24 min

#001 - #PitMad with Kayla MacNeille Automation & Authorship

    • Arts

On this first ever episode of Automation & Authorship, we’ve got guest author Kayla MacNeille on to discuss #PitMad (a quarterly pitching event on Twitter put on by @PitchWars) and the general writing community on Twitter. Here are a few show notes:

About Kayla


Kayla has been a writer for over a decade
She recently finished her first serious book and now she’s entering the querying world

#PitMad


Quarterly querying event on Twitter
Writers have 280 characters to pitch their unpublished works (3 tweets max)
Other writers retweet pitches they like
Agents like tweets they find interesting
Writers with agent likes query those agents who will often request first 10 pages, first chapter, etc

Kayla’s experience with #PitMad


She recommends not promising to blindly retweet pitches, but rather promise to check them out and retweet IF you like them
Kayla got a couple likes early on from random profiles
At 8:30am, she got a like from an agent, which drove the mood for the rest of the day
She started filling out the form but waited a bit to hit send, because it was harder than she thought it’d be
She sent it later that night, followed by the first 10 pages of her manuscript as requested by the agent
Two weeks later, she received a rejection letter
No regrets, the agent like gave such a boost of energy and motivation that didn’t die just from getting the rejection
Getting to the step of querying is a big milestone in itself and rejection letters are milestones too
A rejection just means your work doesn’t match the very particular criteria the agent has, not that your work isn’t good
#PitMad gave Kayla a deadline to stop her from forever nitpicking her work. It was an exercise in committing to her work.

About Kayla’s book


A fantasy book about five girls that are entering a stage of life that they are told is very complicated and hard (medical school). Then they find out they have magical powers. As the main character is going through what she thinks is a normal hard life, she realized there’s actually magic and that’ll give her something to focus on.
Her #PitMad pitch: STRANGE CASE...ALCHEMIST’S DAUGHTER+CHARMED. Avery escaped crippling pain & a boarding school full of spies, and is hopeful for her new, rural PA home. But a murderer is enticed by magic Avery never knew she had, and he will steal it if she doesn’t master it quickly. #PitMad #F #A
Pitching is incredibly difficult and takes time to craft, just like the work itself

Kayla’s experience with the writing community


Very welcoming
Ready to share ideas and build you up
Swapped synopses with other writers
Still have a few people she talks to that are excited about each other’s careers
Find where you fit and where your people are

Follow Kayla on Instagram

Follow Kayla on Twitter

On this first ever episode of Automation & Authorship, we’ve got guest author Kayla MacNeille on to discuss #PitMad (a quarterly pitching event on Twitter put on by @PitchWars) and the general writing community on Twitter. Here are a few show notes:

About Kayla


Kayla has been a writer for over a decade
She recently finished her first serious book and now she’s entering the querying world

#PitMad


Quarterly querying event on Twitter
Writers have 280 characters to pitch their unpublished works (3 tweets max)
Other writers retweet pitches they like
Agents like tweets they find interesting
Writers with agent likes query those agents who will often request first 10 pages, first chapter, etc

Kayla’s experience with #PitMad


She recommends not promising to blindly retweet pitches, but rather promise to check them out and retweet IF you like them
Kayla got a couple likes early on from random profiles
At 8:30am, she got a like from an agent, which drove the mood for the rest of the day
She started filling out the form but waited a bit to hit send, because it was harder than she thought it’d be
She sent it later that night, followed by the first 10 pages of her manuscript as requested by the agent
Two weeks later, she received a rejection letter
No regrets, the agent like gave such a boost of energy and motivation that didn’t die just from getting the rejection
Getting to the step of querying is a big milestone in itself and rejection letters are milestones too
A rejection just means your work doesn’t match the very particular criteria the agent has, not that your work isn’t good
#PitMad gave Kayla a deadline to stop her from forever nitpicking her work. It was an exercise in committing to her work.

About Kayla’s book


A fantasy book about five girls that are entering a stage of life that they are told is very complicated and hard (medical school). Then they find out they have magical powers. As the main character is going through what she thinks is a normal hard life, she realized there’s actually magic and that’ll give her something to focus on.
Her #PitMad pitch: STRANGE CASE...ALCHEMIST’S DAUGHTER+CHARMED. Avery escaped crippling pain & a boarding school full of spies, and is hopeful for her new, rural PA home. But a murderer is enticed by magic Avery never knew she had, and he will steal it if she doesn’t master it quickly. #PitMad #F #A
Pitching is incredibly difficult and takes time to craft, just like the work itself

Kayla’s experience with the writing community


Very welcoming
Ready to share ideas and build you up
Swapped synopses with other writers
Still have a few people she talks to that are excited about each other’s careers
Find where you fit and where your people are

Follow Kayla on Instagram

Follow Kayla on Twitter

24 min

Top Podcasts In Arts

Fresh Air
NPR
The Moth
The Moth
Snap Judgment Presents: Spooked
Snap Judgment
99% Invisible
Roman Mars
The Magnus Archives
Rusty Quill
Snap Judgment
Snap Judgment and PRX