The Colorado Gold Conference is coming up next month. I know I look forward to this event all year long. Seeing my fellow writers, gabbing about the previous year and celebrating my friends’ publications are all things I do at the Gold. I also take classes, eat way too much and bar con after dinner on Friday and Saturday nights.
But if you’re going to the Colorado Gold, you’ve got to prepare yourself. You’ve got to budget for the shenanigans, wear comfy shoes, and have a plan. Today I’m going to give you my top six suggestions for wooing that agent and getting a traditional book contract.
1.) Follow agents and editors on Twitter.
You can go to the conference section of this website and look at all of the agents and editors attending the conference this year. Let’s look at Meg Jeglinski. She’s an agent at the Knight agency. So I cut and pasted her name into Google, and the fourth hit down was her Twitter handle. I now follow Meg. If you’re really into Twitter, you’ll begin to notice how often they post, what they like to talk about and what they’re looking for in a submission.
2.) Choose the agents and editors you want to follow up with.
The conference schedules a pitch for every attendee. These are valuable opportunities – but they aren’t the only ones. So choose one or two additional agents you want to research and get to know. You may end up sitting at the same table with them during lunch or dinner. You may end up sharing a morning coffee over pastries.
3.) Get dressed up.
A friend of mine in the writing game once told me this old adage: Dress for the job you want. So when I’m at conference, I wear a suit and tie every day. On the day I pitch, I wear a black suit with a bright red tie. Now, I am a large Black man. I stand out wherever I go. When I’m doing business at the conference, I do make an impression.
4.) Have your manuscript ready.
I went to a local conference this year and heard a writing professional tell a story. Over the course of several conferences, this gentlemen asked every agent he could find this one question: “Why do you ask for chapters from everyone you meet?”
The answer was shocking. Every agent he spoke with said that 80% of writers never send anything.
When I heard this I felt a quick succession of emotions. Shock, confusion, followed by guilt. I remembered the half a dozen times I had successfully pitched and gotten a request for pages. I followed all of these up with sending nothing.
I wanted to tweak my manuscript. I wanted to go over my chapters with a fine-toothed comb. I wanted it to be perfect. I later realized that perfection is the twin sister of procrastination. I will not do that again.
5.) Be ready to pounce like an apex predator.
Whether you throw on the charm at your pitch appointment, during one of the conference meals, or at bar con, when your time comes, you’ve got to be ready. Throw on the charm, be suave and go in for the kill.
Have your manuscript ready, and practice a pitch to give to the agent. Practice an elevator speech (Tighten Your Query is a great resource for perfecting your pitch). Dress well, and if you wear makeup, check your lipstick and eyeliner one last time. Survey the surroundings and feel for the right time. Don’t be obnoxious, and be confident!
6.) Remember the agents and editors are on your side.
Please remember that agents and editors come to conferences because they want to find the next J.K. Rowling or Christopher Paolini. They are on your side. Be charming, dress up, know what they want to read and pick your moment. When they do ask for pages from your manuscript, go home Sunday afternoon and send it. The publishing business is hard enough without self-sabotage. Have some faith in yourself and the hard work you did to write a book.
When the conference is over, I would LOVE to hear from people who tried my suggestions.
See you at the Colorado Gold!
You are so right…on every point.
Thank you, Karen!
So very happy you hit on Dress Up more than once. A pitch is a job interview, people! Dress for Success. Somebody wrote a book with that title many many moons ago. I will introduce myself @ Colorado Gold.
Best Regards,
Liz Crawford
Liz,
Some of us are getting together tonight (Wednesday, Sept. 5th,) so if your in area stop by the Renaissance Hotel lobby bar about 5!