Edited by Lori Appling in Bethany Beach, DE.
August 10, 2006
“But why, oh why, do the wrong people travel, when the right people stay at home?" -- Noel Coward
Today:
- She Sent Photos to an Online Stock Agency, and the Next Day Her First One Sold
- DESTINATION: GREECE -- Meet Us There
- Eat the Free Sushi… but Don’t Try Selling Your Story to the Denver Post: Five Ways to Turn Your Free Trips into Money-Making Articles
- More Opportunities and Resources for Writers
** Highly Recommended **
RETIRE OVERSEAS!
Learn about the world's 9 best places to live or retire…
Own an exotic beachfront getaway for $35,000. Or romantic pied-a-terre for under $60,000. Enjoy fine restaurant dining for $7 per person. Employ a maid or gardener for $6 a day. Buy comprehensive health insurance for $20 per month. Get the details in your
FREE report now: http://www.isecureonline.com/Reports/IL/WILVG450
Learn Everything You Need to Know – in Just Three Days -- about Living Overseas: Join International Living at their Live Overseas Conference in Montreal, Canada this September 6-9, 2006 by clicking here:
http://www.il-ireland.com/il/promos/los_montreal/awai_mail.html
Dear Reader,
She uploaded six photos to an online stock agency, and they accepted four. The next day, she had a sale. Gloria Marchand, a fellow reader and Turn Your Pictures into Cash member sent me this note:
“Just thought I'd share another little success with you. Since I took you up on your offer to sign up for the photo class and got the Ultimate Summer Photo Guide (http://www.awaionline.com/store/product.php?productid=16182) I studied the fireworks instructions very carefully. Then I went out and shot about 100 photos of the local show. I uploaded six to my stock account -- they accepted four of them. I actually sold a download of one of them yesterday!”
Gloria’s not the only one of our members to see fast sales through an online stock agency. I’ve received several emails about similar successes since we ran our first article here about breaking into them (see e-letter archive issue # 89 at www.thetravelwriterslife.com.)
When I first met Shelly Perry -- one of our panel of photo experts -- she told me that she averages about $.75/ per month per photograph she has on file with her online stock agency. That translates to about $500 a month in passive income for her -- that’s income she’ll continue to collect even if she never uploads another picture.
(Shelly, by the way, has mastered the art of taking -- and selling through an online stock agency -- pictures of simple household items like curtains, crayons, even her pet goldfish. In fact, she wrote a revealing, step-by-step lesson about exactly how you do it in Turn Your Pictures into Cash (http://www.thephotographerslife.com/tw4)
It's worth your while, I'd say, to try selling your photos that way. Indeed, if the letters from our readers about their own successes with online agencies are any indication, you'll find it not just fun and rewarding -- but potentially very lucrative, too.
Charles Belitz also wrote in with a success story -- his about not just photos, but a published article, too. He writes…
“In June 2005, I had a 1700-word travel article with two photos published in the newspaper. This month, that article won first prize for published newspaper articles at the Southern Christian Writers Conference in Tuscaloosa, AL.”
Long-time readers of this e-letter know that we always encourage you to resurrect old articles to get more mileage out of them -- as word-for-word re-sales, reworked material, or, as in this case, as contest entries.
I’m willing to bet that Chuck’s article -- published once, and then a prize winner, could potentially be a very lucrative piece. How? By selling it again (and again) in non-competing markets. For details, review one of our most recent e-letters on buying rights and reselling articles (see issue #119 in our archives at www.thetravelwriterslife.com ).
And speaking of selling articles, we get this question a lot…
"Can you sell an article about a place when you’ve received free stuff -- hotel rooms, theatre tickets, meals?"
In a word: Yes. I’ll let freelance travel writer Steenie Harvey explain how, below…
(By the way, if you missed Steenie at our last travel-writing workshop in Denver, you can still benefit from the many insider secrets she revealed by getting a full copy of her presentations here: http://www.thetravelwriterslife.com/trc/getstarted as part of our Workshop-In-Your-Home package.)
And as always -- let me know about your travel-writing or photography successes. If you have a story to share, send me a quick note at lori@thetravelwriterslife.com.
Have a great weekend,
-- Lori
Lori Appling
Director, AWAI's Travel Division
P.S. Know a friend or two who'd enjoy the freedom and independence of a writer's or photographer's life? They, too, can sign up to receive this free e-letter twice weekly at: http://www.thetravelwriterslife.com/eletter
** Advertisement **
DESTINATION: GREECE…
JOIN US ON ONE OF THE MOST PHOTOGENIC ISLANDS IN THE WORLD
You don't have to be a professional photographer to get paid top dollar for your vacation snapshots. You don't need a fancy camera either.
