Career Planning: Article
2
©Lucy Monroe
Career Planning:
Defining Your Vision and Target Market
A career plan is a concrete expression of a
vision that exists inside you. To give that vision expression,
you need first to bring it into focus...to see it clearly with
not only your subconscious, but your conscious mind. In order
to do that, you need to answer a couple of really important
questions before you can set goals or write up a career
plan.
YOUR VISION:
If you could be anywhere in the world as a writer, where
would you be? What publishing house would you write for? How
many books a year would you write? What do you want out of your
career as a writer?
The answers to these
questions are going to take both a practical and measurable
form as well as the more nebulous goals whose success is not
necessarily reflected in sales statistics or recognition for
the author. For instance, part of my vision for my own writing
is to touch a reader the way my favorite authors have touched
me. I want be a writer who changed someone’s life with my book,
who made readers feel that afterglow that comes from reading a
really emotionally satisfying story. This aspect of my vision
is just as important as the number of books I want to write a
year and the subgenres I want to target.
YOUR TARGET
MARKET: What is your niche?
The first step here is
to determine your general target market. Are you writing
romance, mystery, women’s fiction, something else? The next
step is to narrow your market to the subgenre in which you are
writing and from there, to which publishers are most likely to
publish what you write.
An example: Happy
Writer is writing books with a happy ending that are focused
primarily on the relationship between the male and female
protagonists. Her books are set during the Gold Rush in North
America.
Her general market:
Romance
Her subgenre:
Historical
Her niche: Western
Historical Romance
To determine her target
publisher(s), Happy Writer needs to do some industry research.
Not all publishers of historical romance are open to Western
settings. How does Happy Writer go about identifying the ones
who will? She looks at the spine on the books most like her
own. Who is the publisher? What is the line? Who is the author?
Happy Writer not only reads the publisher guidelines, but she
reads recent releases in niche market she is
targeting.
A final note about
determining your target market: There are a lot of growing and
new markets opening up in women’s fiction and romance right now
– but they are subgenre specific and if elements of those
markets don’t reflect your creative bent, targeting them isn’t
going to get you one step closer to being published or meeting
your career goals. If you like to write stories that make
people cry, targeting a comedy line because they are a more
open market than single title sagas is only going to bind up
your creativity.
In the next article, we
will look at career objectives as the skeleton for the career
plan.
About the author: Lucy
Monroe is the award-winning author of more than thirty
books. She's married to her own alpha hero and has three
terrific children. The only thing she enjoys more than
writing is spending time with them. Lucy loves to hear
from readers at lucymonroe@lucymonroe.com or you can find
her online at http://lucymonroe.com.

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