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Jun 2020

This is just a reminder to be careful about who you trust. Almost no trustworthy company will reach out to you like this. Here are just a few of the red flags with this message:

  • Weird grammar issues in a supposedly professional message.
  • "All sorts of events."
  • No mention of explicit story details or what they liked.
  • It's too good to be true. Again, almost no one will try to reach out to you like this.
  • Sketchy account name (it's literally just a string of numbers).
  • No mention of what the pay model is like, either in the message or on their website.
  • My story's audience is tiny.
  • An extremely unprofessional website.

If a group tries to contact you in this manner, do your research. Find out if anyone else has had experience with them, and what the experience was like. Find out what their business model is. Find out how long they have been around. There aren't shortcuts to being famous or successful with your writing. Anyone offering you one is, in general, not to be trusted.

I realize that recognizing schemes like this is second nature for most people, but there are a lot of young writers on this site, who haven't necessarily dealt with this before. Being reached out to directly can feel too good to be true, and sadly that's because it usually is.

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    Jun '20
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    Jun '20
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This is where I would post some sort of funny interaction with the company in question, but it was early in the morning when I read this so my replies came across a lot less clever and a lot more scathing than I would like.

Please use your imagination, and pretend that I verbally owned them.

I would also add in greeting with your username. A professional would use a generic greeting like "Hi there", not someone's username, if they didn't know the person's name.

Don't forget, its even possible to get scammed on this forum; so you need to be careful of that too.