Showing posts with label contest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label contest. Show all posts

Monday, January 14, 2013

Doing Contests Write

by MarcyKate Connolly

If you're a writer in the query trenches, you've likely seen and even participated in writing blog contests. They're fun! They're exciting! And it's oh so easy to get swept up in it all. I know, because it was one of my favorite things to do!

But before you shoot off that entry, take a deep breath, relax, and make sure you're doing it right.

DO be sure your manuscript is complete and polished within an inch of its life. There's nothing worse than winning an agent request for your full manuscript and realizing you need to scramble to finish that first draft. And oh, crud, you gotta revise that puppy, too? All that pressure can be avoided by just finishing the dang thing first.

DON'T enter a contest if you've queried all the judging agents. I know how tempting it is. Maybe they'll see your book differently now that you changed that paragraph in your query, or rewrote the opening scene. Or maybe it still won't be for them and all you've done is take a spot from someone else. Don't be that guy or gal. Mystery agent contests are trickier because you don't find out who the agent is until the picks are made. Obviously not much you can do there but close your eyes, hit send, and hope for the best!

DO ask questions. Most blog contests have an announcement post before the entry window. If you're unclear on the rules, don't be afraid to ask in the comments. Others might have the same questions.

DON'T freak out if you don't get picked. Sometimes you'll miss the submission window. Sometimes your entry won't get past the preliminary judging. Sometimes every entry will get a request but yours. This is totally normal and even to be expected. Subjectivity is kind of a bitch. Sure it sucks, but don't let it get you down for too long. Keep trying—maybe next time will be your turn to win :)

DO make friends with other contest entrants! This is a fabulous opportunity to find new critique partners, or just general writerly camaraderie. Case in point, last year's Writers Voice contest.

DON'T stress too much. I know it's hard, but it's important! Your writing career does not depend on any single contest. Seriously. So have fun, keep your chin up, and try not to stress.

DO keep querying. Every contest is different and provides a new way of presenting your work. I've seen everything from one line pitches, Twitter pitches, one paragraph pitches, full queries, first lines, first pages, first paragraphs—you get the idea. Not everyone is good at all of these. Just because your 13-word pitch didn't blow an agent's socks off doesn't mean your actual query won't.

If you're looking for contests to enter, you're in luck! There's a bunch coming up and several blogs that run them regularly.

Current Contests:
Other Blogs to watch for Contests:

MarcyKate Connolly writes middle grade and young adult fiction and becomes a superhero when sufficiently caffeinated. When earthbound, she blogs at her website and ferrets out contests on Twitter. Her debut upper MG fantasy novel, MONSTROUS, will be out from HarperCollins Children's Books in Summer 2014.

Monday, September 24, 2012

New Visions Writers Award

by J. Lea López

Here at FTWA we don't endorse or promote products, contests, services, etc. because... well, we just don't. We share resources and info that we personally find valuable, and that's generally the only reason we pass along links. However, we were recently contacted by our friends at Lee & Low Books, publishers of children's literature focusing on diversity, about a new award. Since we know they're legit and have such a great reputation in the kid lit world, we felt it was our duty to pass this info along to our readers. About
The New Visions Award, established this year, will be given for a middle grade or young adult fantasy, science fiction, or mystery novel by an author of color. The Award winner will receive a cash grant of $1,000 and our standard publication contract, including our basic advance and royalties for a first time author. The deadline this year to submit manuscripts will be October 30, 2012.

We strive to give authors of color the chance to have their voices heard, so we are very excited to share this amazing opportunity for aspiring YA authors to break into publishing. The New Visions Award is modeled after our New Voices Award for picture books, which was established in 2000 and has led to the publication of many respected authors including Zetta Elliott, Don Tate, and Paula Yoo.
The award is for unpublished, unagented manuscripts in the genres listed above. For complete eligibility requirements and submission guidelines, please visit their web page.

And by all means, if you enter and win, let us know!

J. Lea López is a writer with a penchant for jello and a loathing for writing bios. Find her on Twitter or her blog, Jello World. She has had some short stories published, most recently in the Spring Fevers anthology.

Friday, May 4, 2012

5 Tips for Holding an Online Contest

by Jean Oram

Hosting an online contest whether it's on your blog, website, Twitter, Facebook, or all of the above is a great way to reward your audience, create buzz, expand your reach, and promote your brand or product (book!).

However, not all contests are created equal. A few weeks ago we held our first contest here on From The Write Angle and while its success may have seemed guaranteed and easy, a lot of time and planning went into the contest to ensure it didn't flop miserably.

