Who Are You Writing For?
Are you writing for yourself or writing to be published? Many of us will say we write because we love to write; we’ve always written, since we were very young, and we couldn’t stop even if we wanted to. We have a story to tell and we must put it down on paper, whether anyone else ever reads it or not. Many of us love research and the learning that comes from it, through travel, libraries, personal interviews, the Internet.
If we’re honest, we say we write for ourselves, but we’d also like others to read our work. We have something to share, for others to, hopefully, enjoy. That usually means getting published. Getting published means marketing the book. Marketing the book means targeting your audience, which brings us back to the original question: who are you writing for?
Are you writing for young adults, men, children, older women, doctors, new mothers, teachers, who? As you write, do you have an audience in mind, or does the audience develop along the way? Personally, when I write, I don’t think about who will read it until I’m done. Maybe that’s not smart. Maybe it won’t help me sell. But if I think about who might read the book, I find myself stifled. If I aimed for gray-haired ladies or young teens, I might avoid swear words or gritty murder scenes that make my books more authentic. So I don’t shoot for any particular market. I simply write . . . and hope I can find the best audience for it later, in the marketing phase.
Only after my book is done, edited, re-written, edited and re-written, do I focus on target marketing. Who would like this book? An adult audience that enjoys history, forensics, and puzzle-solving. I can also shoot for readers interested in the time and place of the story ie: New York City in the early 1900s. You might target readers who love horses, dogs, do yoga, play golf, tennis, are musicians or mathematicians.
Can you stretch those audiences to include YA readers? Possibly, but probably not unless there are YA characters in the story. I don’t think many teens want to read solely about characters of their parents’ generation. What about other genders, sexual orientation, or ethnic groups? If your characters are gay or lesbian will a straight audience be interested? Likewise, gender and ethnicity. What about political or religious affiliations? All important considerations. For marketing.
For writing, however, write because you love to write, whoever the audience turns out to be. You’d be surprised. If a book is a delight to read, you might get audiences you never dreamed of.
Hi, Lynne,
Your article made sense to me—I was starting to think I was the only one who let a story be what it is. As it is with you, similarly, if I write with a specific audience in mind I find that the flow is interrupted.
I feel better for having read what you’ve expressed. I love to write—need to write—and write what’s on my heart, not my agenda. Yes, it does take longer to find an agent or publisher since the researching of many categories which they are looking for is sometimes frustrating.
I wrote an intense novel which I felt was YA, but I’m going to query agents with an adult story now and see what happens. There is a home for it somewhere. Everything happens for a reason, my story was told for a reason. Thanks so much for your input here. I feel hopeful again.
Wholeheartedly,
Lynn P. Penner.
Thanks so much for your comments, Lynn. I’m hopeful too. Lynne
In truth, most of the professional journalists I have met respond to this same question definitively saying that they write to get paid.
Most of the amateurs or professionals who came up through freelancing or through the fiction markets and the majority who do not earn a good living at it, say they write for love, but many of those would prefer love & money, rather than just one of the two.
Why not all three? Probably what we all wish for. Thanks for your comment.