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The Business of In-flights
by Tim Lehnert
Airline magazines aren't simply a way to pass the time on a long
flight - they represent real opportunity for freelance writers.
Despite contractions in the airline industry, in-flight magazines
still attract many readers, and they are largely composed of
pieces written by freelancers.
The readership for the magazines produced for major airlines such
as United (Hemispheres), Delta (Sky), and Southwest (Spirit),
numbers in the millions. In-flight magazines are usually
monthlies with publication lead times of six months to a year.
Pay rates average a dollar a word for the major carriers'
publications, and less for those produced for smaller airlines.
The primary audience for in-flight magazines is frequent flyers,
often business travelers. As a group, they tend to have high
levels of income and education. They are also savvy about
technology and business trends, as well as travel and leisure
pursuits. Moreover, Randy Johnson, Editor of United's
Hemispheres, notes that in-flight readers are traveling while
they look at the magazine; they are actual as opposed to armchair
travelers.
In-flights are diverse. Like fitness, women's, or health titles,
there is considerable variation among publications within the
category. Travel pieces are a staple of in-flights, yet airline
publications also offer articles on technology, business, sports,
and food, as well as lifestyle trends. Some in-flights feature
celebrity profiles, fiction, humor and personal narratives, and
most have at least one or two regular columns.
In-flights are not static, "The only thing constant about
in-flights is that they are constantly changing - like any
magazine," says Tim Harper, a frequent contributor to Delta's Sky
magazine. "The editors always need more good ideas, more good
stories and more good writers, but there are always shifts in
focus or shape," says Harper, some of whose Sky pieces have been
collected in the book Doing Good: Inspirational Stories of
Everyday Americans at Home and at Work.
Breaking In
Prospective in-flight writers should understand the content and
tone of the magazine they wish to write for. Some in-flights
feature conventional travel pieces along with some business and
service pieces. Other publications aim more at cultural critique,
while still others have a breezy, flip tone heavy on celebrity
interviews and reviews of trendy gear. At the very least, you
should check out the magazine's website and contributor's
guidelines, if available, to understand what the editor might be
looking for. Even better, obtain a hard copy. Since in-flights
are not sold on newsstands, request a copy from the magazine's
publisher, ask traveling friends for their help, or visit your
local airport and see if you can snag several publications at
once.
Like all magazines, in-flights have defined formats. You need to
figure out which parts of the magazine are open to freelancers,
and then tailor your pitch for a particular section of the
publication. "The biggest problem is that people do not get a
copy of the magazine before they query the editor," says Leslie
Forsberg, Senior Editor at the on-line publication Go World
Travel Magazine, and former editor of Alaska Airlines' magazine.
Sending a short story to an in-flight that does not publish
fiction is a waste of time, as is offering to write a column that
is penned by the editor of the magazine you are pitching.
Hemispheres' Randy Johnson prides himself on his magazine's
eclecticism, but stresses that the writer must still understand
the magazine before querying, "We're the customer, you're the
person who is selling the idea," he says. "We don't do the work
of selling it for you."
When querying an in-flight, it is crucial that you propose a
story on a topic or place you know well. "If you read a Hong Kong
restaurant story in Hemispheres, it will be by a Hong Kong
writer," says Randy Johnson. Editors don't want a pitch that
amounts to a simple recounting of your vacation. Hemispheres'
"Three Perfect Days" section proposes activities to fill three
days in a given city or area. According to Johnson, it is always
written by a local who has insight into not just tourist
attractions, but also the culture and feel of the place. "Beyond
wanting things that fit the format, what I really want are those
idiosyncratic distinctive ideas that a resident writer comes up
with," he says.
For the prospective in-flight writer, this means you can probably
scrap your upcoming maiden trip to Paris as a topic for query.
But people travel everywhere, and being a native of (or frequent
visitor to) Tampa, Edmonton or Pittsburgh can serve you well if
you have something insightful to say about these places. Leslie
Forsberg notes that certain less glamorous geographical regions,
as well as ones with fewer resident writers, offer opportunities
for the freelancer. If you do decide to cover a big tourist
destination, be specific. Tim Harper suggests that instead of
proposing a general piece on London, "Offer to do a story on what
it's like to walk through the Imperial War Rooms, with specific
examples in the query about what a visitor can see and learn."
In-flights receive many queries for travel pieces. Consequently,
former Alaska Airlines magazine editor Forsberg suggests that it
may be easier for a newcomer to break in by pitching an article
on a business or service topic. Forsberg notes that many people
want to write about vacationing in Hawaii, but not as many about
meeting planning. If you have experience in a particular facet of
business that can be applied to travelers, turn that to your
advantage. If you are not a known commodity, another way to
increase your chances of landing an article is to propose a short
as opposed to a feature. This assumes, of course, that you've
ascertained that the in-flight you are pitching doesn't write
their short pieces in-house. It may also be easier to break into
a magazine produced for a smaller airline, as opposed to the
higher circulation magazines which often feature "name" writers.
