writer and designer who says
all writers should show off their talent
by wearing their Write Side Out! Her wise
and witty product line of gear that shows
the world you're a writer is at www.writesideout.com
Circulated by Bandoni
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