FundsforWriters

Tips and tools for serious writers to advance their careers!

Our free weekly
newsletters reach

28,000 subscribers

and counting

  • Home
  • About FFW
  • Grants
  • Contests
  • Markets
  • Newsletters
  • Submissions
  • Blog
  • Advertising
  • Contact

The Accidental Columnist – How to Land a Regular Newspaper Gig

John Atwell / 2023-09-08

September 8, 2023

The stability of a consistent paycheck eludes many freelance writers, but scribbling out a regular column in a local rag can help address this shortcoming and provide a fulfilling sense of community connectedness. It is also more attainable than you think. (Look at the amount of your local daily’s content that is purchased from without.) A well-crafted cold pitch may work, but consider my unintentional path; it is repeatable.

It began with a need to scratch an itch, lodged deep in my being by a former career in intelligence, to apply solid data, sound reasoning, and honed prose in public discussions of current events in a forum with standards exceeding those found in social media platforms. So, I regularly submitted to the editor of my local paper short letters tackling everything from agricultural initiative debates to public works decisions, from war in Ukraine to Polynesian cultural norms. They were all published, save one.

With a dozen or so letters in print, on a lark, I proposed contributing regularly for pay. I leveraged my demonstrated quality of writing and analysis, and my decades of experience with the CIA, to pitch a column on national security matters. The response was quick: “We’ve never done something like this. Let’s talk.” (Before you get discouraged, a unique background or speciality is not required. Another regular columnist for our paper uses her cachet as a born-and-bred local to craft commentary on community trends. Maybe your huckleberry is gardening or food or cars. Irrespective of any expertise you bring to the table, an understanding of, and ability to feed, your local audience is key.)

Details were fleshed out in a follow-up phone call. “What will your sources be?” “Can I send you some bonafides to verify my background?” “We need an authoritative, but casual voice that can appeal to the farmer, the high-school drop out, and the college professor.” “I can work with tight deadlines and would welcome assignments.”

We settled on a monthly format of 700 words, $75 per piece, to be published in the commentary section. I was asked to submit a few trial pieces that would be my first published installments, if they passed muster. I created a byline, established an email address for write-ins, knocked out three pieces and submitted them. “We will run your first piece this Tuesday, a good day for launching new regular content.” (Fast forward one year. All of my recent contributions have run on Sundays, the highest circulation day.)

“What’s it like?” Well, I choose my own subjects, but have also written to suggestion. Edits are few and far between and, frustratingly, have sometimes introduced errors. I’ve developed a small following, and readers correspond with me. I’ve started looking for speaking opportunities, and schemes for syndication tickle the back of my mind. Then there’s that regular, albeit small, paycheck…

As I come to a close, please do not confuse my success story with an advocacy for regular pro bono, foot-in-the-door scrivener work to get published; I stand with many of you in being against that, in general. For the opportunity to enjoy a long-term regular paycheck doing what we love, mayhaps an exception is called for in this particular pursuit. For me, when pitch time came, I already had a track record of sorts with the paper. Absent that, I cannot say how my tale would have unfolded.

So, know that regular gigs in local papers are fair game for any freelance writer. Demonstrate an understanding of the your community, provide some samples (previously published works, freshly crafted exemplars, letters to the editor, other), and wind up your pitch.

May your writing be joyful and your paychecks regular. Adieu.

Bio:  John Atwell is the editor of Weekly Intelligence Notes, the online news magazine of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers, and the author of The Island Intelligencer, a monthly column on national security issues in the Hawaii Tribune Herald. His writing on media literacy, homeschooling, homesteading, teaching personal finance to children, and health and diet have been published in various magazines. In his early freelance writer days, he also dabbled in copy mill work. John, a federal retiree, lives with his wife of 28 years in a jungle-ensconced off-grid yurt on the slopes of an active remote-Pacific-island volcano, where he tends free-range chickens and turkeys, tropical fruit trees, and some gardens with the help of three feral-pig-chasing hounds and two feline muroid hunters. You can connect with John at solemnscrivener@gmail.com.

