Details: The organizers say, “Brazen U’s premier Executive Social Media Bootcampis a rigorous 4-week online course that will help you develop and implement a winning social media strategy–whether social media is 10 percent or 100 percent of your job.” I’m hoping social media can be 95 percent of the work I do to promote writing and writers. As they say, it’s better to learn to fish than to pay a publicist $10K to catch the fish for you.

promotion
Social media training for authors
Wednesday, August 10th, 2011Midnight and I’m Not Famous Yet (Homage to Barry Hannah)
Monday, January 24th, 2011This week’s comprehensive post is by successful indie author David Rothstein. He recently launched his Civil War novel, Casualties, which is based on a true story about a woman who set out with a horse and wagon to rescue her husband from a Confederate POW camp. Besides being a compelling story told in a powerful, lyrical narrative voice, the novel has benefited from its veritable marketing juggernaut.
When it comes to approaching well-known authors like Lee Smith, getting his book into stores across the country, and creating film and sales opportunities at every turn, David is in his element. So, who better than he to ask for advice? With that, I turn it over to him.
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You’ve written your novel. You’ve workshopped it until you’re wondering if those other people are reading the same manuscript you are. All the typos are gone. You’ve figured out how to convert it to eBook format, got a great cover design and it’s all ready to upload to Createspace or Lulu or whomever. You’re self-publishing because all of your queries turned up dry.
Congratulations. You are now a small businessperson. Actually, you’re a small retailer. The real work has just begun.
When we start out to write a novel or a collection of poetry we don’t typically think of how to get it to market, how to sell it, how to distribute it. If we’d thought hard about those things at the beginning, we might never have gotten to the final draft of our stories. Instead, we exhibit a kind of naive courage. Most writers know little or nothing about running a small (or maybe any) business. But that’s the stuff you need to know if you’re looking for any kind of commercial success.
There’s really nothing mysterious about success in a small business, but that doesn’t mean it’s easy. The rules of small retail are basic and consistent. Here are a few of the more important ones you’ll need to know and master.
The first three rules of retail—especially small retail—are: location, location, location. In getting your book to market that translates into distribution, distribution, distribution.
The distribution problem has largely been solved through Amazon and maybe Lulu for print, and Smashwords, Kindle, iBooks, et al for digital. That’s the upside. The downside is that with the cost of entry so low there are many more authors and books with which you’ll compete. But you know that.
Marketing is the sine qua non of commercial success. It is you getting your book in front of people who will be most likely to see value in it and will be motivated to pay for the opportunity to experience your story.
So that’s where the hard part comes in. You need to get your work in front of potential buyers, i.e., readers. And that’s actually true even if you managed to get a book contract from a publisher, because as an unknown you’ll probably not get much of a marketing budget or placement in bookstores or on their lists. It will still be up to you to do those things. How you do that with a book is no different from any other small retail enterprise getting in front of its potential buyers.
With a novel a huge part of marketing is self-promotion and self-promotion is not a natural thing for new writers to do. I think it’s especially the case with self-published new writers. Even if you didn’t start out that way, as you’ve gotten rejection after (disingenuous) rejection it will rub off on you. You’ll end up believing somewhere inside you that by self-publishing you’re not as good as the others. That’s what the publishing establishment wants you and your potential buyers to believe because it reduces the competition. As Kurt Vonnegut might say, “Sometimes I don’t know about the publishing establishment.”
And maybe you’re not as good. But maybe you’re better. But only readers can tell you that, not agents, or editors or writers’ groups or anyone else. If you’re going to be rejected, be rejected by those who count. The ones who count are readers who will pay you for your work.
Whenever you doubt the legitimacy of self-publishing it will help to remember the Impressionists. When the snots of the Paris Salon refused to show the Impressionists’ work, Monet, Manet, Degas, Cezanne and others rented an exhibit space just down the street and did their own show. They called it “Le Salon des Refusés.” The Exhibition of the Rejected. They self-published. And we all know the outcome.
