The Start of 2019 Editorial Calendars At Magazines Are Rolling In

editorial-calendars-added.jpg

2019 EDITORIAL CALENDARS READY

UPDATE 1/27/2019: Dozens of your favorite magazine editorial calendars for 2019 have been added to Tin Shingle Member-Only PR Center. You can search through them any time by Areas of Interest, or by Magazine Name. Editorial Calendars for 2019 include Allure, Cosmopolitan, Esquire, Essence, Rolling Stone, Southern Living, Town and Country, Elle, Inc. Magazine, Men’s Health, Money, and so many others. See the full 2019 Editorial Calendar list here. You can join Tin Shingle as a member to get instant access to our collection!

The 2019 Editorial Calendar List

Editorial Calendars are the grand themes that a magazine rallies around each month or quarter. Magazines want the best of the best, so they make these available to the public to know about. To make your life easier, Tin Shingle goes out and gathers all of them to put them into our searchable database to have these ideas at your fingertips.

Search by Magazine Title or Area of Interest, let your ideas form, and start pitching these magazines! Members of Tin Shingle at the All Access Level of membership have instant access to these lists. Learn more about our Editorial Calendar collection. Pitching magazines goes best with Tin Shingle’s PR Planning & Tracking Template, so download that and get started!

  • AARP

  • allrecipes

  • Better Homes & Gardens

  • Centurion (Luxury Magazine)

  • Cosmopolitan

  • Eating Well

  • Departures (In-Flight Magazine)

  • Health

  • Martha Stewart Living

  • Money

  • Parents

  • Rachael Ray Everyday

HOT TIPS FROM THE EDITORIAL CALENDARS

Cosmopolitan
Cosmo is rallying around a few hashtags in upcoming issues, namely #Glamming and #FreeToHaveFun. You'll learn this is Cosmo's Editorial Calendar, and we updated Tin Shignle's Instagram Hashtag Cheat Sheet, in the "What Hashtags Magazines Are Using Now"

Better Homes & Gardens
Editorial is shaping up for summer parties, picnics, and a "cocktail garden." What? Sounds good! Can your brand fit in here as a feature? Pitch it!

Money
Editorial is shaping up for the best stocks, bonds, ETFs, and profitable investment strategies. There is a lot more planned for Money, so how can your business fit into an article feature? Pitch it!

“Making the Magic” Column In Highlands Current Out Now

Even though I am a blogger, and have been so for many years, I have found it quite uncomfortable writing a personal column! Most of the articles I write for A Litle Beacon Blog or for Tin Shingle talk about a subject that is not me, even though part of my personal experience may be woven into the article. Here at Time Shingle, I let my biases or opinion show more than I do at A Little Beacon Blog, but that’s just a style choice.

For December’s column, I wanted to contribute joy to the world during the season, but wanted to be honest too, because financially and emotionally, it can be a very hard month for people. And those people may stay silent about it in their own night.

Also, what I’ve noticed about the column, is that people love print! They love seeing it in print! My own husband bought me a binder to clip and save these columns into. I don’t think he’s printed any of my blog articles! That’s how I know that print is not dead (ahem, Glamour, I wish you’d change your mind, Ms. Barry! We need your firey fierceness in print!). Actually I noticed this when I started A Little Beacon Blog. My digital publication may reach more people, but print makes a special imprint for people. Even ads, people would clip out.

Therefore I present to you, this month’s column for the Highlands Current , “Kid Friendly,” Out on newsstands now. Last year, I had a Bah Humbug Christmas, and this column explores it. I was trying to get with Mariah Carey’s “All I Want For Christmas Is You” but instead was vibing “Where Are You Christmas?” sung by Faith Hill from the human Grinch movie (not the cartoon). I made some discoveries, and this year am fully in Making the Magic mode, hence the title of the article, but it took a few adjustments to get there...

IMAGE.JPG

Here is a behind the scenes of me writing the column during a night shift of work while my husband put the kids to bed. Or that’s what he was supposed to do anyway :) 

IMAGE.JPG

Alright, Monday, What You Got For Me?

quote alright monday what you got for me.png

Hello and Happy Monday!

