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Contests : Contests to Avoid : Warning Signs

Warning Signs

13 Warning Signs of a Bad Poetry Contest

The main goal of a bad poetry contest appears to be extracting money from poets rather than honoring excellence. Bad contests typically show several of these warning signs. When in doubt, check with your local poetry society.
  1. Unusually large number and size of cash awards (e.g., $58,000/year)

  2. Contest sponsor tries hard to sell you products that incorporate your work, like anthologies (example)

  3. Contest is free to enter, but 'winners' have to pay a high price for own copy of book

  4. Contest turns up on "Scam Warning" pages when you search for it with Google

  5. Hard to contact sponsor with questions - responses are slow or evasive

  6. Low standards - not choosy about who gets published

  7. Name is close to that of a prestigious contest but for a small difference

  8. Prize is not money or publication, but 'agency representation' or something you must pay for

  9. Hard to find the work of past winners to judge their quality for yourself

  10. Small prize relative to reading fee (e.g., $5 fee for a $50 top prize)

  11. Advertised in mass market magazines (Parade) and newspapers (Sunday comics) unrelated to poetry

  12. You win a prize - but have to pay to attend a convention to receive it

  13. Only short poems (30 lines or less) are accepted - the better to pack them into an anthology

 

Click here for Web resources that flag and fight scams against poets and writers, plus hilarious parodies sent to expose the scamsters.





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