I'm reporting directly from a writers conference (my 2nd in a month) where you get to hear agent and editor responses to pitches and proposals and I'm noticing one thing: no matter how much an an agent/editor/publisher likes a pitch, they conclude by requesting a submission by form. (usually Query Tracker, but sometimes the recipients own site) There is clearly some art to this, but I'm at a loss to figure out what it is.
The unspoken subtext was "If you really believe I'd love your book enough to take it to market, why can't you complete this simple task?"
I was fully prepared to share proposal PDF's, but there were no takers. Indeed, at the agent meetings I attended this morning, you weren't permitted to leave anything other than a business card. No sales sheets, summaries, resumes, or even big business cards. Just fill out the form - I heard it repeated over and over again.
There is clearly some art in the way you approach these forms, but what is it? What traps are set for us here?
I've asked before, but it seems like this is becoming more pervasive.
The unspoken subtext was "If you really believe I'd love your book enough to take it to market, why can't you complete this simple task?"
I was fully prepared to share proposal PDF's, but there were no takers. Indeed, at the agent meetings I attended this morning, you weren't permitted to leave anything other than a business card. No sales sheets, summaries, resumes, or even big business cards. Just fill out the form - I heard it repeated over and over again.
There is clearly some art in the way you approach these forms, but what is it? What traps are set for us here?
I've asked before, but it seems like this is becoming more pervasive.