Then there’s pricing. Pricing can be pretty tricky, especially when you don’t know how much your product has cost you and you haven’t set any revenue goals. Early in the game you have to determine how much you have invested in this product. With a novel that means how much your time and passion and labor are worth. If you don’t know that and are expecting any kind of return, you’ll probably not get it.
The chat rooms, blogosphere, writer’s groups are full of talk about pricing. One of the worst pieces of advice I’ve seen is that you should give your work away to build a “platform.” To me that is pure nonsense.
There’s the basic rule of perceived value. If you’re selling your eBook for ninety-nine cents while the others are going for upwards of $7.99, then the perception is not that yours is a bargain, but that it must not be as good as the others. If you try to sell at that price you’re telling potential buyers that is how much you think your own work is worth. If you give it away you’re telling potential buyers your work has zero value. You cannot compete on price. You must compete on value.
You can’t sell something by giving it away. There’s a selective process that happens: if you give your stuff away, or give away large portions of it, your fan base (to the extent that you develop one) will become people who want something for nothing and you’ll be the sap giving it to them. All those people who are happy to download your first book for free will not be there when you write the second and ask them to buy it. You’ll have rewarded them for the wrong behavior. And you’ll have driven away the readers who are willing to part with their money for something they believe has value. I believe you should never let people preview more than three percent of your book. That will push you even harder to make the first few pages compelling.
Another rule of retail is, “Mark it up to mark it down.” You might need to mark your price down later in the game. If you price your work with the minimum margin when you initially publish it, you can’t mark it down if you need to. Plus you’ll already have signaled something unfavorable about your estimation of its value. And any early sales will not have yielded the maximum return for you.
If you’re in the right market and you’re selling on value, price is not the principal deterrent to someone buying your work. It takes as much effort to sell something for $5 as it does to sell something for $500 or $5000. Ask any retailer. It has to do with the way consumers typically make buying decisions. If you think your work is as valuable as anything written by Phillip Roth, or Cormac McCarthy or Tom Clancy or fill in the blank, that’s what you should price it. If you don’t think it’s as valuable (not necessarily as good, but as valuable), you probably need to ask about your reasons for writing in the first place.
Be really careful about blogs and chats—which ones you read, which ones you respond to. The conversation on most writing blogs (except Sarah’s, of course) is a lot of people talking to one another and none of them have the answers to the questions they’re asking. It’s mostly a churn of angst and speculation and daydreaming. It’s like being locked in a room with a bunch of people who don’t know how to pick a lock, but have no limit to how much they can talk about being locked in a room.
In my opinion if you’re at the marketing stage and don’t know what to do, you’d be better off getting your advice from a small retailer, someone selling pet supplies or apparel or car parts. If they’re still in business in this economy, they’re the people who know what you want to know. You just have to know what questions to ask.
When all else fails, change your expectations. That’s ordinarily crappy advice. But in this case it’s actually not that bad. If you thought you’d become a famous author and you haven’t on your first try, by changing your expectations you’ll be that much more inclined to write another book, and that one might make cash registers ring everywhere. At least you’ll live to fight another day. You’ll keep writing, and that’s what it’s supposed to be about in the first place. On the other hand if the result of your work is “only” that you finish what you set out to do and you also make your grandchildren proud of you, that’s pretty damned good. Besides, you’ll know you’ve done something that nearly all humans in nearly all the history of our species couldn’t or wouldn’t or didn’t do.
Finally there’s capitalization. You must have enough capitalization to make mistakes and recover, and to hire help when you need it. This is even more important if you’ve no experience in marketing and promotion. At this stage we’re all pretty vulnerable. So be extra careful about unsolicited offers from publicists, book reps, all those types. Do your research to make sure they’ve actually produced and don’t pay anyone anything unless they can prove that they’ve actually produced for someone else. The best evidence is real writers with real books that have really sold.