One "amateur snapper" earned back her conference fee in less than three months after attending our workshop in Paris. It was easy. And another got $2,000 for pictures she took in Miami Beach, FL. Just like that.
Join us on one of the most beautiful islands in the world this October 15-19, 2006 and let professional photographers Rich Wagner and Alf Meier show you how to shoot and sell top-quality photos.
See this page for details: http://www.thephotographerslife.com/greece2006 or call toll free (866) 415-1425 or local at (831) 274-2779. Spaces are limited. Reserve your seat before September 12, 2006 and SAVE $200.
NOTE: Our last three workshops have sold out before the Early Bird discount expired. Don’t wait. Click here now: http://www.thephotographerslife.com/greece2006 and reserve your seat.
GORGE YOURSELF ON FREE SUSHI --- BUT DON’T TRY SELLING YOUR STORY TO THE DENVER POST
By freelance travel writer, Steenie Harvey in Ireland
Travel writers. We’re corrupt... our work is tainted... readers shouldn’t trust our recommendations.
That’s what Miami Herald readers probably believe after seeing this headline in the business section: "When visiting South Beach, be sure to try the free sushi, nightclubs, cocktails and hotel rooms. But only if you're a travel writer."
The five writers who found themselves in the spotlight were Brits. And the journalist who penned the article could barely hide his outrage. He made my compatriots sound like the most loathsome bunch of freeloaders ever to roam the earth.
The article pointed out they’d gotten free round-trip airfare from London, complimentary rooms in South Beach and Fort Lauderdale, and six days of gratis meals. But that wasn’t all...
Our writers lolled around in a "boudoir-themed hotspot." They sipped an "amuse-bouche of lobster bisque." They stuffed their faces with dulce de leche soufflés and molten chocolate cakes.
Thing is, press trips can be hard work... and that wasn’t mentioned. After a 10-hour daily slog of non-stop sightseeing, what’s wrong with a $750 night out where somebody else picks up the tab?
In my view, nothing. But according to the travel editors of some US newspapers, there’s plenty wrong with it. Many won’t use articles about destinations where a writer has accepted complimentary or subsidized travel. As a freelancer, it’s something you need to be aware of.
At AWAI’s recent Ultimate Travel Writer’s Workshop in Denver, Kyle Wagner, travel editor of the Denver Post, made this very clear. Although Kyle realizes that without "comps," most freelancers need to sell many, many articles to make a trip pay, that’s our problem. Her newspaper’s policy is to accept no pieces where complimentary travel or accommodations are involved.
The thinking is that by going on junkets, writers are compromised. ''If you're recommending a place because you've been led by the nose by a publicist to the place, to me that sounds fishy,'' said Chicago Tribune travel editor Randy Curwen.
It seems unfair. Sports writers get free tickets (and the best seats in the stadium). Music and book reviewers get free CDS and books. And contributors to motoring sections do not buy a brand-new Porsche before they test-drive it. Nobody calls their judgment into question.
But are travel writers compromised? Can you keep your writing trustworthy? Personally I think it depends on the individual.
It’s not obligatory to gush because a hotel gives you a free or a subsidized rate. I wrote this for International Living about a hotel in Vilnius (Lithuania), which gave me a press rate of $40 a night:
"Near the Gates of Dawn, the 3-star City Gate Hotel isn’t exactly luxurious. Not only was the room poky, a curtain pole fell down and almost took my eye out. But given Vilnius’ grossly overpriced rates for better hotels, it’s one to consider. Doubles 300 litas ($109) nightly. Breakfast is included."
Even leaving aside press trips, most freelancers need complimentary or reduced-rate accommodation to make an out-of-town trip pay well. So you may wonder how can you accept hospitality when the host (hotel, restaurant, Convention Bureau, etc) expects a mention.
Well, here are three ways to keep on the straight and narrow -- and another two for fellow reprobates:
1) Most magazines don’t have problems with comps. So avoid pitching stories to places that do. You’ll find a publication's policy in the Writers’ Guidelines. If comps aren’t mentioned, you can presume it’s OK.
My editor at International Living passes on "invites." And most British newspapers are fine about them too -- the Daily Telegraph actually sent me on a British Airways Press Trip to Borneo. (No boudoir-themed hotspots there, unfortunately.)
