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Blog

Why would a magazine have YOU write their articles?

Budget Travel June 2008 issue, written by the readers (Scarborough photo)The latest issue (June 2008, the magazine’s 10th anniversary) of Budget Travel, one of my long-time favorites, is entirely written by amateurs.

That’s right, some goober down the street tells you how to travel to places like New York City and Arizona’s Navajo Nation and Hong Kong and Reykjavik, Iceland.

You know what? They did a great job of it, too!

Months ago, I noticed several “calls for input” on This Just In (Budget Travel‘s blog) for this special written-by-the-readers issue. I passed on the opportunity because, quite frankly, as a full-time writer I’d rather be paid to write for their publication.

My print copy hadn’t even landed in my mailbox before a little related dust storm hit the Travelwriters.com bulletin board, with the topic thread title “Amateurs write for Budget Travel.” Experienced writers on the BBS huffed that “maybe the editors would like to go back to hiring professional writers” and “getting them [readers] to write an entire issue does seem more than a bit risky.”

Remember, these are folks like me; professional writers and journalists who have been crawling through assorted destinations for years, finding the nuggets and describing the world with practiced, beautiful prose. They take pride in their work and are understandably peeved at wads of free user-generated content (like that on TripAdvisor, for example) pushing aside their years of analytical experience and their paychecks.

One travel writer, though, nailed it — and in my opinion it’s thanks to his lengthy experience working online.

Durant Imboden from the excellent Europe for Visitors Web site said in response, “Didn’t Glamour [magazine] used to publish an issue that was edited (obviously with adult supervision) by college students? This sounds in that same vein. A clever idea, really, if it encourages a sense of community/participation and helps to retain subscribers at a time when travel magazines are threatened by the Web.” (emphasis mine.)

(Update 28 May 08: I did a little research, and it was actually the now-defunct “Mademoiselle” magazine that used to have selected female college students write and edit their August issue. Sylvia Plath used her experiences as one of those writers/interns when she wrote “The Bell Jar,” and journalist Lynn Sherr wrote on the “Huffington Post” about her experience as one of those interns.)

It’s no secret that print media is struggling. It is used to making money by selling subscriptions and advertising, and advertising companies are still sorting out how to move their money online as print media revenue drops. Ad companies pay HUGE money to get their print ads in front of me in magazines, and I blow past them just like I mute ads on television and immediately shred direct mail solicitations.

Magazines, if they’re smart, are trying a variety of revenue and content-publishing models. Budget Travel is smart, and that’s why I subscribe to them; I put my money where the talent is. They cover down-to-earth, relatively unusual travel destinations like eastern Kansas, always with one’s wallet in mind and without the doofus nouveau riche Rolex-studded pretension that I find in the glossy Condé Nast Traveler magazine (one exception is Traveler‘s consumer travel editor Wendy Perrin, who seems to demonstrate in her Perrin Post blog that she’s heard of a budget.)

If you don’t already subscribe, head over to your local newstand or book store and get the June 2008 issue of Budget Travel magazine. Keep them in business.

The reader’s issue is well-written by regular people who love to get out, see the world, take good photos and then come back and tell you about it (with admittedly a lot of help from the BT editors.) I thoroughly enjoyed the issue, just as I like the magazine and their lively blog. Put your money where the worthy talent resides.

Thanks for trying something new, Budget Travel editors. As a writer, I’m not offended at all if it keeps you on the newsstand and in my mailbox.

Now I need to think up some good travel article pitches to send in your direction….

(Update 29 May 2008: The June 2008 issue of “This Old House” is also entirely reader-generated — it’s temporarily titled “Your Old House.”)

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Blog USA

My kinda town….Chicago is.

Chicago skyline (courtesy Shane Bee at Flickr Creative Commons)Frank Sinatra sang that the Windy City was his “kind of town” (courtesy songwriters Sammy Cahn and James Van Heusen) and I have to agree.

This is just a quick post while I’m here this weekend for the fabulous SOBCon 07 blogging conference, which ends today.

We are out near O’Hare Airport, not downtown, but yesterday I did manage to run into the central Loop area on the “El” (elevated train, a transportation fixture here) for a couple of hours.

