Working as an editor can be a luxurious job, or just a sideshow in paying off the mortgage. Consider the possibilities for a writer with basic skills: we can work at college and professional newspaper, we can edit for online magazines, we can work with major magazines, and we can do all this and focus on our own writing in the spare time. But, editing can be time consuming. It is not unheard of for salaried editors to work 50 hours a week, especially for more local newspapers with a short staff or magazines that publish often. Yet the rewards can outweigh the benefits. We learn things from all the hard work of being an editor. We become better-paid editors by becoming willing to work the long hours sort out an article.
We improve upon the basics first. The dreaded comma happy writer has to be reined in. The m dashes need to be used sparingly. We can learn more about what a basic story needs, news or other kind, by looking over someone else's piece. Editors learn that every word counts, lengthy articles do not get read, and boring articles lower the number of readers for future stories. We learn to become superior writers; we find the key elements in the story and cut down everything else. That is key for any form of writing because writing is about improving draft after draft.
Experience is crucial in becoming a better-paid editor. We will need to start out small; perhaps a local paper will take us in for a short article. These initial sales often lead to jobs. My career started by writing short articles for my college newspaper. They offered me an editing job a few months later because I had the experience they needed. Building experience allows for the editor to shop themselves around. The more clips we have, the better our chances of landing the higher paid job.
An editor is a working writer. Often the editor will have to be just as good as the writer because sometimes a story needs. The hours may be long because both writing and editing will come into play. This almost always leads into bettering our career options.
The basic editor works many hours, but is rewarded more often than the writer with talent who lacks basic editing skills. To become a better-paid editor we will need to take some chances, learn the basics of the trade, and explore both editing articles and writing them.
Published by Jacob Malewitz
I have written over 600 articles for newspapers and online publications. I am the author of the ebook The Writer Who Smiles, available here: booklocker.com/books/3288.html My new blog can be found at Cof... View profile
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1 Comments
Post a CommentPerhaps you may want to consider editing your own article checking for grammatical errors.