Publications that prefer writers to sleep in alleyways and faint from hunger carry guidelines something like these:
"The Travel Section will not publish articles that grow out of trips paid for or in any way subsidized by an airline, hotel, tourist board or other organization with an interest, direct or indirect, in the subject of an article." -- New York Times.
"We do not accept material produced by journalists receiving benefits (such as free travel) from any entity or person who could be perceived as an interested party to the story." -- Christian Science Monitor. (Yes, they do use travel stories.)
2) Take a Press Trip or Fam tour, and have stories lined up for editors who have no problem with comps. Then stay on for a day or two extra at your own expense. Move out of the flashy hotel and into a cheap B&B -- one you have a receipt for and can mention in another article for the likes of the Denver Post.
3) Produce additional stories that have nothing to do with restaurants or accommodations. I wrote a piece for The Washington Post -- which also bans freebies -- about a pilgrimage climb up one of Ireland’s holy mountains. In other words, do something beyond the press-trip itinerary.
4) Don’t worry about the ethics at all. The Washington Post never asked where I’d stayed...
5) After the Miami Herald’s hatchet job, we travel writers are already down in the depths with politicians, real estate agents, and other assorted pond life. So if quizzed about whether any part of your trip was complimentary, spout bare-faced lies.
[EDITOR'S NOTE: Steenie Harvey is International Living's roving Euro-editor and a freelancer whose by-line has appeared in such illustrious publications as The Washington Post, The World & I, The Daily Telegraph, The Independent, and The World of Hibernia among many others in the States, Ireland, Britain, Australia, and Germany.
If you've been to one of our live travel writer workshops, you know that she’s an absolute riot! Her presentations -- an entire day of tricks for charming editors and landing the best assignments -- not only keep students laughing (nearly to the point of tears on occasion) but they also drive home some really important lessons about dealing with editors.
If you missed her at our last travel-writing workshop in Denver, you can get a full copy of her presentations here: http://www.thetravelwriterslife.com/trc/getstarted)
** Advertisement **
Is There a Book In Your Future?
Learn how to go from a 'wannabe' to a published author by the end of this year:
http://www.thewriterslife.com/tw/publishedauthor
OPPORTUNITIES AND RESOURCES FOR WRITERS:
* RETIRE...AND GET PAID TO TRAVEL -- Get the details and your free report at: http://www.thetravelwriterslife.com/kp/tw4
* TURN YOUR PICTURES INTO CASH -- If you can take a simple picture you could make $200 - $2,000 a week taking snap shots in your own backyard… on your family vacations… or anywhere in the world you care to travel. You don't need fancy equipment. And you don't need to know a thing about photography to get started. Here’s everything you need to know about this fun and lucrative side-business: http://www.thephotographerslife.com/tw4
* CAN YOU WRITE A SIMPLE LETTER? -- If yes, you could be in beg demand, earning big money, writing just a few hours a day from anywhere in the world you choose to be. Here’s how you can learn the secrets of this little-known, lucrative business: http://www.thewriterslife.com/ph/tw89/
* THE AWAI FORUM FOR TRAVEL WRITERS -- You'll find this excellent online resource at: www.thetravelwriterslife.com/forums . It's a place to get answers to your questions, discuss your story ideas, find readers to review your articles, and stay connected to a community of writers.
* TAX SAVINGS EVERY FREELANCER SHOULD TAKE -- Find out where you can save... what the IRS really needs to know... how to make the most of those deductions for travel, meals, entertainment, home office, and more including practical worksheets you can use to make sure you're paying as little as possible to Uncle Sam. You'll find “The Writer's Tax Guide: A Money-Saving Manual for Travel Writers and Other Freelancers” here: http://www.thetravelwriterslife.com/tax/tw4
* MAKE MONEY AND SAVE THE WORLD -- What if something you wrote could... Help 3 million people in 29 countries get access to clean drinking water... Provide safe, secure housing for 5,400 families in the U.S. ... Protect 160,000 acres of timberland in Tennessee and Oregon... Put 23 new computers in the elementary school down the street... http://www.thewriterslife.com/fundraising/tw89
The Write Way to Travel is a FREE weekly newsletter from the American
Writers & Artists Institute, available to AWAI students and friends.
To ADVERTISE in The Write Way to Travel or to send comments, news, research,
or story ideas, e-mail Lori Appling at lappling@awaionline.com.
NOTE: If URLs do not appear as live links in your e-mail program, please
cut and paste the full URL into the location or address field of your
browser.