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The information on this page is an excerpt from
the
FabJob Guide to
Become a Travel Writer. It is only a small sample of the valuable
information contained in the 117 page complete guide.
Writing a Travel Guidebook
You will
have a blast writing a travel guide. You will visit places you've never seen
before, and see places you've already visited through different
eyes.
You may be
hired to write a travel guide even on a topic that is already well covered.
Just look at the section on Italy, where my books The Italy Guide and
The Rome Guide, are located. That section is swamped with entries. I am
constantly amazed that my books even get noticed. But they do, to the tune of
thousands of copies sold every year. The same could happen to
you.
 There are more than 350 travel guide publishers, so if you want to
write or update a travel guide, there are plenty of
opportunities.
Getting Hired to Write a New
Guide
Andy
Herbach and his partner Michael Dillon came up with the idea for a series of
pocket-sized guidebooks to help travelers translate foreign language menus more
easily. The idea came from their own experiences. They had difficulty
translating menus despite their proficiency in Spanish and French, and realized
that others would as well.
So
combining their skills - Andy's the writer and Michael's the graphic designer -
they created the
Eating & Drinking series of
guidebooks, which have been a rousing success. If you are ever going to a
Spanish, French or Italian speaking country, pick up one of their books. It can
make you less apprehensive at meals, and allow you to enjoy them
more.
Basically
what they did to get published is what every prospective author can do when
they have an idea for a book, whether it is a travel guide or not. They did
their homework, created a powerful proposal, and got hired.
The
following four steps will help get your own travel guide
published:
1. Create a list of travel
publishers
2. Create your proposal material
3. Contact the publishers by sending them your
proposal material
4. Once hired, start writing the book
As you can
see from these steps, just as in attempting to get published in a periodical,
it is best to do all your homework up front, pitch the idea, and only after
getting hired to start writing your travel guide. It worked well for Andy and
Michael, it worked for me, it can work for you too. In the sections that follow
you will find out where to get contact information for publishers, and how to
prepare a proposal.
Getting Hired to Update a
Guide
While
publishers prefer to hire people with previous experience to update guides, you
can break into this field by first getting experience writing travel pieces for
newspapers or magazines (covered in the previous section of this guide). This
shows that you can write and research, and researching is the key to updating
guidebooks.
Each will
have their own selection process, so be prepared to have to fill out forms, do
phone interviews, submit writing samples, etc. This is a very competitive
process, so remember to put your best foot forward through all these trials.
You may know that you are a brilliant writer and a dynamite researcher, but
they won't until you show them.
The
information in the next section will give you some tips on the kind of
information publishers want to see.
The above is only a small sample of the
valuable information in the FabJob Guide to Become
a Travel Writer. The guide includes detailed
information about writing travel guides, and also explains how to get hired to
write travel articles for newspapers and magazines. Visit
FabJob Guide to
Become a Travel Writer for more
information. |