Title: Pitch Requirements
1- Pitch Requirements
- Research
- Structure
- Style
2Pitch Requirements
3Why were doing pitches
- Learning the tools and trade practice
- Getting you to target so you know how
- 2. The Assessment getting a good mark
- Show us the range of your learning/skills
- 3. Being published (even if its just in Weard)
- Using this opportunity to get into print
4Pitching to a features editor
- NOT a query about what types of feature they
cover or are looking for - A pitch of your feature
- To a specific features editor for your target
magazine - 100-150 words
5Pitching to a features editor
- Building a professional relationship with the
commissioning editor (normally the features
editor) - Think psychology and marketing
- You are selling A) your feature, B) yourself
- You need to pitch both in the right way
- Proof read from the bottom up even this letter
6Pitching to a features editor
- An outline, and not the first draft
- But do propose a clear angle
- Break it down into a structured outline
- The angle should be concise
7Pitch case study, womens weeklies
- Were in a cyclical market, where the same stuff
comes out again and again, so for us its all
about reinvention were totally dependent on
finding new angles. - Elena Dalrymple, Editor, Mother and Baby
- A good freelancer is actually very rare. They
need to write to style, do very thorough
research, get brilliant expert quotes, plus
reader anecdotes that capture the essence of the
feature, and deliver on time. - Claire Askew, Features Editor, Company
8(No Transcript)
9Womens weeklies
- 82 of women read a magazine
- Heat, Take a Break, Easy Living, Woman
- Total sales 8 million magazines a month
- New titles constantly launched
- First, news-led weekly for 30-somethings
- Pick Me Up, real life stories
- Women 563m on magazines in 2004
- You get 300 per 1,000 words
- Up to 750 per feature for big name mags
10Theyre looking for
- Lifestyle features
- First person stories
- Real-life tales
- Womens fiction
- Case studies
- Specialist (psychology, extreme sports)
- Interviews
11Opportunities
- We want eyes and ears outside London. We can
always do with people to knock on doors. Julia
Lawrence, Editor, Reveal - Local and regional press as sources
- Personal contacts
- You need a large contacts book
- Not just celebs, but real people with stories
12Before you write the feature
- Build up your cuttings files
- Write for free magazines, student mags, get work
experience, online magazines etc - Do your research
- Read the magazine you target thoroughly
- Address the commissioning editor by name
- Get the right copy deadlines make it timely
- Monthly magazines work 4-months in advance
- Weeklies work 5-6 weeks in advance
- If you spot a story, dont hang around. By
tomorrow, every agency and freelancer in the
country could be onto it.
Julia Lawrence, Editor, Reveal
13The letter
- Send a pitch, not a full article
- Make your synopsis brief, punchy, funny,
informative, pithy, thought-provoking. - Lisa Markwell, Features Editor, Easy Living
- Give two or three celebrity examples, if relevant
- Dont send more than three ideas at once
- Attach only one or two cuttings
14Do you need a headline?
- A good piece is one thats easy to write a
headline and sub-deck for. You know its a woolly
story when youre struggling to find the head and
sell. For that reason I always ask writers to
pitch ideas with the head and sub-deck already
writtenits a great way of finding your angle
and sticking to it. - Victoria Woodhall, Feature Director, Eve Magazine
15Remember
- Your pitch is not the same as the sub-deck
- Email first, and then follow up by phone, but
only once or twice if you need to phone more,
youre idea has not made it - Do your own research
- Do say if commissioned, please send me your copy
brief and house style guides so you know whats
expected it also shows youre aware of the need
to write to style
16- To Corrie Jackson, Commissioning Editor, Grazia
- Dear Corrie,
- As the UKs leading womens weekly glossy, I know
Grazias readership is looking for a distinctive
take on Madonnas legal battles to adopt a child
from Malawi. -
- While the PR-factor of celebrity adoptions
(Angelina and Brad Tom and Nicole) seems to be
the standard angle, my feature looking at the
vogue of adoption is pitched at - Warm, witty, but ultimately revealing of the
relationship between celebrity and poverty, this
feature will engage Grazia readers in the
Thank you...
17Doing Research
18Research the myth exploded
- There is no secret to research
- Hard work
- Perseverance
- Keeping your eye out
- Developing media habits
- Looking for the unique angle
- Being thorough
- Brainstorming / sharing ideas / getting help
- Building contacts and data files
19Research the Consumer Corridor
- Industry term for the profile of your typical
magazine consumer - A typical individual you need to know
- Good exercise to know your audience
- For example, the typical individual who
represents The Guardian newspapers reader is - Guy, 32, an architect, who lives in Fulham,
southwest London. He drives a Toyota Prius (an
electric-powered car) and is a vegetarian. He
went to university in Edinburgh, and has a degree
in Architecture. He and partner Milly have one
son, Jack, aged 18 months. Guy is into mountain
climbing and cooking. He also etc
20Research put out media requests
- What is a media request?