I’ve only been here once before, years ago, for a Navy engineering school at the nearby Naval Station Great Lakes. All that I had time for then was one afternoon walkaround plus an amazing outdoor concert with folkie Tracy Chapman and South African rocker Johnny Clegg.

This is such an open city, with rivers running through town, the ever-present breeze, polite people and amazing architecture. Do you know that I heard “Please, may I have….” about five times yesterday at various food service counters and transport stations? How nice, and unfortunately how unusual in some cities.

Later this summer I’ll be back here on a Midwest road trip with my teenager, and I promise to write lots of posts.

For now, you can see some Chicago info on my guest post over on Darren Cronian’s well-known Travel Rants blog in the UK. I highlighted five places in the U.S. that are off the beaten path; maybe they are familiar to North Americans, but they are not as well known to international visitors.

Besides Chicago/Door County, Wisconsin, I chose Providence RI/Block Island, north central Florida/Panhandle beaches, Portland/Astoria Oregon and Forth Worth/east Texas.

Stop by Travel Rants and visit!

Technorati tags: family travel, travel, Chicago

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Blog

A 1000 Voices (well, over 370.)

I’ve been hopping over at one of my other blogs, the Perceptive Travel Blog, where I’m a co-author.

Dynamic Australian blogger Darren Rowse, who runs the ProBlogger site, has a Group Writing Project going on — I’m one of , oh, over 370 submissions so far on the topic “Top 5.” It can be “Top 5” of anything, which is great because that means an enormous variety of blogs can participate. 

My own post was Top Five Travel Blogs You Gotta Read, featuring the Perrin Post by Conde Nast Traveler magazine’s Consumer Travel Editor Wendy Perrin, hilarious travel writer Leif Pettersen’s Killing Batteries, Budget Travel Online‘s useful blog  This Just In…., New Zealand writer Liz Lewis’ My year of getting published and three blogs at CHOW, the online food magazine. 

For Day One and Day Two of the Project, I looked for posts that were travel-related, but since there were so many interesting ones, I got rather distracted.  For your reading pleasure, here are my faves:

Five gems: what makes a good pub?  by Michael Scott (well, of course I picked this one.)

Top 5 Steps to Securing your Data  by Geoff R (“got backup?”)

The Top Five Firsts of the First Two Years of the American Civil War by Mike Goad (this guy is seriously into the Civil War.)

Top 5 Techniques for Sermon Idea Generation by Sherman Haywood Cox II (a whole blog on being a preacher.)

Top 5 Reasons Why We Travel by Timen

Top 5 Spanish Tapas by Matthew Bennett

The Top 5 Reasons to Start Your Weight Loss Plan Today by JoLynn Braley Top 5 Reasons Freelancing is a Bad Idea by Mike Sieber

Top 5, mojich pät najlep’ích ucitelov by Peter Druska (’cause I have to give props to bloggers in Slovakia)

The Top 5 Reasons To Make Nova Scotia Your Next Vacation Destination by Bryan Henry

Top 5 Unusual Guitars Owned by Popular Musicians by Adam Ferguson

Top Five Languages I Would Like to Learn by Darrell Pursiful

The Top 5 Time Savers in My Kitchen by Maricar

Top 5 Gardening Tips by Kenny Point

Since Sunday, 13 May is Mother’s Day in the U.S.:  5 Gifts for Mom That Won’t Ever Go Out of Fashion by ispf

Jackie Chan’s Greatest Fight Scenes by Chris  (reminded me of Hong Kong.)

Top 5 Great Birding Moments by Trevor Hampel  (all over Australia)

5 Top Myths Foreigners Have About Ukraine by Alexander Radich

5 Top Things I Miss About Harare, Zimbabwe by Sharon

What Are Your Top 5 Travel Dreams? by Stacy

5 Reasons Queen’s Market Must Be Saved by Jon Tillman (an East Londoner’s point of view)

Top 5 DC Things To Do This Summer by Francoise Galleto  (Washington, DC) 

I’m a stranger here myself by Jul  (an expat sees her home with new eyes)

5 best places to go while visiting Acadia National Park by Norman Sargent  (a popular US park in Maine)

Top 5 Australian beach locations for the IT commuter by Vincent McBurney  (finding that life balance)

My Five Most Awestruck Travel Experiences by Steve Madsen 

Top 5 most entertaining foreign films of the last decade by Jithin Jerald

Top Five Strategies For Travelling Light by Graham Barker

and finally, Top 5 Monkey Songs by Martin Breton  (Obvious travel tie-in, right?)