5036849 © Oleg Pidodnya | Dreamstime.com

Filed Under: Uncategorized Post a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Buy Me A Coffee

 

Free FundsforWriters

Weekly issues
A free weekly newsletter that lists semi-pro or higher paying markets and contests as well as grants, crowdfunding, contests, publishers, agents and employers. Available to those with writing products/courses/conferences/etc. for advertising. Purchases short features from freelancers. View Archive.

Subscribe Now:










Privacy Policy

25,000 Reasons to

Advertise With Us

FundsforWriters reaches people with a passion for writing. Let writers know about your product or service through online or newsletter exposure. Since FFW limits its ads to writing-related services, you do not see those get-rich-quick schemes or anyone’s novel or poetry chapbook for sale. We are here to help you earn a living and be a better writer.

learn-btn

Donate to FFW

Support our award winning publication

FundsforWriters is a free publication that takes numerous hours a month to plan, research, write, and produce. If you have benefited from this publication that comes to your inbox faithfully each week, please consider making a monthly or one time donation.

  • - Caroline Sposto, Emerald Theatre Company

    Thanks to the publicity from your newsletter, our little Memphis, Tennessee event received scripts from Arizona, California, Delaware, Florida, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Montana, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Vermont, West Virginia, Wyoming, the UK and New Zealand. This wealth of wonderful material yielded quality vignettes that made the best local actors and stage directors (including a popular local radio personality) eager to donate their time and talent. Their presence, in turn, sold tickets. We played to packed houses and everyone had a great time. The bottom line is, without you, we would have had something rinky dink -- with you we had something substantial. The publicity you provided on the front end made all the difference in the world!


  • -Laura Kepner, Safety Harbor Writers and Poets

    Hope gave the keynote workshop at the Safety Harbor Writers Conference: Solving the Mystery of Writing, in Clearwater, Florida. Hope could have left after her keynote address, but instead, she stayed throughout the day and made a point to talk to individual writers one-on-one. At the end of the day, Hope participated in a panel and stayed for a Q&A. She left such a good impression on so many that I believe my conference would have been a success had she been my only presenter.


  • – With deep appreciation, Laura Lee Perkins

    I am sitting in a ferry terminal, waiting for the next boat to take me to the Turkeyland Cove Foundation Writer’s Retreat on Martha’s Vineyard Island. Am I excited? You bet I am! Why? Because this is the first time in my life that I have been offered the gift of time and space for an entire two weeks to focus on what I love to do most: WRITE! I was accepted months ago and “anticipation” has been my middle name.
    The timeliness of this couldn’t be more perfect. Maine Authors Publishing just released my collection of twenty-two inspirational essays a few days ago! “Lighting Your Spiritual Passion” One of those essays was chosen for 3rd place in the Writers’ Digest Contest Inspirational category a couple of years ago, spurring me on to publish a collection of essays. When I opened the AMAZON page for my newest book, I cried with relief and joy.

    The common thread here is you, Hope Clark, and your FundsforWriters. You inspire me to have more courage, to reach higher, and you offer me threads of hope that I, too, can continue to grow and contribute something of worth to the world. Do you have ANY idea how much you mean to all of us who sit at our computers on Friday afternoon, waiting for your email to come in? I cut and paste every opportunity into a computer document that remains “open” on my desktop so that I can refer back to it any time I feel discouraged. Thank you for your dedication to sharing the roller-coaster ride of writing. You are a gifted teacher and mentor.


  • – Melanie Steele

    Advertising with FundsforWriters has brought amazing people to my writing retreats. My ads generated a strong, immediate response from Hope’s active, engaged fans. Hope is a pleasure to work with, and I highly recommend FundsforWriters as smart, effective use of marketing resources.  www.forthewriterssoul.com/retreat


  • – Reece W. Manley

    Total Funds for Writers pays for itself almost immediately. Hope and her research skills are phenomenal. Thanks to TFFW I have sold four articles, all with clients who did this amazing thing called paying me. It’s quite delightful – money is querky but boy its fun stuff to have! If you haven’t signed up for TFFW, you’re just not serious about your career.


Let’s explore the world of writing together

Subscribe | Advertise © 2000-2025, C. Hope Clark and FundsforWriters.
Designed by Shaila Abdullah, a certified women and minority-owned business.