11 Ways to Find the Agent or Editor You Need

1. Referrals
The best way to get an agent’s attention is if the first two words the agent sees or hears are the name of a client, editor, agent, author, or bookseller who suggested you contact the agent. The more important the person, the more eager the agent will be to hear from you.
    
2. Your Networks
Writers and publishing people who can make suggestions

3. Writer's Organizations
Members are part of your networks.

4. The Association of Authors' Representatives (AAR)

www.publishersweekly.com/aar

5. Directories

Jeff Herman’s Guide to Book Publishers, Editors, and Literary Agents 200X; 200X Guide to Literary Agents; 200X Guide to Literary Agents: A Writer's Guide by Adam Begley; Literary Market Place (LMP); The Writer's Handbook.

6. The Web
Google literary agents. Visit authorlink.com, agentquery.com, litmatch.net, publisherslunch.com, publishersweekly.reviewsnews.com, publishersmarketplace.com.

7. Literary events
Writing classes, readings, lectures, seminars, book signings, conferences

8. Magazines
Publishers Weekly, The Writer, Writer's Digest, and Poets & Writers

9. Publishers' catalogs and websites
Libraries receive catalogs.
 
10. Books
Dedications and acknowledgments in competing and complementary books.

11. Your Platform
Give talks, maintain a website, write a blog, do an ezine, post to related sites, do podcasts, get published online or off, publicize your work and yourself, build your email list. When your continuing national visibility is great enough, agents and editors will find you.

These ideas will help you find an editor if you decide to sell your book.
 
Adapted from How to Get a Literary Agent by Michael Larsen.

Michael Larsen-Elizabeth Pomada Literary Agents / Established 1972 / Members: AAR
415-6723-0939 / larsenpoma@oal.com / larsenpomada.com
1029 Jones Street / San Franscisco, California 94109