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5
Dynamite Ways to Generate Ideas for Parenting
Articles
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by:
Terri Pilcher
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The key to selling reprints to parenting
publications is the creation of dynamite ideas followed through with
professional writing. Here, I’m focusing only on finding those
lucrative topics.
Most topics in regional parenting publications are
straightforward: finance, parenting tips, health, sports, and
education. The trick is to twist them in an unusual way.
- If you’re a parent, what do you wish you knew
about a topic? Write down questions that you have as you go through the
day. When I was driving the other day, I complained to myself about bad
teenage drivers. Then I wondered, “What can parents do to encourage
good driving?” If you already know the answer to the question, it won’t
make a good article unless you’re an expert on the subject.
- Take a generic topic and make it seasonal.
Choose a season about four months away, because the lead-time for
parenting publications is 2 to 6 months. Four months from now is April.
What happens in April (or would be published in April) that I can
combine with a topic like health? In April, parenting publications
start printing their summer guides to camps. What can parents do to
make sure their children stay healthy at camp? What are the traits of a
safe camp? Change to camping plus another topic like education or
finance to create unique articles.
- Who do you know who has an unusual or
remarkable story – something that affected children? What did the
parents learn? Write an article using the anecdote as an introduction
to the information you want to give. A great anecdote can sell a story.
- Visit online parenting forums and read the
questions people ask. Use some of these as a basis for your article
ideas.
- When you research a piece and talk to experts,
look for what you don’t know. “Joe says insurance is important for
families,” won’t make an article interesting. Too many people know that
insurance is important. But a quote like, “Joe says disability
insurance is the most neglected area of insurance, but it protects
young families from the biggest threat to their security,” will make
parents keep reading.
If you give editors timely articles that readers
will want to read, you’ll sell your work over and over again.
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About The Author
Terri Pilcher edits a FREE weekly e-zine for
writers, “Writer’s Guidelines Magazine”, that provides 10 writer’s
guidelines. She recently published “MONEY Markets 2005: 101 Publishers
That Pay in 6 Weeks or Less”. Her website contains the writer’s
guidelines for almost 200 parenting publications. http://www.powerpenmarketsearch.com.
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This article was posted on February 09,
2005
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