If you are considering hosting a contest now, or in the future, here are Five for Friday tips to help you make the most out of your contest.


5 Tips for Holding a contest


Five Ways to Get The Most Out of Your Online Contest:

1. Purpose

It's important to know why you are holding a contest. Is it strictly for fun and a way to reward your loyal readers? It is to expand your reach? Promote your book? Generate more "likes" or followers?

Depending on your purpose, it will change your approach as well as your contest criteria.

2. Criteria

Successful contests take a lot of time. Do you have the time (and desire) to read through a large pile of flash fiction (we did!), or do you simply want to draw a name from a hat? Do you have the time to build buzz before and during your contest as well as draw and announce winners followed by distributing prizes? Don't mess with your contest's schedule—plan ahead!

If you are hoping to generate "likes" on Facebook you might consider holding the contest right on Facebook. (Note: If you are holding a contest on Facebook you will need to use a Facebook app in order to stay within Facebook's contest holding rules—if you don't they could shut down your page and account without warning. Eek!)

When determining your contest's criteria, keep in mind that asking people to do great things for you such as like your Facebook page, follow your blog, follow you on Twitter, Tweet your contest, or whatever else you might come up with, may reduce the number of potential entrants significantly. Some people won't jump through hoops, aren't on social networks, or simply don't have the time to find you and follow you in all these places. Essentially you are asking them to promote you ... but for what? The slim chance they may win. Make it easy for them and make it worth it. Contests are fun. Not work for the entrant.

If your purpose is to gain followers and you really want to make following you a condition of entry, consider this idea: Give every entrant one entry for doing something simple like commenting on your blog. Then give an additional entry for any 'bonus' thing they do such as tweeting your contest. This way those who really desire the prize and don't mind sharing the word and have the time to do so, get more entries. But remember that you will have to keep track of who has jumped through which entry hoop. As well, what do you do for those who are already following you?

3. Details

Details are important and can make or break a contest. Remember to tell people HOW to enter. (You might be surprised how many contests forget this detail). WHERE to enter (especially important if you are talking about your contest on multiple social media platforms). WHEN to enter. (When does the contest open and close? Don't forget timezone info!) WHO can enter. (Can previous winners enter? Is this contest closed to people outside your home country?)

Always, always provide a direct link to your contest page or post. If people have to sift through blog posts, website pages, etc., to find your contest you will lose them. Make it easy and you will gain more entrants.

4. Prizes

Large prizes are wonderful, but keep your costs in mind. Who is going to pay for the prize and its shipping? Is a $50 prize going to be worth the five entries you receive? What about if you had 50 entries? What ROI (Return on Investment) are you hoping for? What will it take to accomplish that?

If you aren't sure, take a look around at networks similar to yours. Based on their contests, guesstimate how many entries you could get.

And when choosing your prizes, don't forget to consider what would appeal to your audience.

Note: You might consider a smaller prize for your first contest—think of it as a trial, risk-free learning contest. Save the big prizes for when you really know what you are doing and can knock your contest right out of the park with its awesomeness.

5. Promotion

If you want to reach new people and expand the reach of your contest, you are probably going to have to publicize your contest until the cows come home. Smart, unique ways to expand your contest's reach is essential. Overall, people retweet funny and unique, not spammy and self-promotional.

When promoting your contest you could do like many do (a.k.a. the lazy way) and rely on the entrants to spread the word. But keep in mind that asking your entrants to publicize your contest is bittersweet for them. Every person they tell who enters decreases their odds of winning—and they know it. It's up to you to make sure you find interesting ways to promote your contest over different networks, on different days, and at different times of the day. Don't expect people to miraculously find you and enter.

Direct links to your contest page/post (as mentioned already) are vital, but so is adding a footnote subsequent blog posts as well as a note or badge on your sidebar or wherever you can add one. Promote, promote, promote! Don't let people come to your site and miss your contest. Most people over promote their books and under promote their contests.

For example, we (the FTWA team) barely promoted our contest for about the first week or so. And we got two entries. Then we gave ourselves a little smack and tweeted, shouted, Facebooked, blogged, and taglined about the contest wherever seemed suitable. That afternoon we got four more entries and it kept growing from there. So do what you need to do to get the word out!

Note: Use hashtags like #free and #contest when promoting on Twitter.


Now that you've looked at five contest tips from the write angle, let us know what you think about contests. What advice would you share? What do you like in a contest? What do you hate? What drives you to enter a contest? Have you ever held a contest? Share with us! We'd love to hear your thoughts and make next year's blogiversary contest even bigger and better! (And yes, we are already planning next year!! We're crazy that way.)

