Showing posts with label group. Show all posts
Showing posts with label group. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 22, 2015
How to Make a Living Writing Children's Books
Read what is being published now. Books that were published in the 1980s would not be published today, said Andrea Brown, agent with Random House Children's Books. Children are more savvy and sophisticated, and current books being published reflect that. Familiarize yourself with the newest publications. Identify the publishers of books that are similar to your writing style.
Consider smaller markets. Many aspiring authors earn credentials and publishing credits by targeting children magazines. Having publishing credits to list in your query letter may get the attention of a book editor.
Write from the heart, and often. Brown notes that successful children's book publishers do not have children in the house. They write from the child within. When you have written the book, go back and revise until the story sparkles.
Join a critique group. Having feedback on the manuscript you think is perfect is vital for discovering handicaps you may be overlooking or gaining other tips on improving your writing. Critique groups can form networks and allies in your quest to be a children's book author. Find a critique group through newspaper listings, online meetup websites or by joining a professional organization, such as the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators.
Format your manuscript for submission. Visit the target publisher's website for details on the preferred format. Most picture book publishers will want the entire manuscript, typed double-spaced with one-inch margins. Include your last name, the title and page number in the top righthand corner of each page.
Include a query or cover letter if specified by the publisher. This can be three paragraphs: one to give the reader a hook, another to summarize your manuscript and a third to introduce yourself and your qualifications as a writer. This is where publishing credits from magazines and other small markets work in your favor.
Submit your manuscript. Note if the target publisher accepts multiple submissions. If this is not specified, you can only submit to this publisher and must wait until you hear from this publisher. Also note if a self-addressed stamped envelope needs to be included. Publishers use that to send back your manuscript if it is not needed, but recent trends stray from the SASE, with the publisher recycling your manuscript if it is not published. Publishers who do not accept a SASE will likely post a time period for contacting you on their website, usually three to six months.
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Tuesday, September 1, 2015
How do I Make Money Daily in the Stock Market With Little Capital?
Understand market volatility. The market as a whole, as well as many individual stocks, can fluctuate between 1 and 3 percent from previous day's close on many trading days. For a stock priced at $30, that would represent a change in value of $0.30 to $0.90 per share. Potential profit will depend on the total number of shares you wish to trade and your timing in getting in and out of the position.
Decide on the amount of trading capital you can commit. Buying shares in the stock market is affordable to everyone. You can buy as few as 10 or 20 shares, which may cost you only a few hundred dollars. Suppose you can commit $3,000 in capital, which would buy you 100 shares of a $30 stock. In the meanwhile, your profit target would be around $30 to $90 per trade per day.
Research a group of potential stocks for trading. Stocks do not rise and fall all at the same time and daily trading involves trading many different stocks. Trading daily requires not only the fine skills of technical analysis but also a broad knowledge about industries and sectors. Moreover, information about specific companies and the understanding of various economic data in general affect trading results as well.
Adopt a trading strategy. Two contrasting strategies are momentum trading and contrary trading. Momentum traders believe that what is rising or falling may well continue that trend. Contrarians believe that an apparent trend may soon reverse. Investopedia refers to momentum trading as looking for stocks moving in one direction on high volume. Contrary trading also concerns stocks in a directional course but on low volume. Both strategies may prove to be valid only if confirmed by the convergence or divergence between trading volume and price.
Take the profit or cut the loss. Discipline in trading is the willingness to overcome greed and fear. Always take the profit or cut the loss as planned, unless you have decided as an alternative to hold a position longer if a trade prediction was wrong. But any uncleared position ties up the capital and should be avoided when the total amount of capital is limited.
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