Here are a few things that you can do to get the word out to potential buyers.
- Advertising still works. Place ads in media that your potential readers will likely see. You have to figure that out—who, what, where and when. Another reason you need capitalization.
- Readings and Signings. Even if it’s just local, the exposure and experience will be great. Go to the bookstore and talk with the decision maker and give that person a review copy. They’ll be most concerned about their margins and ability to return unsold copies. There are two ways you can do that; first, by having them buy through the big distributors; second, by taking your books on consignment. Don’t be disappointed if they agree but only ask for two copies. Then leave them alone. It’s a total high when they call you and ask for two more. The split is usually 60/40.
- If number two has worked, put together a book tour. It’s not that hard to do. But it costs.
- Approach other writers. But make sure they’re known writers. You’d be astonished at how many writers will actually give you their time and attention. Send a copy of your book with a well-composed note asking the person to read it. Real writers are suckers for good writing and if your story is as good as you believe it to be, writers will be drawn into it, and they are the peers you want. Agents aren’t. If a known writer likes your work you’ll know about it. If the news is good always ask for a review and referrals from him/her.
- Be persistent. If there’s someone (a reviewer, a known writer) and that person can help you, go back again and again until he/she helps you or tells you to get lost. You have absolutely nothing to lose.
- Do what screenwriters do. People who write screenplays know they’ll have to sell them and they develop a plan to do it. And the successful ones are not only good writers, they’re good marketers and they’re persistent. Track one of them down and talk. You’ll learn a lot.
- Remember what old man Stamper said, “Never give a inch.” It’s your project, your story, your innards.
I hope this helps. And I wish you all the success you can create.
An interview with writer and journalist Laura Stanfill
Saturday, January 15th, 2011We met in 2008 in a nascent novel critique group in Portland, Oregon, and gathered with other writers every few months over tall stacks of manuscript pages. We continued the friendship on writing retreats, and sometimes, just over some of her delicious mini banana breads to talk about storytelling and books. Laura Stanfill’s advice is unfailingly productive and positive, and it’s my pleasure to bring her voice to this blog.
She has completed two novels, BODY COPY and PROOF OF US, and is at work on a new one, LOST NOTES, a sweeping, multi-generational story of collecting, connecting, and obsessing. She also has an extensive journalism background, has earned various awards for her writing and design, and holds a bachelor’s degree in English from Vassar College.
1. I knew you first as a literary writer with a lovely writing voice. In the almost-three years of our friendship, I have learned that you were trained as a journalist and worked as a newspaper editor on the Oregon coast. Many nonfiction writers struggle to meet the artistic demands of fiction writing: How do the habits of these two kinds of writing conflict with or complement each other, and how did you manage the transition?
The two pursuits have been intertwined in my life since right after college, when I launched my journalism career and started my very first novel. Newspaper work is extremely disciplined. If you’re sick, or exhausted, tough luck. Deadline’s always on the way. With that novel, I pushed myself to work for hours at a time, because professionally I was learning to survive grueling stints at the computer. The discipline transferred.
Of course with fiction, there’s the matter of making up worlds and setting the scene even more carefully than in a well-crafted feature article. Once the fictional world exists, it must change as the characters progress through the story. With journalism, a reporter must address the world as it exists, without overstepping professional boundaries, and an editor must evaluate reporters’ material with an eye toward accountability. Writing and editing nonfiction trained me to focus on the details. But fiction’s more freeing. It’s fine to elaborate, use inventive phrases and make all kinds of judgments. And if something doesn’t work, it can be fixed in the next draft. A reporter only gets one chance to nail the story.
2. You are about to go on submission with your second novel, BODY COPY. Tell us a bit about it.
When I started BODY COPY six years ago, I wanted to write about community newspapers, intense deadlines and the sacrifices reporters and editors make to put out a weekly paper. There’s something romantic about people working crazy hours for little pay in order to write about, say, a woman who makes dolls in her kitchen. My main character, 23-year-old Megan Trumball, evolved from that concept, certainly, but the story has morphed into a portrait of grief and what it means to lose friends when you’re young. It feels like the world has ended. And that’s where BODY COPY starts.