Jean Oram usually wins contests when she is the only entrant. She blogs about writing, and also tweets about it, facebooks, and pins playful kid's play stuff on Pinterest. (She'd feel like a real winner if you followed her.) ;)

Friday, April 27, 2012

And the Winners Are...

Have you been biting your nails in anticipation of this post?

We received some great entries for our one-year blogiversary contest.

As a reminder, second place wins ebook copies of Devil on a Sparrow's Wing by Calista Taylor and The Watchtower by Darke Conteur. First place wins print copies of Sophie Perinot's The Sister Queens and Spring Fevers anthology edited by Matt Sinclair. All winners will also receive a special bonus prize (more info at the end of the post).

I won't torture you by drawing out the tension longer than the last pause on the American Idol finale, so let's get to it. (Any typos or minor errors in each submission have been edited. You're welcome. :-))

Second Place

We had a tie for second place, so you both win! Congratulations to Martina Cote-Kunz and Ty Unglebower. Let's take a look at their flash.

Disturbed, by Martina Cote-Kunz

She sat in the park, novel in hand, enjoying the solitude. The twittering of the birds did not disturb her. The rippling of the creek meandering by did not disturb her. So caught up in the words on the pages, that not even the occasional screech from a nearby playground could break her concentration or cause her to tear her eyes from the words she loved. She licked her finger, readied to turn the page, when a sudden ‘shuff clomp, shuff clomp’ caused her head shoot up.

A man, dressed as though he belonged to the group of guys doing construction on the other side of the park, the crew she’d made sure she was far away from, shuffled toward the only bench beside the creek – the one beside the seat she currently occupied. She frowned, hoping he’d realize that he was annoying her. But, he smiled, tipped his head in her direction and walked past her to sit down a few feet away. He was quite good looking, she realized. And, he looked strong as an ox. She slipped her sunglasses on and tilted her head at the perfect angle to watch him without him seeing her.

He took the newspaper he had tucked under his arm – a well toned and tanned arm, she admitted – and to her surprise, hidden inside the folds was a copy of Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities. All thoughts of his perfectly chiseled face instantly dissolved. This man had a mind! He must have to be reading such a glorious book. It was one of her personal favorites. She longed to discuss it with him, but the nerd in her was shy – much too shy to talk to this god who reminded her of Alcide from True Blood. She was entirely shocked when she heard his voice speaking to her first.

“What are you reading?”

She held up her worn copy of Jane Eyre to show him.

“One of my favorites,” he replied.

“Mine, too,” she answered back. She nodded toward his book. “That one, too. I love it.”

“It’s my first time reading it,” he acknowledged. And then continued, “I’m sorry if I bugged you by coming over here. But, the guys.. well you know. They’d bust my chops if they caught me reading a book without pictures of…. Well, you know,” he repeated himself.

She laughed. “I understand. I don’t mind,” she lied. Well, it was a lie up until about thirty seconds ago.

He nodded and began to read, an easy silence falling between them. The beeping of his watch roused them both from the stories they read and he stood.

“Time for me to get back to work. Maybe I’ll see you again?”

“I’d like that.”

“Good.”

He wrapped his book back in the paper and shuffled away again. This time she was free to look at his especially callipygian backside. “Good indeed,” she whispered before becoming lost in the words once again.  
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Ty Unglebower

He'd learned from his days on a film crew how to negotiate his surroundings and insinuate himself into virtually any space without being obtrusive, or even so much as detected. He knew just how useful this set of skills would become as soon as he'd read the article in the town paper.

"'It’s a little embarrassing, but I always write completely in the nude,' the statuesque 24 year old author confessed with a giggle. 'I just can't concentrate wearing clothes.'

Now that she has completed her move into the old Belmar Mansion, Miss Walsh can finally put that concentration to use again, writing her highly anticipated third novel."

Every night for two weeks he had observed Stacy Walsh's routine. From down the street at first. Then across from it. The last two afternoons, from her back yard. He memorized her movements down to the minute she began writing. (When she pulled the curtains in her study shut at 3:00 each afternoon.)

At 2:15 he entered the Walsh home by jimmying a basement window open. He glided up the stairs into the house, and up to the second floor to her study's closet.

There were boxes of stationery up to the ceiling. After a few easy contortions he situated himself and his cell phone at such an angle that he had a clear shot of her writing desk through a slat in the closet door.