Go ahead and read through them; I’ll wait here. 🙂

(This was originally posted at my Kid Trippin’ blog, on Disney’s Family.com.)

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, blogging, ProBlogger, Group Writing Project

Categories
Blog

SOBCon 07, for Successful and Outstanding Bloggers (you!)

I love blogging, especially the wonderful people I meet in the blogosphere.

It’s not surprising; bloggers are just writers online (with a somewhat different bag of tricks, to be sure) and since writing tends to be a solitary profession, the more gabby and social of us really enjoy the chance to meet fellow writers.  

This Friday, I’m flying to Chicago from Texas for basically one day of blog-o-mania.  It will be worth every penny and every moment of lost sleep — not to mention having dinner with Wendy Perrin of Conde Nast Traveler magazine, whom I convinced to drop everything and attend since she blogs at the Perrin Post.  I participated in a fun contest on her blog and did well enough to win a chance at dinner, and we found that our paths would intersect in Chi-town.

SOBCon 07 (for Successful and Outstanding Bloggers) will be hosted by community-builder Liz Strauss and a gaggle of extraordinary speakers and panelists.  One of them was even featured by a Business Week blogger….

In the May 08 issue of his column, Nussbaum on Design, Bruce Nussbaum shines the light on SOBCon and speaker David Armano.

“Blog conferences are proliferating and I think it’s because people are discovering that blogging – blogging with a purpose – is harder than it appears. This is a lesson that I’m discovering as I meander into the blogopshere. If you want to influence an audience, you actually have to know how.

And there is no better teacher of these skills than David Armano over at Logic + Emotion. David is talking this Saturday at SOBCon07 (who makes this stuff up?) about taking blogs to the next level.”

“If you want to influence an audience, you actually have to know how.”  Very true.

The Successful and Outstanding Bloggers Conference begins this Friday, May 11, with a great bang and fanfare. Check the Schedule Of Events for all the details.

If you haven’t registered, there is still room, so sign up now to ensure a seat in this jam-packed conference.

The conference is at the Hotel Sofitel Chicago O’Hare
5550 North River Road, Rosemont in Chicago.
Tel: (+1)847/678-4488

Need directions? Here’s the Sofitel Chicago O’Hare Hotel on Google Maps for driving directions.

The hotel is sold out but there are other places to stay nearby. Check the Accommodations list.

Some of the brightest blogging stars and experts in blog building will be at the conference, sponsored by Blog Herald, Blog Talk Radio, Evoca, Podblaze, MyBlogLog, TheGoodBlogs, Haneberg Management, among others.

The speakers include Phil Gerbyshak of Make It Great!, David Armano of Logic + Emotion, Andy Sernovitz author of Word of Mouth Marketing: How Smart Companies Get People Talking, Liz Strauss of Successful and Oustanding Bloggers, Mike Sansone of Conversations and BlogTalk Radio, Drew McLellan of Drew’s Marketing Minute, Mike Wagner of Own Your Brand, Rodney Rumford of PodBlaze, Ben Yoskovitz of Instigator Blog, Chris Cree of Success CREEations, Scott Rafer of MyBlogLog, Vernon Lun of The Good Blogs, Diego Orjuela of Evoca, Wendy Piersall of eMoms at Home, Terry Starbucker of Ramblings from a Glass Half Full, and many other blogging experts.

This is your last chance for this one-time blogger’s special event, so sign up now and learn how to take your blog beyond.

Need more convincing? Here is what others have been saying about it:

What more do you need? See you there!   

Technorati tags:  blogging, travel writing

Categories
Blog Europe

Tips for Tuscany and the ProBlogger Guy

Duomo di Siena, Tuscany, Italy (courtesy Geo8 at Flickr Creative Commons)If you want some fresh, no-holds-barred advice on travel to Tuscany (my post on Pisa/Florence with kids is a bit long in the tooth, although I try to add links with updated info) look no further than the Tuscany lists.

