By Matt Sinclair
As writers, we tend to write what we know. For most of my
life and my entire professional career, I’ve been involved with the nonprofit
sector as an active volunteer, a paid employee, and a professional journalist,
and – in an unexpected way – as a publisher.
While I’m working to build a successful and profitable
publishing company, Elephant’s
Bookshelf Press, like many of the writers who have been published through
it, has always had a little bit of “nonprofit” feel to it. Although it has been
true for the anthologies, the more obvious example is our novel Battery Brothers by Steven Carman, the
proceeds of which will go the Sunshine
Foundation, which was the first organization to focus solely on providing
seriously ill children with their wishes, such as providing a trip to Disney or
setting up a visit from a celebrity.
The partnership works for both sides: Sunshine Foundation
has helped spread the word about Battery
Brothers in its newsletters and on its Website. We can include their logo
on the EBP Website and to link to them. The organization will receive the
proceeds from sales of the book. We had everything outlined in a contract
between us.
But even if you haven’t spent your career in the
nonprofit sector, it’s possible for just about any writer to build that type of
partnership. As with any new relationship, you need to develop it; it might not
happen immediately and it might not happen at all or in the way you initially
hoped. Still, the potential for mutual benefit is there and worth pursuing.
How do you do it? Each organization is different, so
sometimes the best contact person is in the public affairs or media office, but
it could also be someone in the fundraising or development department. In my
opinion, a writer’s initial goal should be to ensure that the story maintains
believability. Could a person with diabetes run a marathon, for example? It’s
possible, but a group like the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation or the
American Diabetes Association can help you understand the conditions in which
it’s most likely, or possible challenges that might add tension to your story.
A call to the organization can open the door to someone who’s willing to talk
to you.
It’s best when there’s a clear connection. For example,
if you have a significant character who suffers from a specific disease, it’s
always a good idea to do your research so the depiction is accurate. There is
likely an organization that provides services or funds research that can help
you. This type of relationship works best because you both have something to
gain: you get accurate information and they have the opportunity to educate
people. Be sure to thank the organization in an acknowledgements section of
your finished work.
But even if there’s not a clear connection, you might be
able to work something out. The key is communicating with the organization. Perhaps
a character in your story has been beaten or abandoned. There are numerous
human service organizations that help people in those situations, and they
might be willing to highlight your book in a newsletter. It might only require
a polite request.
As an important caveat: don’t simply use an
organization’s name and say that the organization will receive a portion of the
proceeds if you don’t have an actual agreement. Most organizations don’t like
it when their name is used without permission; some will file suit.
The key is building a relationship, a partnership.
There’s no telling where good relationships can take you.
Matt Sinclair, a New York City-based journalist and fiction writer, is also president and chief elephant officer of Elephant's Bookshelf Press, which recently published Battery Brothers, a YA novel by Steven Carman about a pair of brothers playing high school baseball and about overcoming crippling adversity. Matt also blogs at the Elephant's Bookshelf and is on Twitter @elephantguy68.
2 comments:
This was an interesting article. Thanks for sharing!
www.modernworld4.blogspot.com
Thanks, Gina!
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