A new approach to the three-by-three model

The three-by-three model described in Chapter 4 accomplishes two imperatives for the travel journalist. One is journalistic excellence. The other is journalistic efficiency. In other words, get as much good stuff as possible for the least investment of time and money.

The model proposes that the travel journalist report, write and publish (or prepare to publish) three stories over a three-week cycle. Week One is at-home pre-work. Week Two is the reporting trip. Week Three is back-at-home writing and publishing.

I explored a variant of the model during a recent reporting trip to Prague. I was there to test-drive TOL’s Foreign Correspondent course. The at-home pre-work assignment was to come up with a story idea. Instead of three stories — one sure thing, a story that emerges from serendipity, and a story based on gathering string — as…

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New edition of best “how-to” text published

I advised in Resources that travel journalists with time to read just one of the “how-to” texts should order The Travel Writer’s Handbook: How to Write — and Sell — Your Own Travel Experiences. That was the 6th edition, published in 2007, in which Louise Purwin Zobel and Jacqueline Harmon Butler provided comprehensive, coherent, accessible advice.

A 7th edition was published in April 2012, and is stronger in several ways. Most importantly, this edition recognizes that opportunities to publish in print are in decline, and most new opportunities are to be found online.

Butler handled the new edition on her own. Zobel died in June 2008.