It’s an unusual structure. The juicy back story about Megan’s roommates—full of secrets, fights and betrayals—unfolds parallel to her present-tense existence. As she settles into a new job on the Oregon coast, Megan uses her reporting skills to really look at what happened with her roommates, and to judge her own culpability in her friend’s tragic hit-and-run death. The reader watches her surface from grief in a realistic way, and once she engages fully in her new community, she sets about changing it.
3. As you start to shop BODY COPY around, you have been doing a lot of research—both on agents and on books in your genre. You’ve done this successfully before: What are your techniques, then and now?
I haven’t yet immersed myself in the query pond, but I can speak to what worked last time. And that’s what you mentioned in your question: research. I tend to target agents who represent novels with some similarity to mine, such as a strong voice, a small-town landscape or a particular theme.
When I’m querying, I read lots of books and pull favorite tomes off the shelves in my living room. I subscribe to Publishers Marketplace. And I send my letters out one or two at a time. It’s a slow slog, and quite possibly an archaic method, but it’s one that has worked for me.
4. From the perspective of a writer in search of an agent, has very much really changed with the publishing industry in the past five years?
I paid attention to the market in 2004-05, when my last novel went to agents and then editors, and I’m paying attention now. The years in between, I kept my mind on my manuscript.
That being said, I definitely think things are more difficult now. I’ve heard that from ultra-talented writer friends trying to find a foothold as well as from people in the industry. Everyone’s talking about the economy. Sometimes I wish I had finished BODY COPY six years ago, when agents and editors were more willing to take risks on no-name newcomers. Of course, publishing news and bookstores’ struggles are disheartening, and ebooks have changed the landscape.
5. You’re one of the most effective writers I know, where it comes to taking an objective step back from a manuscript and evaluating its market potential. Is this a journalist’s skill? A personality trait? Where can I get one like it?
Thank you, Sarah! That’s a huge compliment, especially because I really respect all your insights about a work’s merits, shortcomings and prospects. As managing editor of a weekly newspaper, I had to balance content to ensure our subscribers would have stimulating reading experiences regardless of their particular interests. My list of options for each page was enormous, and each choice had its own consequence. Running two pages of letters meant stealing a page from business or schools. Bumping a lovely photo up to three columns on an inside page would result in a prettier page, but also a need to shrink the story.
There was never enough space for everything. Whatever I cut, or shortened, or held until next week would earn a complaint call. Perhaps that kind of editorial work trained me to think about how a reader might respond to specific artistic choices.
6. Putting the business of writing aside—what are you working on now? Where is the new project allowing you to take your craft and development as a writer?
LOST NOTES is historical fiction, and that has taken me by surprise. This summer, as I was freewriting about an object, its history took over my imagination and overruled my initial plot outline. The piece in question is a small, high-pitched barrel organ, which was manufactured to train wealthy women’s canaries to sing popular or religious tunes. Now my novel begins in 1855, and it’s set in New York and several New England states.
I’ve never written a third-person novel. I’ve never written historical fiction. I’ve never chosen a male protagonist, let alone one who speaks French. I’ve never done major research for my fiction. And yet this book is extremely exciting. I’ve always approached a story from the character angle and then struggled with plot. This time, the plot keeps flowing, and I’m figuring out character as I go. Knowing this is a first draft gives me the leeway to experiment with language and see what shakes loose.
7. You’re the journalist. What great question could I have asked, but didn’t?
How about this one: What are your thoughts on writing groups? I’m a huge fan of critique groups and trading useful feedback. There’s so much to learn from other writers, not just in terms of your own manuscript’s needs, but in the process of analyzing others’ work. I’m lucky to live in Portland, Oregon, where there’s a huge community of savvy writers.