Finally, don't forget that the in-flight magazine market is
global. You need not limit yourself to North American
publications. There are many airlines based in English speaking
countries other than the US and Canada. Even airlines from
countries where English is not the primary language often publish
part of their magazine in English, or have a separate English
language edition.
In-flights Are Peculiar Beasts
The previous points apply to perhaps any magazine -- it always
pays to do your homework and know your market. But while they
share some similarities, in-flights are unlike newsstand
magazines in several ways. As a general rule, you should only
propose stories on destinations served by the airline you are
pitching. Don't offer an article on whale watching off the
Newfoundland coast, or where Chicago blues musicians go to catch
a show, if the airline you are querying doesn't go near these
places.
It's also important to keep in mind not just where your audience
might be headed geographically, but where they are physically as
they look at the publication. "People who are reading the
magazine are enclosed in a metal tube at 30,000 feet," says Randy
Johnson. Not surprisingly, stories about "my scariest airplane
flight ever" are clearly out of the question. Johnson says he
welcomes provocative and thoughtful pieces, but not stories about
natural disasters, terrorism or other topics that might agitate
or upset people. And obviously articles about the inconveniences
and frustrations of air travel, or jibes at the airline industry,
are nonstarters. You wouldn't write a piece for a bridal magazine
suggesting that weddings are a big waste of money; similarly an
article that begins by describing your twelve-hour layover in
Dallas, and concludes by observing that flying isn't what it used
to be won't get you very far.
The in-flight magazine market is competitive, although not
impossible to crack. Tim Harper has written more than 100 pieces
for Sky, and in the 1980s and 1990s did many articles for
American Way. He got his start writing for in-flights over twenty
years ago when he was casting around for new markets and landed
an assignment with the publication of now defunct Trans World
Airlines. This acted as a springboard for future assignments with
other magazines. The best way to break in is to bring your own
expertise to a publication. Randy Johnson of Hemispheres came to
in-flight magazines from a background in writing about the
outdoors and nature. In addition to serving as Editor-in-Chief of
Hemispheres, he still writes freelance pieces and guidebooks,
primarily about hiking and backpacking in the Southeast US.
Johnson is also a co-author of The Age of Flight, which
celebrates seventy-five years of air travel at United Airlines.
Leslie Forsberg brought her experience at Sea Kayaker magazine to
her former post as editor at Alaska Airlines Magazine.
Even if you don't have a long list of publication credits or an
impressive resume, you can still break into the in-flight market.
How? Do your research -- both about your topic and the publication
you are pitching, rely on your particular expertise about a place
or subject matter, and produce insightful, error free copy aimed
at a sophisticated audience of frequent travelers.
Markets
- Alaska Airlines Magazine/Horizon Air Magazine
- Alaska, West Coast
and Western US focus. Monthly.
- Contact: Managing Editor, Alaska
Airlines Magazine/Horizon Air Magazine, Paradigm Communications
Group, 2701 First Avenue, Suite 250, Seattle, WA 98121.
- http://www.alaskaair.com/as/www2/magazines/magazines.asp
- Continental Magazine
- Continental Airlines' magazine. Writer's
guidelines and editorial calendar available online. Monthly.
Circ: 358,000.
- Contact: The Pohly Company, 99 Bedford Street,
Floor 5, Boston, MA 02111.
- http://magazine.continental.com
- enRoute
- Air Canada's magazine. Writer's guidelines available
online.
- Contact: enRoute Magazine, 4200 Boul. St. Laurent, Suite
707, Montreal, QC, H2W 2R2, Canada.
- http://www.enroutemag.com/e/
- Hemispheres
- United Airlines' magazine. Monthly. Circ: 400,000.
- Contact: Hemispheres, Pace Communications, 1301 Carolina Street,
Greensboro, NC 27401.
- http://www.hemispheresmagazine.com
- Latitudes
- American Eagle Magazine. Bimonthly.
- Contact: American
Eagle Latitudes, HCP/Aboard Publications, One Herald Plaza, 4th
Floor, Miami, FL 33132.
- http://www.eaglelatitudes.com
- NWA World Traveler
- Northwest Airline's magazine. Monthly. Circ.:
293,000.
- Contact: NWA World Traveler, MSP Communications, 220
South Sixth Street, Suite 500, Minneapolis, MN 55402.
- http://www.spiritmag.com/
- Spirit of Aloha
- The magazine of Aloha Airlines. Bimonthly.
Circ.: 100,000.
- Contact: Honolulu Publishing Company, 707
Richards Street, Suite 525, Honolulu, HI 96813.
- http://www.spiritofaloha.com
Copyright © 2007 Tim Lehnert
Tim Lehnert lives in Cranston, Rhode Island where he is a
freelance writer and stay-at-home father. He has an MA in
Political Science from McGill University, an MA in Writing from
California State University, Northridge, and BA in Political
Studies from Queen's University. His features, columns and
articles have appeared in the Boston Globe, the Christian
Science Monitor, the Montreal Gazette, the Providence Journal,
the Providence Phoenix, Rhode Island Monthly, The Writer, Today's
Parent and other publications.
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