Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Blog to book?

People keep asking me why they should spend the time building up a blog. Well, here's one good reason.

"The price, according to a source familiar with the deal but not authorized to discuss the total, was about $300,000, a sum that many in the publishing and blogging communities believe is an astronomical amount for a book spawned from a blog, written by a previously unpublished author."

How do you get $300K from your blog? Read the whole story here.

Then go update your blog. lol

Audrey

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Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Recommendations

Writers keep learning that they need to learn more things. And, in some cases, buy things or services. Where do you turn for advice?

Nobody wants to get ripped off, but research takes time away from writing. How do you find out the best products for your career? Who can you trust?

Hopefully, you trust us. Believe me, I've spent the hours researching products and companies. And we've learned a lot of dos and don'ts by making expensive mistakes ourselves. Let us save you the time and money.

If you're looking for information and/or classes to take, you will find a lot of help on our Tools and Resources pages. (I try to keep them current. If you run across a dead link, please let me know!) You can also find contests to enter on our Contests page.

We try to help with those products and services that cost money, too. You'll find tips for website hosting, domain names, promotional products and much more on our Products page.

Before anyone screams at me, yes, those are affiliate links. If you buy from those links, TWC gets a small percentage of the price. That's how we keep this site free.

But making money isn't why we recommend those products. There are a LOT of products out there that pay high prices for clicks, but they aren't products we would spend money on. We have done the research and made the mistakes, and picked the products we think are best. THEN, after we decide they are a good product, I look for an affiliate program.

So when you see a link on our site, you can feel confident that it's been checked out, it's for real, and it's the best value we've found.

And, by using our links to buy, you can help keep all the information on this site free.

Thank you!

Audrey

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Wednesday, June 04, 2008

Are your readers a nuisance?

Today I read an article by Charles Lambert regarding the atmosphere of bookstores in Italy. Here’s a link to the story: http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/books/2008/06/buying_books_in_italy_from_gro.html
He said something I’m going to blatantly take out of context.

“...the customer isn't right or wrong so much as a nuisance.”

Mr. Lambert was referring to bookstore clerks feeling this way; I can’t help but wonder if we writers often think of our readers in a similar fashion. If we value them, why do we bemoan and complain about having to get out there and promote our books? Don’t we want them to buy our books, read our stories? Putting in the face time, making them feel valuable and getting to know us is a big part of that. We treat book promotion, and our readers, like a nuisance...something bad to be avoided. Surely I cannot be the only person to see the backwardness in this.

An online publisher, I now work for, notes how their authors who heavily promote, have higher sales. I can see that. What you put into this is reflected by how much you get out of it. I learned that selling make up and it certainly applies to books.

I firmly believe promotion starts long before any book is ever sold. This is where you are out in the book community (be it online or in person), making yourself known and putting a friendly face to that name. Yep...branding YOU!

Then when that book comes out, you want people to see the promo or ad and say, “Hey, I know this author!” They’re far more likely to hand over their hard-earned money to someone they’ve come to know and trust than someone who shows up on an email list or message board for the first time to promote their new book.

If you’re uncomfortable calling them online friends, then how about acquaintances? We all understand the friendliness we can share with coworkers and customers in the “normal” job workplace. It’s just as important here.

One of the best ways is to make use of the online communities like MySpace, Facebook, Goodreads, Writerschatroom. You don’t need to give away your shoe size or social security number to anyone but you can open up a little to potential readers. Let them in on the writing process of a book you’re working on. They’ll want to buy it because they feel a vested interest in the project...after all, they were there with you through the writing.

Pat yourself on the back when those kudos come. People love to celebrate with one another. The plus side is it peels away a layer of that solitude writers are supposed to be famous for. Reaching out to readers is never a nuisance. It’s a necessity and not just for our pocketbooks...but for ourselves as human beings.

Remember: attitude is everything. If you go into it with optimism, it will reflect in your online relationships. These marketing sayings of how fifty-percent of promotion is useless or how it takes contact with a customer seven times for them to buy your product, don’t need to discourage you. Let it encourage you. You need seven contacts? Try for nine. Only getting fifty percent out of a hundred? Then shoot for two hundred. Let it justify in your mind, the time you ARE spending in promotion. All you need do is schedule an hour of your time a day. Give it a try!