|

Building Your Editing Business

Building your editing business requires finding clients. As a newer editor, this can be challenging, so where do you start? I suggest you begin by asking yourself a few questions.

Building Your Editing Business: Decide Who You Are as an Editor

  1. What is your purpose? Mine is to help women find a way to tell their stories.
  2. What kinds of clients does your purpose suggest you should target? I target women who are transitioning from nonfiction to fiction or creative nonfiction.
  3. What do you want from your business? I want to work on interesting manuscripts written by professionals who can pay professional fees.
  4. What kinds of clients does your “what I want from my business” answer suggest you should target? For me, people who are already professionals and who see the value of editorial help.
  5. What is your area of specialization, and why? I specialize in teaching women nonfiction writers to write romance because this is where my skills and experience lie, and it is what people ask me to do.
getting editorial work from book publishers and packagers.

Inventory What You Already Know

  1. What is your overall business goal?
  2. What are some overall marketing strategies you could use to get clients?
  3. What are some skills and experiences you have that might help potential clients solve a problem?
  4. What are five or ten things you can do in the next two months to gain additional editing experience?
  5. Who are some people you could get to know who could help you build your business?
  6. What types of services are you offering/planning to offer potential clients?

Put It Together

  1. Who are your target clients, and where are they likely to be found?
  2. What is one thing you can do this week to network with colleagues and/or potential clients?
  3. Identify an indirect way of finding clients (such as teaching a class) that appeals to you. What are some steps you need to take to get the ball rolling?

Tips for Editors & Writers

  • Happy New Year!

    I ate my grapes (a Spanish tradition for the new year), said “Feliz año!” to everyone in the neighborhood, and snuggled up with a good book, feeling grateful as I embark on my second year in Spain. May your 2026 be filled with happiness and adventure!

    Read more…

  • Reading Books for a Living

    I discourage editors from saying that our work is “reading books for a living” because that diminishes our expertise and experience. Editing is not reading books for a living; it’s understanding stories and storytelling techniques, cultivating judgment and discernment, practicing effective editorial methodologies and more. But some days, like today, I look around my office…

    Read more…

  • Happy Holidays!

    Here in Spain they take Christmas very seriously, and so that’s what I’m doing, too. I’m taking time off to spend with family and friends. We’ll gather for a meal and a walk among the Christmas lights. Then I’ll read a good book before bed. (Perhaps next year I’ll say, “We take Christmas very seriously.”)…

    Read more…

Join the Club!

how to become an editor

New to story editing? Begin at the beginning.

Similar Posts