It’s Leif Pettersen’s latest post on his trenchant Killing Batteries travel writing blog.

Leif is usually offering up his expertise in Romania and Moldova, among other garden spots, but thanks to a scheduling glitch with Lonely Planet‘s guide to Tuscany, he’s been able to live the “high life” (not!) updating the LP Tuscany guidebook.

He’s definitely become one of my Five Travel Blogs You Gotta Read, which is the post I did for the Perceptive Travel blog as a part of Aussie Darren Rowse’s latest ProBlogger Group Writing Project.

If you’ve never participated in one of these Projects, and you’re a blogger or like to read blogs, get your self over (Down Under?) to the fabulous ProBlogger site and check out the Project.

It’s a no-brainer for fun and bloggy traffic.

If you participate in his Group Writing Project, and follow the directions, Darren generously links up to your blog and your post. Now, if you’re a biggie like LifeHacker or something, that’s no big deal to you. But if you’re like most of us, toiling out here in the hinterlands with pretty good traffic but not blowing anyone away, a couple of big fat links from ProBlogger are a nice gust of exposure.

Even better, you’ll find hundreds of new blogs to enjoy, and they will find you.

Technorati tags: travel, blogging, travel blogs, ProBlogger, Group Writing Project

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Blog

I’m in New Zealand — sort of

Blogger at work (courtesy saar at Flickr's Creative Commons)

Through the wonders of the blogosphere, I’m featured in a post this week by New Zealand blogger Liz Lewis.

It’s part of her series of email interviews with various travel writers worldwide, and I’m honored to be included in such esteemed company (and to be featured on a Kiwi blog!) 

I’m not sure how many pearls of wisdom that I bestowed in her interview with me, but feel free to pay a visit and leave a comment. 

Liz launched herself into the blogosphere with the gutsy My Year of Getting Published, an account of her efforts to get started as a real-live freelance writer and blogger.  

How’d she do it?  Hard work, careful building of a portfolio of published clips, properly targeted queries and playing to her strengths, including her expertise on New Zealand travel.  (She’s also a nurse, and landed a paid blogging gig discussing Alzheimer’s disease.)

I learned about her “publish thyself” project through Deb Ng, who scopes out writing jobs most weekdays at Freelance Writing Jobs, and gives good blogger tips at About.com’s About Weblogs.  Thanks for the intro, Deb.

Liz and I keep “running into each other” in the comments section of various travel blogs, especially the Perrin Post — I don’t know how you can manage to wave to another person in print, but somehow we do!

The blogosphere is like this very cool social gathering where you circulate and run into the neatest people….OK, so you do have the obnoxious drunks at the party sometimes; the ones whose writing makes you feel as though someone just grabbed your butt and needs a good smack upside the head.  

Overall, however, I love that I’m featured on a New Zealand blog, that the post includes a link to a Houston tech blogger who’s helped me a lot, he sees the link and sends me an email to say thanks, plus tells me that he put up a blurb about it on Twitter, which I learned about at SXSWi, which I wrote about for a wonderful blogger in Chicago, who I’m going to actually see in person next month, along with having dinner with another travel writer that I met online, where I also ran into Liz Lewis.

Technorati tags:  travel, family travel, blogging, travel writing, New Zealand

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Blog

Grab Bag: Over-used travel words and latest carnival

Here’s a mashup — a terrific thread from the Travelwriters.com BBS of most over-used words in travel writing, and the latest Home Turf Media blog carnival. 

For the first topic, I must say that, yikes, I’ve been guilty of a few of the cliched expressions that are panned on the BBS, like “a step back in time” or “nestled.”  This is a fun discussion and should be required reading for English composition classes. 

For the second topic, let me commend the Carnival of Cities #3, Urban Planet to your reading pleasure.  Topics submitted include:

Houston, Texas, USA    Bill at Wisebread wants you to know why a bad first job is good for you. It’s the first in a series of articles about how to break into Houston’s advertising industry.