In 2008, I joined a novel group, envisioned by writer Liz Prato as a way to address plot flaws and other big-picture issues, and I learn something new about the craft each time we get together. We read each other’s manuscripts and then comment on how everything works, what falls short and where the writer might go with revisions. It’s such an interesting process to focus on a big chunk of someone’s writing—or to submit your own work to such scrutiny. The several-hour discussions we have are truly amazing.
I joined my other critique group this past year, and we read a few pages aloud once a month. There are incredible writers in the room, and we’re all working on different projects, not just novels. I’ve been testing pieces of my new manuscript there, and the positive, helpful feedback has given me the courage to press forward.
Thank you, Laura! Be sure to visit her website, www.laurastanfill.com, or follow her writing blog at http://laurastanfill.wordpress.com. And you’ve really gotta see her photography.
Indie book advertising that works?
Wednesday, December 1st, 2010Yesterday, Lit agent Kristin Nelson wrote a blog post on Pub Rants–”Advertising That Works?“–that suggests a new way to publicize books. Ever hear of Groupon.com? It helps independent local businesses offer deals to local customers, sometimes at huge discounts. She sums it up like this:
It introduces subscribers to local companies that they might not have discovered otherwise and more importantly, if a subscriber buys the deal for the day, that person is committed to visiting that company or using that service in the very near future.
I’d love to know if this concept could work directly for authors. For instance, a few indie authors could team up and publicize book specials along a couple of different dimensions–say, “Get three books by local Portland authors for $25″; or, “Get three new YA paranormal romance books for $25.” It would be a great way for readers to connect with new authors in their geographical area, or new books in a genre they love.
If you know me, you’ll know that any kind of local publishing venture intrigues me. The “Big Six” publishers are not the bad guys–they’ve brought us every book we’ve ever loved–but I also love the idea of self-publishing, Wild West stigma and all. The number of books per year continues to climb, and yet the number of good manuscripts that get rejected continues to climb, too. If you’ll allow me a cautious flight of fancy, what potential there must be for (some) literature right now, if (some) authors and (some) readers alike move away (sometimes) from the big-box-store mentality of traditional publishing and instead write locally, buy locally, and read locally (a little more often).
Maybe, just maybe, books and reading would regain footing in American culture. As Leonard Cohen wrote, “There is a crack in everything; that’s how the light gets in.” For once, let it not be the light of a computer or television screen.
Conference report card
Saturday, November 13th, 2010Venue: A
Agents: A
Value: B+
The coffee: A+
Fellow writers: A+
Like the Backspace Writers Conference last May, this autumn’s Backspace Agent-Author Seminar was the shortest distance between two points: writers and literary agents. Two days of 15-member workshops and panels made for two nights of dead-exhausted sleep and sore feet, if you happened to be wearing boots with four-inch heels. But the rigor is worth it, because the agents, location, and especially other attendees–and yes, Starbucks coffee–were outstanding. The only reason I gave the value a B+ is because everything in New York has a, well, New York price tag.
My pages and query letter seemed generally OK, based on the response they got from agents Michelle Brower, Rebecca Friedman, Natanya Wheeler, Alanna Ramirez, Adam Schear, Kirsten Neuhaus, and Paul Cirone. But the few flags and questions the agents raised are ones I have, too, and hearing them out loud in front of a group helped me answer them better for myself. Chiefly: yes, it’s a dystopian novel about near-future Gaza; no, present-day Gaza is not a dystopia, (1) by definition; and (2) not an appropriate setting for story I want to tell, because the way characters confront the division of men and women in this society cannot happen while strident criticism of the West is a conventional part of the argument.
Anyway, it’s complicated, but it is all helpful for me as the creator of this world. I’m clearer about the writing and revisions that come next, and more excited about my late winter deadline than I was three days ago. Add this to a long run in Prospect Park this morning, and the discovery of a Stumptown Coffee around the corner from Leena’s apartment, and the world seems like a generous place.
Onward!
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