Where's the (freelance) sports coverage?
ShareThisQUESTION: I am a sports columnist and member of the CAJ, my work has been published in smaller newspapers and online for the past three years. I am quite aware that the daily newspaper business is in a state of flux but when I approach any daily newspapers with my work, hoping to reach a new level with my writing, I run into one dead end after another. I would love to actually get paid but being published is more important at this point in my career. Even without being paid, editors have told me if they use a freelance writer, the union gets angry. How do I overcome this hurdle and get published and hopefully paid one day? Thanks for any suggestions, your help is truly appreciated.
-Andrew Rodger
Answer by Chronicle Herald sports editor Andrew Waugh.
ANSWER: It is a difficult thing to justify publishing a freelance column over something written by a guild member. However, it's not impossible. The most important way to differentiate yourself from other offerings is to offer something genuinely different. Simply being another voice weighing in on Tiger Woods, Sidney Crosby or LeBron James just won't cut it. Target a niche that the paper's readers might be interested in - as a general rule, local always trumps national or international - and then cover it well. Chances are if your pitch will really add something to the conversation already occurring within the paper's pages, you'll stand a better chance of having something published.
Andrew Waugh is the assistant director of news content and acting sports editor of The Chronicle Herald in Halifax.
-Andrew Rodger
Answer by Chronicle Herald sports editor Andrew Waugh.
ANSWER: It is a difficult thing to justify publishing a freelance column over something written by a guild member. However, it's not impossible. The most important way to differentiate yourself from other offerings is to offer something genuinely different. Simply being another voice weighing in on Tiger Woods, Sidney Crosby or LeBron James just won't cut it. Target a niche that the paper's readers might be interested in - as a general rule, local always trumps national or international - and then cover it well. Chances are if your pitch will really add something to the conversation already occurring within the paper's pages, you'll stand a better chance of having something published.
Andrew Waugh is the assistant director of news content and acting sports editor of The Chronicle Herald in Halifax.
Comment Policy
J-Source invites comments on any content items or on any other topics relevant to journalism. Those posting comments are expected to adhere to standards of accuracy and fairness that would be recognized by those who practise, teach or study journalism.
- Comments are restricted to registered users. You must register with your full first and last name in order to be eligible to comment.
- Please communicate as effectively and intelligently as you would in a professional or academic forum, focusing on the issues at hand rather than the characters or characteristics of those involved.
- This forum is intended for discussion of the craft of journalism, not of the issues of the day that journalists cover; please do not post story tips or press releases.
- We moderate the forum for adherence to these standards of discourse, and reserve the right to decline any comment or restrict any user from commenting without giving reasons. Every effort is made to approve valid comments within 24 hours of submission.



Comments