- Have you outgrown an amateur writer's group (meaning, are you the best writer there or can the group no longer give you feedback)
- Have you read at least 5 books on improving your craft?
- Have you presented your work to those who "*know what they're talking about" and received positive feedback (some examples of these might be editors/agent meetings at writer's conferences, published authors, personalized rejection letters, etc.)?
- Do you know as much or more about a topic presented at a **conference as the speaker?
**Eventually, you'll start to outgrow conferences as well, as a lot of the classes begin to repeat themselves (ie-they always seem to have a class on how to write fabulous queries.) This is another sign that your writing is becoming publishable.
Start using the connections you've made at these conferences/online/writer's groups to improve your writing and network.
I can hardly afford the next grocery bill. How can I afford to go to conferences? I really, really want to, but it seems out of my reach.
ReplyDeleteAnd... I know it's probably somewhere on your blog, but how did you get your agent? Was it a blind query or at a conference? Or some other way?
I started selling jewelry on the side to pay for it.
ReplyDeleteHow I got my agent is kinda a long story. Basically, I met some editors at a conference and had some serious interest. It's a lot easier to get an agent when you have a contract.
Course, we turned down the contract, cause it sucked . . .