Problem: An editor wants your article, but you wrote 3,000 words and she only wants 2,700 words. Solution: The ten percent solution. I found this idea when peddling my humor columns a few years ago. An editor said they were loose, rambling and about ten percent too long. The ten percent solution met that editor's needs. It works in fiction and non-fiction, even query letters and outlines, any style or length. You can use it to make more sales--and more money. Here's how: First, when you write, don't be too concerned about length. Just put on your writer hat and write. Make sure your lead is engaging, your examples concrete, your transitions smooth, your body entertaining (or informative, if you're doing non-fiction) and your conclusion a clean wrap. Check grammar, spelling, voice, agreement--all that writerly stuff. Finish it. Then set it aside. Second, toss away your writer hat, don your editor hat and cut your story by ten percent. As you edit, inflated prose will jump at you. You'll realize you can do with three rather than four examples, that you have a quote too many, that one can be paraphrased, another shortened. Before you know it, you've cut ten percent. (Or so. The title is a convenience, not a fixed objective. Don't be arbitrary about this. If you go about this too arbitrarily, you may cut too much--or too little.) Best of all, what's left reads--and pays--better. Some things to look for to trim the fat without cutting the meat:
There are more. Make your own list. In time, you won't need it. Always ask yourself, "If I cut, will it hurt meaning?" If so, leave it. If not, you've found a place to apply the ten percent solution--and improve your chances to sell. (Extra credit assignment: edit this article using the ten percent solution. Of course you can do better.) The 10% Solution is now available at fictionwise.com in ebook formats, and as a chapbook from amazon.com.HomeCopyright © 2000 by Ken RandPage by webspinner |