Seattle, Washington, USA    Mary Jo Manzanares tells us about the thought-provoking photography exhibit “Captured Youth” at Pioneer Square’s James Harris Gallery.  She writes at The Seattle Traveler.

Des Moines, Iowa, USA    Doug Mitchell wants to know what would happen if “Little House on the Prairie’s” Charles Ingalls had venture funding (or How America’s Heartland Is HOT.)   

Chattanooga, Tennessee, USA    Alli Crumley extends a warm welcome to Chattanooga visitors (it’s natural that you will love it here.) 

San Francisco, California, USA    The Silicon Valley Blogger is appalled that this old house is worth US$ 1.23 million compared to a gorgeous home in another attractive Western US city. 

Bellevue, Washington, USA    Steve Madsen tells us that in Bellevue, Seattle’s younger sister is growing up. 

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia    CJCM discovers that Zass!!, the world’s first mobile hair salon, is in Kuala Lumpur.   

Tokyo, Japan    Yours truly presents a detailed itinerary from Asakusa to Odaiba in Tokyo. 

Preston, Lancashire, the United Kindom    Riversider argues against excessive development and barrage construction on the historic River Ribble, near the town of Preston.  His post asks, “Riverworks, who stands to gain: property consultants or the environment?”   

Berlin, Germany    Steve presents Five Favs – Berlin, Germany posted at Exit Row Seat

Fribourg, Switzerland    Jul describes colorful Fribourg in words and lovely photos at her blog This non-American Life.  

That’s it for today; the week is rapidly getting crazier as I prepare to attend Austin’s South by Southwest (SXSW) Interactive conference (for “digital creatives”) starting this Friday.  I’ll be blogging about it over at Liz Strauss’ Successful Blog

Categories
Blog Tips

Happy New Year Blogtipping

Blogtipping

Thanks to some post-a-day ideas from Successful Blog, my brain doesn’t have to think of writing topics for the entire month of January.

I’ve never been a blogtipper, although I think Easton Ellsworth’s concept from Business Blogwire is a great idea. However, since it’s a new year and a new month, I’m going to take a stab at highlighting a few blogs/sites that I enjoy.  They are more writer-related than travel-related, but if I decide to keep tipping I’ll start paying more attention to travel-specific blogs that I can spotlight.  Here goes:

**  My year of getting published — here’s a fellow writer, a travel writer mostly, named Liz Lewis. She is putting it all out there about her determined efforts to get her work published.

1)  I like the details about items that are accepted and rejected; statistics of how many pitches are sent/accepted/rejected, and editor’s comments. You’re obviously working your tail off, with lots of queries going out.

2)  I like your other blog about travel in New Zealand.  It’s very detailed, full of photos and interesting links.

3)  Your list of writing goals for 2007 is an inspiration.  You’re very good at laying out measurable milestones and a clear roadmap to success; no wonder you’ve been successful getting published this past year.

Tip:  Give us a picture of you with your bio info!

**  StartupNation — Jeff and Rich Sloan’s comprehensive site for anyone running their own business, big or small.

1)  You have a vibrant and informative community Forum that never fails to give me interesting ideas and good info.

2)  You are always coming up with neat stuff like the new Marketplace (in beta) for fellow entrepreneurs.

3)  Your “10 Steps to Open for Business” really helped me focus when I started my own freelance writing services.  Hey, it’s just me, myself and I, but it’s still a business!

Tip:  Tell your readers more about the StartupNation blogs; I just found them today.

**  The Renegade Writer blog — Linda Formichelli and Diana Burrell wrote one of the key books that got me started as a full-time freelance writer. This is their blog.

1)  Your organizational makeover of one of your writer-readers had lots of good work flow ideas.

2)   The “You Ask, We Answer” advice section is always ready with a direct, helpful response to those nagging writerly questions.

3)   You tackle one of every writer’s favorite topics: how to send a terrific query letter. Not only did you write the book on the subject, you also provide helpful advice on your blog about queries.

Tip:  Your bios (and maybe a photo) should be more “front-and-center” towards the top of the home page, in my opinion.

Well, that was fun, and I certainly think I’ll try again February 1st.  Happy New Year to all of you travelers and writers….

I Love Blogtipping