- Call for responses to a research position
- Publicised notice on websites, in newspapers,
magazines etc. - Bullying and depression I'm Laura Reid and I'm a
trainee Journalist at Nottingham Trent
University. I am making a short documentary about
childhood depression and its causes and
treatments in the UK. I am looking to speak to
children who are currently or have in the past
suffered from depression, or the parents of a
depressed child or adults who have suffered from
depression in their childhood. Also any experts
in the field. Anyone interested in being involved
whether to input in my research or to take part
in the documentary should call Laura Reid on
07786 868 448 or email lauraereid_at_hotmail.com - (from http//www.bullyonline.org/media/media.htm)
21Research use the Net
- Not just to find articles use its full scope
- British Freelance Journalist Graham Halliday
I'll be chatting over Skype with Sandeep
Junnarkar this Friday morning to discuss donation
driven blog journalism projects. Sandeep is the
brains behind Lives in Focus. I'm researching a
feature about. I'm most interested in - Who else is saying the same thing as you?
Bloggers, chatrooms? Contact people
22Research whos proving your point?
- You are showing a particular point of view
- How much research you need to do
23Research hierarchy of sources
- Key Experts / Eye Witnesses unique quotes
- Institutions and organisations
- Reports and Studies
- Peer reviewed books and journals
- (For background and shaping of context)
- Other people non-expert
- The media
24Research a 1,000-word feature
- Key Experts / Eye Witnesses unique quotes
- Institutions and organisations
- Reports and Studies
- Peer reviewed books and journals
3 7
25Sources for features ideas
- Reports (such as the fat map)
- Angles that everyone else misses
- Institutions
- Police, prison, NGOs, government, councils
- The Media
- Newspapers, radio, internet, press, TV
- Contacts
- Friends, family, colleagues, PR people, notables
- Businesses
- Local, marketing firms, publishers, agencies
26Some resource areas
- Circulation and Marketing Info for mags
- www.ppa.co.uk Periodical Publishing Assoc.
- www.adassoc.org.uk Advertising Assoc.
- www.abc.org.uk Audit Bureau of Circulation
- www.intelligentcia.com British Rate Data
27Some resource areas
- Contacts and Background
- www.bsme.com British Soc. Of Mag Editors
- www.magforum.com Sector Overview
- www.mediauk.com Ind. Media directory
- www.nrs.co.uk National Readership Survey
- www.jbwb.co.uk Where to sell features
28Some resource areas
- Publishers
- www.natmags.co.uk National Magazines
- www.emap.com EMAP
- www.ipcmedia.com IPC
- www.condenast.co.uk Conde Nast
- www.dcthompson.co.uk DC Thompson
- www.bauer.co.uk Bauer
29Structure
30- According to Friedlander and Lee, there are only
two types of feature - The news feature
- Tied to a breaking event
- The timeless feature
- A story frozen in time, not linked to a
contemporary event - Feature Writing for Newspapers and Magazines,
Longman, Friedlander and Lee, (2000)
31- Business company launch, big profits, going bust
- Commemorative anniversary of event
- Explanatory some big issue e.g. politics and
voting - First-Person dramatic event happened to the
writer - Historical old story hooked to a news event
- Hobbyist unusual people in the spotlight
- How-To live green make a million become
famous - Invention a new technology explained
- Medical tragic or uplifting story linked to
health - Number Top 10 holiday destinations Top 5 films
- Odd-Occupation A look into an unconventional life
- Overview A view of an issue from all sides
(Vox-pop?) - Participatory The writer plays a role in the
story - Profile Focus on one person
- Unfamiliar Visitor To a city to a belief a new
pair of eyes
32Were just looking at 4
- Profile (due next Monday, 25th Feb)
- News Backgrounder
- Specialist
- Human Interest
33Structure and characteristics
- A non-fiction short story
- Quotation-filled, descriptive, entertaining,
informative - Original
- A beginning, middle and end needs to be read in
full to make sense
34Structure and characteristics
- Evocative it must evoke some feeling, idea or
response - Compelling/dramatic the reader should want to
finish the feature - Insightful there should be some new
understanding or learning
35- 1 Do your research
- 2 Choose your angle
- 3 Find your experts
- 4 Do your interviews
- 5 Check your facts
- write the feature
36News
37Feature (Dramatic Unity)
38Structure
- Original thought is the mainstay for a truly
great feature. Some writers could be writing
about paint drying and youd read it because they
have an original take on it like Julie
Burchill. A fantastic feature will reveal
something about the writer or subject that will
draw you in by the first paragraph. - Victoria Harper, Deputy Editor, Red Magazine
- First point Reveal the writer or subject in 1st
para - (a paragraph is 2/3 sentences 75 words)
39Structure
- I look for quirky and lively writing, a tightly
focused angle and a few (but not too many)
quotes. The commonest problem is getting the
balance right. Not too newsy, but not too slack.
