…but what you can do for your agent.
Yesterday, we learned what a good literary agent can do for both your career, and your sanity. Today, let’s talk about the other side of that proverbial coin: what you can do to make your agent’s job (and maybe her life) easier.
Again, let’s start with the most obvious: Meet your deadlines. You’ll get a little input on due dates for your books/proposals, and you should be honest about how soon you can have your work finished. Be sure to allow for time for your CPs/beta readers to read the book and give you the valued opinion you’re counting on them for. And make sure to give yourself time to do some serious editing and rewriting. Because once a deadline is set, you’ll be expected to stick to it, and it can be really embarrassing to have to admit later that you’re going to need more time.
How does this affect your agent? Well, it’s going to be easier for her to get you want you want, both in terms of your contracts and in other minor things that come up, if you’re known for being prepared and punctual. People are more willing to make occasional allowances for those who are professional and easy to work with.
How else can you help your agent? Polish your work. Even after you’re published. So you’ve sold a book or two. Or maybe three. If anything, the bar has been raised, not lowered. You’re now expected to be professional, without that buffer of newbie shine. Your work should be skillfully edited and polished before your agent sees it, to cut down on the revisions she’ll suggest, and to make her first read-through go quickly.
You want your agent to be itching to see your new book. You want her to crave it. To rip it open as soon as it arrives, and devour it in a single sitting. The last thing you want is for your agent to dread reading your latest manuscript, even if she knows it’ll be fantastic, because she also knows it’ll take a lot of work to get rid of the typos, grammatical mistakes, and plot holes.
What else can you do? Expect revisions, and accept criticism. Your agent and editor both have a lot riding on the success of your career, and they’re probably both going to have some ideas to make your manuscript better. These suggestions will all be intended to improve your story or the strength of your writing, and to ultimately make more money for you all, and lengthen your career. Keel this in mind.
Revisions say nothing about you as a person. They’re not personal. They’re the very core of professional writing career. Revisions are concrete proof that both your agent and your editor are watching your back. That they’re in your corner. They’re dotting your Is, crossing your Ts, and finishing your incomplete sentences. They’re filing plot holes, fixing inconsistencies, and trimming up those dangling participles. And no writer is perfect. We all need a fresh set of professionally trained eyes mopping up behind us. So don’t be offended. Be grateful for their time, flattered that they’re spending it on you, and open to making some changes.
Now we’re down to one of the things I really struggle with. If you want to make your agent’s job easier…do your best to just calm down and be patient. Seriously. Yes, emergencies sometimes happen. Yes, normal problems sometimes seem like emergencies. Yes, sometimes phone calls/contracts/edits/covers are late. But it’s not the end of the world. It’s not the end of your career. It’s probably not even the end of your contract. And I promise that calling your agent every hour, on the hour, will not speed things up. In fact, it will likely slow them down, because while she’s on the phone assuring you that the publisher still does want your book, and they haven’t changed their minds, and you really can write, she can’t be out there working on your behalf. Or that of any of her other clients. And let’s not forget, you’re not the only one. Not by a long shot.
When your agent has news, she will let you know. If it’s big news, she’ll call. If it’s minor news, she’ll probably email you. But either way, she will keep you in the loop. There’s no reason to call every day to see if she’s heard anything new. Calling with questions is fine. Even expected. It really is. But calling with the same question every day is not. So take a deep breath, put down the phone, and think calm, confident thoughts. Because that’s how you want to appear. Calm and confident.
And, last of all, and possibly most important, thank your agent. I may go overboard on this one. The verdict isn’t back yet, so I’m not sure. But I am very thankful for my agent and all the things she does on my behalf, especially considering that until that first check came in, she was working on my behalf for free. Because she believed in my work. That’s a huge compliment. And I like to return the favor. I tell everyone I know how fabulous she is. I tell her the same thing, every time she does something else on my behalf, which happens all the time. In fact, I probably say it too often. But I want to make sure she knows.
Also, I’m always looking for suggestions. Those of you out there with agents…what do you do to make your agent’s life easier? To make her feel appreciated? Anyone? Anyone? Bueller? Bueller?
Hopefully we’ll get some more input. And, if not, at least now you have somewhere to start. ;-)
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- I’m an urban fantasy and young adult author for Mira books, journaling my experiences in publishing.
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9 comments:
This is fantastic info :)
Rachel:
Excellent, excellent post. Thank you for that!
Susan (hoping, with fingers crossed, to need this advice soon)
Do I ever tell you how grateful I am to know you?
This has been an excellent week, Rachel. :)
I'm excited to see what Miriam has to say, but I certainly hope everyone appreciates your posts.
They are fantastic.
Once again, great and informative post Rachel! :)
Hey you! Your blog is good...it cracks me up you are such a dork! haha but you rock my awesome cousin! so anyways...mom just got off the phone with you. wish i could come and stay :( but maybe soon we can do something like when we have a school break or something. cause band is fixin to start. so yeah. oh by the way i don't know if mom told you about my poem but i had to write this poem for English class at the end of last year called "I Remember" and I wrote one part about you. Mom said you'd want to read it maybe. My teacher thought it was pretty good. So yeah. Well this is a long note. But I wanted to say hey. And your website looks really good. I remember when you were trying to make it and you were so confused! And mom said we can come to your book signing in Dallas next year, and I'm just gonna be like hey, all ya'll people think this girl is awesome and guess what, she's my cousin-big sister! oh yeah! haha so this is a very long note and i know it is full of typos which is going to drive you absolutely up the wall but sorry! haha love ya,
Rayna
Rayna! Oh my gosh, everyone, Rayna is my baby cousin...who's not such a baby anymore.
And Rayna, you totally outed me for the clueless web designer I truly am. Was that really necessary? ;-)
You better come to Dallas! We'll get a picture together, and I'll put it on my website, if your mom says it's okay!
Thanks for dropping by! ;-)
Okay, I just used up my exclamation point quota for the entire year. How sad is that?
Sometimes your agent is so in love with the conept they will send back your work with suggestions several times in order for the manuscript to at its best. Don't take this personally.
:)
teri
Rachel, I think Rayna should visit your blog more often. And I want to read her poem.
Sara, you're right! I forgot all about the poem.
Rayna, of course you should send me the poem! Soon. Now, even!
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