For freelancers, knowing the basic terminology
"before" they begin can be a valuable
lesson in earning a few extra dollars
in that initial stage. When I started
my freelancing career, I knew nothing
of rights, simultaneous submissions, querying
or varying payment rates. All I knew was--
I could write. Everything else, I learnt
on the job. You will too. But just to
make your stay a little less frustrating,
and a lot more enjoyable, I've listed
a few concepts that will help you immensely
as you contact editors and try to make
them pay you for your words.
Copyright
It's yours as soon as you have those
words on paper. You don't have to register
copyright to claim it, though if you're
writing a novel or book, it's a wise investment.
Registered copyright is proof enough for
a court of law, and is extremely valuable
in cases of dispute. However, for short
materials like articles or essays, copyright
needn't be registered. You can however,
club a number of essays and register them
together.
Reprints
Reprints are articles, essays or pieces
that have already been published. If you
own the copyright (more on that later),
and want to sell the piece again to another
publication, it will be termed as a reprint.
Most publications pay much less for reprints
and some don't accept them at all. However,
for a freelancer, sometimes reprints bring
more income than original articles do.
Rights
Earlier, magazines asked for all rights
to articles. Even today, in many countries,
including my own (India), most magazines
want to keep all the rights ensuring that
the articles in their magazine remain
unique to them. However, this trend no
longer exists in America, Canada and England,
and is making headway into other nations
as well. Now, almost all magazines in
these nations refrain from asking for
all rights to the work. Others have opened
their doors for reprints, which is a boon
for writers. Let's look at some of the
different kinds of rights.
- All Rights: This means that the article
must not have been published before,
and cannot be used again after it has
been published in this particular publication.
Never give up all rights for a measly
sum of money. If you're selling all
rights, make sure you're being paid
what you deserve.
- First Serial Rights: These usually
pertain to some country. For e.g., First
North American Serial Rights, or First
British Serial Rights. Although the
article mustn't have been published
in the country prior to this, you are
free to submit elsewhere after publication.
- Electronic Rights: As more and more
publications archive their articles
online, they are asking for electronic
rights. This means that they can carry
your article online. Usually a time-period
is specified. Also, electronic rights
are usually non-exclusive, meaning that
you can sell this article elsewhere
although it will continue to appear
on this publication's website.
- CD-ROM Rights: A fairly new addition
to the list of rights, this means that
the publication is free to use your
work on a Compact Disk.
- Anthology Rights: Some publications
publish yearly anthologies (collection
of articles or stories). In such cases,
they ask for these rights for possible
inclusion of your work in their anthology.
- First-time Rights: Your article must
not have appeared anywhere worldwide.
You are however, free to sell your work
elsewhere after publication.
- One-time Rights: Your work may have
appeared elsewhere. Publications asking
for one-time rights require that you
let them use your work once. It may
or may not have been published before
and you are free to use it after publication.
Payment on Acceptance vs. Payment on
Publication
You've written an article and the editor
has approved it. Now comes the time to
pay you. Well, not quite. Many publications
prefer to pay their writers on publication,
meaning when the article appears in print.
In established magazines, the time between
acceptance and publication can be months,
so you may write an article in January,
and be paid for it in June. Always try
to get paid on acceptance.
Clips
When you write a query, the editor wants
to see more than just a good idea. She
wants to know whether you can do it justice,
whether you'll be able to carry it through
or not. For this, she needs to see samples
of your writing. Published samples are
termed as clips. Simply stated, you photocopy
the pages of approximately three magazines
in which your articles have appeared and
send them to the editor.
If you haven't been published, you'll
still need to send in samples of your
writing. For this, write out an article
or two related to the subject of the magazine,
and send them off with your query.
Lead Time
A magazine usually asks writers to submit
their work well in advance so that there
are no last-minute goof-ups. Magazines,
especially reputed ones, cannot risk delaying
an issue because of a single writer. This
period is usually termed as lead-time.
Although most magazines have lead times
of approximately three months, many have
periods of more than six months.
Kill Fees
Editors are always "killing" articles
that they've assigned. To the writer,
this could mean wasted time, as well as
money. To reimburse the writer for her
research and hours put in, magazines usually
have a 20-50% kill fee. Simply put, if
your query has been accepted, but your
article isn't published for some reason,
you'll be given a kill fee for your work.
Expenses
For your article, you may have to interview
a subject. In some cases, you may have
to make long-distance calls or spend a
few bucks on travel, lunches and other
expenses. All such expenditures incurred
for the assignment are usually paid for
by the publication. You should be very
clear on this before you get on the assignment.
Usually, editors will agree to reasonable
expenditure refunds.
Bios and Photos
Haven't you sometimes noticed how the
author's picture or contact information
appears alongside the article? Yours could
too. Although this isn't always done,
sometimes editors may agree to put up
a photo or a short bio beside your article.
It never hurts to ask.
Simultaneous Submissions
Although this is something magazines
advise against, it isn't always feasible
waiting three months for your hot idea
to strike a note with the editor you've
submitted it to. This is where simultaneous
submissions come in. Although I truly
warn you against submitting the same article
to more than one publisher (I did it,
and I regretted it), I do advocate simultaneous
queries.
Now that you're armed with the basic
knowledge, you're all set to go out into
the big, bad world of publishing, and
show them what you've got. Good luck!
| About The Author
Mridu Khullar is the editor-in-chief
of www.WritersCrossing.com,
a free online magazine for writers.
Sign up for the free weekly newsletter
to get a complimentary e-book with
400+ paying markets. Also check
out her e-book, "Knock Their Socks
Off! A Freelance Writer's Guide
to Query Letters That Sell," available
at http://www.writerscrossing.com/queries.html
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This article was posted on January
22, 2005