I often tell inexperienced freelancers to begin
the piece with a colourful cameo that sets the
scene, then kicks in with the facts (the nuts and
bolts of the story) - Jon Stock, Editor, Weekend, The Sunday Telegraph
- Second Point After your revealing opening, bring
in the facts whats it about?
40Structure
- A great feature is 1. a piece of writing with
an awareness of the audience 2. a piece that
addresses both the brief and brings some new
information into play 3. a piece that covers the
ground in the right number of words, hooks the
reader, and leaves them satisfied at the end. - Anne Pursglove, Deputy Editor, Elle
- Third Point Dont stretch out your feature to
fit 2,000 words if it works in 800 then thats
all it takes and it means its too short for
this module
41Structure
- Intro
- Cameo anecdote tease
- Linking paragraph
- A paragraph that summarises the main themes of
the piece (nut paragraph) - Should answer the questions
- What is this feature about
- Why should anyone want to read it
- Is it new, surprising or revealing
- Do its themes have a broader significance
- Can these themes be expanded upon
42Structure
- Body of the feature
- Make the points you want to make in logical order
and set up each sectionthis is sometimes
called signposting, and gives the reader a) an
idea what to expect, and b) an idea of its
significance - Knit sections together
- Dont jump-cut its not a film
- Feed in valuable and surprising information
- Dont give all your secrets/research at once
43- Opening tell us something, but not everything,
about the subject youre writing about an
example of the larger story a detail of the
person or business or maybe a statement or
question you want to explore or answer - Paragraphs 2-3 expand the story introduce your
first source make your fist comment, insight or
explanation - Paragraphs 4-5 introduce your further sources
do these contradict, question or support your
first source? Provide background talk around the
subject
44- Paragraphs 6-7 go deeper into the subject
reveal what the feature is really about the big
question, the surprise, the questions that the
sources themselves want to answer, or your take
on the subject the dramatic revelation or
resolution (although not all features need to be
resolved) - Paragraph 8 A closing sentiment does the
interviewee leave? Does something physical draw
the feature to a close (an earthquake? The end of
the interview?) Is there a report being released
or an ice-sheet melting that may change what we
think about the subject? What have you and the
reader realised through the feature? - Closing line do you want to leave a question or
an answer? Do you want to tie-back into your
opening with a similar image, line, or reference?
45Summary
- 1 Do your research
- 2 Choose your angle
- 3 Find your experts
- 4 Do your interviews
- 5 Check your facts
- Write the feature
- The title
- The sub-deck
- The opening line
- Pieces 1-8 Eight paragraphs
- The closing line
46Style
47Style your aim as features writers
- Brevity
- Clarity
- Language
- Substance
- Accuracy
- Subjectivity
- Style
- Quotations
48Detailed characteristics of style
- 1. Brevity
- Writing a longer piece does not mean being wordy
or long-winded. You always strengthen text when
you remove the padding - Paragraphs should be short two or three
sentences long. - Never use two words when one will do never use a
long word if a short one will do. - E.g. Experimental endeavour experiment
49Style
- 2. Clarity
- Avoid over-complicated sentence structures and
clichés. - Use of complex language betrays sloppy thinking.
- E.g. Representatives agreed to a feasibility
study NOT representatives agreed to take this
forward on the basis of a plan for a feasibility
study. - Make your point in the direct voice and avoid the
ing form of verbs.
50Style
- 3. Jargon/language
- Avoid jargon or technical terms where possible.
- If used, provide a concise explanation of their
meaning. - Use descriptive words with care and precision.
- Avoid superlatives, unless you are prepared to
prove them.
51Style
- 4. Substance
- To interest the reader, your story has to be
about something, with plenty of information (from
both direct and indirect sources) to give it
substance. -
- 5. Accuracy
- Check that names and places are accurate and
dates correct. Ensure that information is
properly sourced.
52Style
- 6. Subjectivity
- You can have a point of view, but it should be
based on the evidence presented in the article. - You cannot present your own opinion as evidence.
- Do not assume that your views will be shared by
readers. - Your point of view will be strengthened if you
include comments from other people in a position
that gives their views some weight.
53Style
- 7. Style
- An article loses readers with every paragraph
- Keep your feature well constructed and taut
- Woo your reader from start to finish
- Tie up any loose ends
- Add your own voice, tone and approach.
- Show the reader description and dialogue
54Style
- 8. Quotations
- Always use direct quotes they bring an article
to life. - But reading one long quote after another can be
trying. Aim for a mix of direct and indirect
speech. - Learn to summarise what someone says (such as in
a lecture) and keep the most vivid, personal,
pivotal or controversial bits for quotes. - Use quotes to add immediacy, authenticity and
change of voice and pace. - Do not invent quotes