Dealing With Instructables Rejection
by luann2425 in Living > Toys & Games
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Dealing With Instructables Rejection
Earlier this week I published my twenty-seventh Instructable.
I thought it was an original concept.
I thought it was fun and different.
I thought it would get featured.
I. WAS. WRONG.
I felt rejected and unhappy.
Then I took a look at my most recent failure. Good grief! I was in such a hurry to get it online that I left a typo in the introduction! Well, I fixed the typo and I decided to write myself a little book of reminders to help me deal with the next rejection.
Make Sure the Instructable Really IS Polished.
Check for more than just typos or spelling mistakes.
Is everything REALLY as clear as possible?
Realize That Other Projects ARE Better Than Yours.
I wrote my first instructable in August, 2017, so I could enter the First Time Authors contest.
I thought my project was good, and original, and fun. I worked extremely hard getting the photos and the instructions uploaded. I felt very happy to have this project featured. But I didn't even place in the contest.
There were lots of other cool projects in that contest.
They were better than mine.
Moving on.
Don't Expect to Get Featured for Projects That Are Not Unique.
I started putting my little print-and-mail storybooks online in order to share them with others. Grandma Van's Print-and-mail storybook #3 got featured. Others didn't. While storybooks 2, 4, and 5-26 were each unique compared to one another, they weren't unique enough to get featured.
But I still needed to publish them, because I need to...
Remember the REAL Reason for Writing an Instructable.
It IS all about sharing.
Being featured is cool. Being a winner is probably really great (I would not know.)
But the real goal is to share my work with others.
Sharing is good.
I like to share my work with others.
I like to see that my work has been viewed by others.
I like it when people take time to comment.
Remember That the Editors Are Looking For: "Content That Is Highly Reproducible and Has That 'wow, Awesome!' Factor."
I still think my basement maze was awesome.
But for someone who does not have an unfinished basement, it is not exactly "highly reproducible."
It was a cool project. It got featured. It got me started.
It just wasn't a winner.
Do Some Research.
Yesterday, while feeling especially rejected, I did a google search for "not featured on Instructables." I saved five different articles and they gave me some good pointers.
Study the Masters.
Yesterday, I took a closer look at some of the featured projects and contest winners that I have admired in the past. Wow! MarlenaT and ProfessorPi and LanceMakes and MadeByBarb and Kiteman are really good.
(And if YOU are really good and I didn't mention you here...I just haven't discovered you yet.)
Eliminate Envy. Accentuate Gratitude.
Yesterday, I noticed that many, many people had more badges, more features, and more wins than luann2425.
Instead of feeling envious, I choose to feel grateful for all the great content out there.
I'm a member of an awesome community.
Thanks, you all!
Focus on Quality, Not Quantity.
At the beginning of 2018, I set a goal to publish one print-and-mail book each week.
I was mailing one book each week to my grandchildren, and I thought to myself, "Why not share those books with others who might be looking for print-and-mail storybooks?"
But some of my personalized storybooks didn't really work well on Instructables. I tried to adapt them, or change them, or write them with Instructables in mind instead of my grandchildren.
My grandchildren didn't really CARE if a book was perfect. They just liked getting something in the mail.
For Instructables, however, I should have published fewer, better books.
Don't Quit.
I won't.