Mondays can be deliveries of good news in the form of people following up from outreach you did during the previous week. If you've been building upon your foundation of outreach, then opportunities begin to trickle in to you - which is always the dream. To help you continue to create your own luck, we have some tips for you:

Here's How You're Going To Have A Great Monday

  • Don't Rely On Your Brain
    Make your lists. Have paper in your bag or pocket, and/or your Notes or Calendar app open on your phone. The biggest trap to losing control of a Monday is thinking you know what you need to do, but forgetting the most important parts. Stick to your list. It's your boss.

  • Send That Invoice!
    This has been a re-emerging theme - people who do good work for people, then procrastinate sending the invoice, and then throwing the invoice out the window all together, fearing it too late. It's not! Send the invoice with a smile.

  • Reach Out To That Store aka Wholesale Account
    You need a new account, and now is a good time to reach out. You may close the deal in the new year, or possibly if you're local, the store wants the inventory now if they are having a good holiday season.

  • Do Fitness
    If it's stretching in the middle of the day, a quick set of pushups in the middle of your office, or walking to the grocery store. Move around! Get that blood moving and those those endorphins pumping. A fun stretch to do is the Back Stroke: move your arms in backward circles while sitting down or standing up.

  • Pitch Someone Who Would Be A Great Fit
    If you sell sponsorships, for a university or a foundation or anything, think of a company or individual who would be a great fit to sponsor what you do, and reach out to them. Feel the enthusiasm you see in the partnership, and let that enthusiasm come out in your email to them.

And, Happy Last Night of Hanukkah! Today is going to be a great day, even if you're snowed in down South. Today is Motivation Monday pretty much everywhere, but at Tin Shingle, it's also Money Monday. Go out there and make some. You can do it!

Want These Water Bottles - 50 Strong

We get exposure to so many great products and people designing them! Hello new Tin Shingle Member, 50 Strong ! And they are from Lima, OH to boot! We are OH proud via Cleveland and Columbus!

Thanks to 50 Strong’s social media, we see they participated in a Walmart initiative to highlight Made In America on retail shelves. 50 Strong shared the stage with two other Ohio companies: Crazy Richard’s Peanut Butter and RedHead Wine.   

Way to hustle and make it happen!  and welcome to Tin Shingle!

IMAGE.JPG

Featuring Your Success Stories for Valentine's Day Gift Guides

Hello and Happy Monday!

If you've been in this game for a while, you'll know that your next big chance for Holiday Gift Guides is happening now - and it's Valentine's Day. This week's live Tin Shingle TuneUp is focusing on how to pitch Valentine's Day Gift Guides. The bigger magazines have already filled this, but you have a chance elsewhere.


We Want To Feature Your Gift Guide Success Story

Did you land a Valentine's Day Gift Guide? Are you a business owner, artist or maker who did this? Are you a PR professional who did this? We want to hear from all of you.

We are sharing success stories during this week's Tin Shingle Training TuneUp - if you send them.
Contact us here with how you did it. Can be a quick email - just let us know! We want to feature your clever tricks.

Glamour Magazine Abandons Monthly Print For Digital Double Down

Photo Credit: Screenshot of article in The New York Times.

Photo Credit: Screenshot of article in The New York Times.

In January 2018, the stepping aside of Glamour’s longtime editor in chief, Cindi Leive, became official, and, Samantha Barry, a digitally based  journalist with extensive background in the digital television space at CNN Worldwide as an executive producer for social and emerging media, stepped in. Cindi had also been the editor in chief of Self, another print magazine that ceased printing monthly issues.

Monthly Schedule Not A Thing Anymore At Glamour

Upon her arrival, Samantha reduced the numbers of monthly publications from 12 to 11, gave the print magazine a makeover, completely changing the type treatment of the logo, and on the Tuesday before Thanksgiving, announced that the monthly print magazine version of Glamour would cease. 

As first reported by The New York Times, and then The Hollywood Reporter, Samantha stated that she sees no need for a monthly print schedule for the brand anymore. In fact, that Glamour is not just a magazine, that it is a brand. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Samantha stated that Glamour will continue to produce printed editions of its tentpole issues like its “Women of the Year” issue.

In her interview on Cheddar, Samantha is putting Glamour's eggs into the video and event baskets, saying that portions of the Glamour audience are spending more than a minute, sometimes up to half hours on their video content. Being that Samantha comes from the TV world, she is comfortable in this vehicle for storytelling and ad delivery. However, she came from a large cable network - CNN - where their base is TV. In magazines, the base is the book, and the social and the video are the spinoff. Looks like Samantha is bucking this model.

“Doubling Down on Digital”

In her goodbye-to-print email to the editorial staff obtained and quoted by The Hollywood Reporter:  

 "We’re doubling down on digital — investing in the storytelling, service and fantastic photo shoots we’ve always been known for, bringing it to the platforms our readers frequent most. We’ll be expanding video and social storytelling, with new and ambitious series and projects.”

What’s In A Book?

Glamour is committing now to the crowded space of digital with its many mediums, abandoning its loyalty vehicle - the printed book - the magazine. What digital-only producers, editors, and storytellers might not realize is how the printed page carries weight in the hands of their audience. While the people reading the magazine may frequent online spaces more, the printed book helps to define the brand.

According to The New York Times: “Although the number of Glamour’s paid subscribers has remained stable over the last three years, at around 2.2 million, Ms. Barry said it was time for the publication to break away from the printed page.”

The advantage that magazines have over media outlets with no print extension is that they are able to design a deeper experience on the page in the layout of a book. The advantage that digital mediums like blogs have over traditional print is that they understand the online space better and can spread the word farther.

It is the opinion of this writer that the combination of the two - the digital and the print - is an enrichment technique. I say this as a blogger. I am a digitally based producer of content who sees the emotional reactions of people to the printed page, vs the online experience. While the online experience may have more exposure with a larger footprint, the emotional imprint is still there for the printed page. Thereby making the digital version of print even more valuable.

Glamour magazine is in the Condé Nast family. It was founded by the Condé Nast father himself as a vehicle for storytelling of Hollywood Glamour. The magazine’s direction has changed since then, as Glamour has taken on more of an empowerment and educational role for women. Add this move to its evolution.

Vogue’s famed editor in chief, Anna Wintour, is the artistic director for Condé Nast. According to The New York Times article, she enthusiastically supports the release of Glamour magazine’s printed edition, as she did for the ceasing of the printed editions of Self and Teen Vogue. Would Anna encourage the stopping of monthly printing for Vogue magazine? Could you imagine such a thing?

In the Cheddar interview, Samantha acknowledges that there are advertising dollars for print ads, and less so for banner ads on the internet. Branded content can make up for that, as it’s storytelling vs static visual. However, the desire for brands to place print ads still exists, and they are still effective in the impression they leave behind. Therefore, what does it mean to other magazines when a heavy hitter in the industry like Glamour leaves? One answer could be that print ads in existing magazines get more valuable, as there are fewer print outlets. Hence, a possible enthusiastic support by one editor in chief for the decision to abandon print by another editor in chief.

What Does Digital Glamour Mean for Businesses, Artists + PR?

What does this mean for business owners, artists and makers trying to get featured in Glamour? It means a few things:

Pitching Glamour just got more fractured.
You will be pitching tiny corners of Glamour, and by corners I mean video segments, contributing writers and social media handlers. See Tin Shingle’s Training TuneUp here with a contributing writer at GQ and others about how she approaches writing assignments. There may be assignment editors who see everything at the very top line, but they are seeing the overall message delivery for several media mediums. Pitching can be more frequent, different and specialized as you reach more media creators for Glamour. How a feature on your business will get produced has increased in variety.

Crossover for visual storytellers in video and TV just got better.
Opportunities increased for video segments. While writers may still be there to help write the script - if there is one - video editors and producers may be more involved here.

On-Air experts and TV personalities may also have an increased role to play.
The host of a segment will usually be delivering and guiding the segment. Tin Shingle’s Media Contact Lists include a search filter for On-Air Experts, making it easy for you to focus on pitching these types of media creators.

Editorial Calendar FAQs :: "Will 2018 Work For 2019?" and "Do you post PDFs?"

editorial-calendars-faqs.jpg

Editorial Calendar FAQs

Everyone is scampering around, searching for next year's Editorial Calendars that the magazines post for 2019. During this time, a few questions have come in. You're going to want to know this as you prepare for what and when you want to pitch magazines:

What is an Editorial Calendar?

An Editorial Calendar is a pre-plan that a magazine puts out to let people know where they are going with each issue. Because it's a projection a year in advance, things do change, especially with a weekly magazine. But for the most part, the magazines stick to their grand plan. It's what is between the lines that you are trying to get into and featured in! Magazines also post sponsorship opportunities that can be very good placements for your business. Tin Shingle recommends both advertising and organic editorial. After all, without advertising, there would be no magazine. More importantly, however, the advertising has gotten very good over the years with branded content and niche opportunities.


Can I use last year's 2018 Editorial Calendar?

Heck no! This has been the most surprising question of all. In fact, some media agencies have re-posted 2018 Editorial Calendars to their websites as PDFs, and slapped a 2019 over top. We discovered this during our own online research. Right away, the very unique themes looked familiar. How did we know so quickly? Because every month at Tin Shingle during our "What To Pitch This Month" TuneUp webinar, we go over the best themes with you, encouraging you to pitch an idea to get featured in a print magazine.

Take a look at these two Editorial Calendars from Time Magazine, for instance. You'll see super general similarities, like when Mother's Day is, or Back to School, but that's it:  Time Editorial Calendar 2018    vs   Time Editorial Calendar 2019


Where does Tin Shingle get their Editorial Calendars?

Straight from the magazines themselves. If it doesn't come from the magazine, we don't use it. If the Editorial Calendar is not posted on the magazine's website, we email into someone at the magazine. We want to know about the best editorial and sponsored opportunities, and we only trust the most reliable source: someone on staff.


Does Tin Shingle post Editorial Calendars as PDFs?

No. We transpose the information into our searchable database. You get to look through an easy list of themes, organized by title of magazine, and area of interest.


Do you need an Editorial Calendar to pitch a magazine with an idea?

Not at all! Especially if you've been reading the magazine to be up on what they are covering, you can email them an idea at any time. Having an Editorial Calendar gives you top-line guidance of what direction the magazine is headed in each month or week.

My business is too small to be written about in a magazine, right?

Not at all! Magazines of all kinds would want to write about your or your business. They just need to be led to the water, and you're going to lead them. Start listening to Tin Shingle's TuneUps to tune your mind into this way of thinking so that you can start generating buzz in the media.

If you work for a larger company, or if you run that larger company, then you already know this, and your wheels are turning for how to get media coverage.

Keep going!

Tin Shingle's Editorial Calendars

It's Here :: The Time Tested Snow Day Survival Kit For Working From Home With Kids

Have been wanting to publish this Snow Day Survival Kit article for a year now! There were too many snow days last year to do it. So now on this first snow day in November, 2018, during this mega-storm that hit the Northeast, it has been written!

I’m still in the Snow Day, so a more proper blog post about this could not be written, but you can get to the article here by clicking here.

Get The Show Day Survival Kit Article

Early Winter Schedule of Training TuneUps Is Available!

Early Winter Schedule Of TuneUps

It's here! The schedule of upcoming Training TuneUps, and our new Personalized TuneUps. Set aside 3pm EST (almost) every week as your must-focus time on getting the word out about your brand. Visit Tin Shingle's Scheduleat any time at our website for registration links or new class listings.

NOVEMBER
Week 1:What To Pitch This Month: November 2018 Stream Now >
November 7, 2018
Week 2:Personalized TuneUp Workshop (Members Only)
November 14, 2018
Week 3:Thanksgiving Break - Enjoy! Watch for a Tin Shingle Black Friday Sale on Membership!!!
November 21, 2018
Week 4:Pitch Now: Valentine’s Day Gift Guides :: Tips & Tricks Register Here >
November 28, 2018

DECEMBER
Week 1:What To Pitch This Month: December 2018 Register Here >
December 5, 2018
Week 2:Personalized TuneUp Workshop (Members Only) Begin Registration Here >
December 12, 2018
Week 3:Pitching Local Media Register Here >
December 19, 2018
Week 4:Winter Break - Happy Holidays!
December 26, 2018

JANUARY
Week 1:What To Pitch This Month: January 2019 Register Here >
January 2, 2019
Week 2:Personalized TuneUp Workshop (Members Only) Begin Registration Here >
January 9, 2019
Week 3:Hibernation Season: How To Polish Your Brand For Big Changes This Year Register Here >
January 16, 2018
Week 4:Personalized TuneUp Workshop (Members Only) Begin Registration Here >
January 23, 2019
Week 5:To Be Announced (wanna be a Guest Expert?)
January 30, 2019