When he heard the front door open, he knew it was ten minutes to 3:00. That was when she had always come back from lunch. He pressed record, and waited.

Walsh sauntered into the room and into his frame, and walked over to the window opposite where he lie, to pull the curtains shut. The author then pulled off her t-shirt and tossed it to the floor. No brassiere.

Next she wriggled her way out of a set of blue jeans two sizes too small for her. After some struggle, her callipygian form, unencumbered by panties, oozed out of her Levi's, which dropped to her ankles. She stepped out of them and crossed to the writing desk.

For half an hour his only movement was blinking. Yet he even tried not to do that, unwilling for even an instant to tear himself away from the bouncing, naked form of the sexy young author as she pecked away without pause at the keys on her laptop.

His shoulder had only just started to cramp, when she rose and walked out of the room with a sigh. This, he knew, was when she took her mid-day shower.

Once he heard the water come on, he opened the closet slowly, and extricated himself from the boxes. Rushing to the laptop, he punched a key to wake it from sleep mode.

Blood left his hands, as upon scrolling down he realized she had typed the same sentence over and over again for ten solid pages.

"I know you're in here."

He heard the cocking of a pistol behind him.  
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First place - Joan Cusick

The copy desk chief knew, without having to glance from his first-edition paper, as soon as the shapely intern walked into the newsroom. Suddenly, the night crew wasn't the least bit interested in writing anything -- a headline, a cutline, or even the great American novel. Their brains had downshifted into a much lower gear.

Then the muttering started.

"Legs all the way up to her ass."

"Look at that, will ya? It's down-right..."

The veteran editor couldn't resist. "Callipygian," he growled.

"Say what, chief?"

"Callipygian." His voice sounded like smoke and scotch -- two longstanding newsroom essentials. "I've got a twenty for the first person to use that word in a headline."

"Come on, chief. That's a fifty-dollar word if I ever heard one."

The chief refolded his first edition and looked up at the young editor. "You've got the right angle, kid. But my finances aren't nearly as plump and well-rounded as my ass."
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Congratulations again to our winners, Joan, Ty, and Martina! As I mentioned at the beginning of the post, in addition to the listed prizes, each of you will also be getting a bonus prize: a copy of Pete Morin's Diary of a Small Fish, in your choice of ebook or paperback. We'll be in touch with you this weekend to work out the logistics of delivery.

Thanks to all who submitted. We hope you had as much fun writing your flash fiction as we had reading it. Last but not least, a huge thank you to ALL of you - all of our readers and supporters who have helped us come this far in our first year. We hope you'll stick around and continue reading.

As always, we welcome your feedback and questions/suggestions for posts you'd like to see in the future, so don't hesitate to email us. We're happy to give you the write angle on all things writing and publishing related.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

A Blogiversary Contest!

From the Write Angle is one year old! We can't believe it has been a year already. To celebrate our birthday month, and to thank you, our loyal fans and readers, we're having a contest!
  • What: Flash fiction, maximum 500 words
  • Requirements: You must use each of the following words in your entry: paper, crew, callipygian, angle, novel. Other than that, there's no specific theme. It's up to you. Have fun with it!
  • Deadline: Entries must be received by midnight (EDT) on Wednesday, April 18th 2012
  • Method of entry: email your entry to fromthewriteangle@gmail.com with your flash fiction pasted in the body of the email. Please don't send any attachments.
  • Results: the Write Angle Crew will read and collectively decide on two winners, which will be announced here on the blog on Friday, April 27th.
Important: By entering, you agree to let us publish your flash fiction on this web site if you're one of the winners.

We would love if you would tweet or otherwise share this post and spread the word about the contest. We'd also love for you to subscribe to our blog. However, these are not requirements for contest entry.

One last thing... PRIZES! Two lucky winners will receive book by Write Angle crew members.

1st Place: 2 Print books
The Sister Queens, by our own Sophie Perinot












Spring Fevers short story anthology edited by our own Matt Sinclair, with stories from FTWA writers Cat Woods, J. Lea Lopez, R.S. Mellette and Mindy McGinnis. (Cover design by our amazing Calista Taylor, and interior design by R.C. Lewis) Currently only available in eBook format, you'll be one of the first to get your hands on a paperback copy!







2nd Place: 2 eBooks


Devil on a Sparrow's Wing, by Calista Taylor. This is the second in a series. You can get the first book, Viridis, free here so when you win this prize, you'll be ready for the sequel!








The Watchtower, by Darke Conteur










If you have any questions, leave them in the comments. We look forward to reading your entries!