- Joined
- Jul 11, 2007
- Messages
- 106
- Reaction score
- 0
An editor was "trying me out" on a short spec blog post on a very big topic (I had pitched an article).
I wrote it twice and he didn't like it. He, himself, didn't really know the approach he wanted covered, but I followed instructions and ended up trying to write a primer on the subject; instead of the approach I had originally been interested in. An editor has never before rejected my work.
So, in the process of doing the spec post the pub sent me to a conference. I interviewed several people, in-depth, telling them I was doing an article for this pub.
I want to use the interviews somewhere; hence, pitch other pubs. But, what is the protocol?
Should I call original interview subjects first and tell them I'm pitching elsewhere, or just wait to see whether I get an assignment, then call them?
Thoughts? Despite the fact that the editor was not very nice, I'd like to eventually publish something there. Does this make any sense?
Thanks!
I wrote it twice and he didn't like it. He, himself, didn't really know the approach he wanted covered, but I followed instructions and ended up trying to write a primer on the subject; instead of the approach I had originally been interested in. An editor has never before rejected my work.
So, in the process of doing the spec post the pub sent me to a conference. I interviewed several people, in-depth, telling them I was doing an article for this pub.
I want to use the interviews somewhere; hence, pitch other pubs. But, what is the protocol?
Should I call original interview subjects first and tell them I'm pitching elsewhere, or just wait to see whether I get an assignment, then call them?
Thoughts? Despite the fact that the editor was not very nice, I'd like to eventually publish something there. Does this make any sense?
Thanks!
Last edited: