tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-65467773494374590642024-02-19T09:57:23.243-06:00Sarah NegovetichRejecting BoundariesAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.comBlogger660125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-68637989715471172172017-05-04T11:54:00.000-05:002017-05-04T11:54:24.716-05:00Why you should stay up until 2am with David GaughranHey there lovely folks of the internet!<br />
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I wanted to talk today about something fun and (as the title suggests) a little different.<br />
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So last week I had an amazing time at the 2017 Smarter Artist Summit. This is an author conference put on by the awesome guys at Sterling and Stone. The same guys who gave us <a href="https://sterlingandstone.net/book/write-publish-repeat/" target="_blank">Write.Publish.Repeat.</a> and <a href="https://storyshop.io/" target="_blank">StoryShop</a>.<br />
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I could go on and on about the amazing speakers and how much I learned, but there are plenty of other posts out there on those topics and honestly, if you weren't there do you really want to read a blog post about an awesome event you missed?<br />
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Instead of doing that, I want to talk about what happens at a conference that isn't the actual conference and could possibly be the most important part of the whole thing. And this is where David Gaughran comes in.<br />
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Well, David (AKA The Muffin Man) and really all the other people who are there with you at any conference.<br />
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Because the speakers are always awesome, right? And I've learned that even if the speaker is covering something I already know, there's a good chance I'll pick up at least a few little tidbits that sit inside my head and help me do better, smarter work.<br />
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But the speakers are only half of any conference. It's when the speakers aren't holding a microphone when the real magic happens.<br />
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The short conversations in the hallway during breaks, the random people who all end up at lunch together, the after dinner hotel bar chit chats. This is the real sweet spot of any conference.<br />
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Why?<br />
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Because publishing is a hard row to hoe and no one should be out there trying to do it all by themself.<br />
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I mean, you could. Sure. But you can't possibly know everything you need to know to be successful. There's too much. There will always be too much. Which means you'll always be leaving something on the table.<br />
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Unless...<br />
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You make some friends.<br />
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And this is where people can drop the ball at conferences. They don't make the friends when the opportunity is right there.<br />
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You probably paid a lot of money to attend a conference. You shelled out big bucks for transportation, hotel rooms and food. Maybe you even had to take vacation days from work. Attending a professional conference is an investment in you, so you need to make the most of it.<br />
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Here are my two tips for making that happen:<br />
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1. Ditch the idle chit-chat<br />
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You can have conversations about the weather or sports teams for free at your local grocery store. Don't waste time at a conference talking about the dumb stuff. Instead, have meaningful conversations.<br /><br />How, you may ask?<br />
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Well, if you're not an extrovert, first you'll have to step out of your comfort zone. The good news there is that most authors are introverts (except for us few extroverted weirdos), so you're in good company knowing most of the people there are probably just as uncomfortable as you are.<br />
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Next, strike up a conversation about something that matters. An easy opening is "Hi, nice to meet you. What do you write?"<br />
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That's not hard. If you find there's a lull or awkward moment then hit it again with a conversation that matters. "What do you think is the hardest part of the writing process?" "How are you promoting your work off of social media?" "Have you tried Facebook Ads yet?"<br />
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If you want to have meaningful conversations, ask meaningful questions.<br />
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And after your meaningful conversations...<br />
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2. Don't go back to your hotel room<br />
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There is nothing for you in that hotel room. Nothing. Sure you could write. But, again, you can do that at home for free.<br />
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Instead, go to dinner. Don't skip the after party. Hang out in the lobby. If people are going out, go with them. If no one is going out, make the suggestion.<br />
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Why?<br />
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Because meaningful conversations during the conference is only step one. After that you need to get to know people a little more. Make friends. Make friends with the kind of people who have the same goals that you do.<br />
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Because friends help each other.<br />
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Now, I'm not saying you should go make fake friends with people so they will help you. That's lame and makes you sound like a used car salesman.<br />
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But I am saying that making friends will help you. Because now you are someone that person can come to for honest advice, and you can do the same. And friends are people who genuinely want to help each other. Because even though we're all authors, we aren't competing against each other. Because you can't know it all and friends can know things you don't.<br />
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So don't go home. Sleep when the conference is over. Instead, stick David Gaughran with a 5lb bag of muffins and brainstorm pen names with Lori Ryan. Watch bats with Chance Carter and laugh until you're sore with Tammi LaBrecque.<br />
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Build those relationships, because publishing can be a long, lonely road...but only if you let it be.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-52284110091003391342016-09-23T22:44:00.000-05:002016-09-23T22:44:00.771-05:00Rise and Shine, Author!In the continued conversation regarding my recent life changes, I wanted to dive a little deeper into my new found morning routine.<br />
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So, let's flash back a few months. I was a hard-core night owl. I'm talking up until 3 or 4am, night owl. And not the "I'm awake but I don't want to be kind". I came alive at 10pm and then sprang into action. Of course, authors are still human so a regular sacrifice to the sandman was required. I was not the kind of person who could get by on a handful of sleep, so I regularly snoozed until 9 or 10am.<br />
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The schedule worked (or so I thought). I homeschooled at the time so we didn't have to be up at any particular time and since my kids were ALWAYS home, night was the only time I was able to be at my computer uninterrupted for more than ten minutes at a time.<br />
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But there was a downside. Or several really. When I did have to be up early for an appointment or activity, I was dragging serious tushy. My coffee intake was through the roof. And I almost never got time to just sit and talk to my husband. We were making it work, but it wasn't ideal.<br />
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When my kids decided they wanted to try traditional school this year, I was hesitant, but...<br />
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HOLY MOTHER OF GOD!!!!! THIS IS AWESOME!!!!!<br />
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I now get up like a normal person at 6:30 in the morning. To be clear this is before the sun is up. This is only slightly later than I was previously going to bed.<br />
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By getting up this early I have time to wake up and start my day before I have to jump right into it. Plus, now that I'm not up until the crack of dawn I get to have real, actual conversations with my husband.<br />
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Now, in order for this new schedule to work, a few things had to happen.<br />
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1. I had to give up homeschooling<br />
This was a toughy for me because I loved teaching my girls and having them home with me. And I'll admit to spending that first week of school wondering if I was doing the right thing. The good news is my girls are loving their new environment and I'm learning that I don't have to do all the things. I know this sounds simple, but I have a really hard time not doing everything. I've somehow convinced myself the world would be a better place if I had my fingers in all the things. This is obviously not true and I'm getting there, slowly<br />
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2. I had to retrain my body<br />
The reality is, I'm still a night owl. My brain still works better at night, but that isn't good for me and my body. I've had to retrain my mind to be productive and inspired during the day. Having an accountability partner for this was key. Knowing there was someone else waiting on me to post my word counts for the day helped me to stay on task and keep working, even when my muse didn't show up. A month on and I am finding my daytime productive groove<br />
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3. I had to make a schedule<br />
Those first few days my kids were in school was like being on vacation. I immediately thought of all the things I would do in my massive amount of free time. HAHAHAHAHA! No, that's not how it works. So, to keep me from going down a rabbit hole of toy organization or errand running, I created a schedule. I've got it posted here so you can see what I do, but keep in mind that this is just what works for me. It's not the end all be all of schedules<br />
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6:30 Wake up and get kids dressed and ready for school<br />
7:20 Walk kids to school<br />
7:45 Morning walk<br />
8:45 Clean up and get dressed<br />
9:00 Breakfast<br />
9:30 Check email, social media and take care of any outstanding tasks<br />
10:30 Butt in chair writing time*<br />
2:45 Pick up kids from school<br />
3:00 Homework<br />
5:00 Dinner<br />
6:00 Evening activities (soccer, church, etc.)<br />
8:00 Kids in bed<br />
10:00 My bedtime<br />
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So, you'll notice on here that once my kids get home from school I am done working. There have been a handful of times when there was something time sensitive I needed to handle after that time, but for the most part I leave my work at my desk and it's all family once they are home.<br />
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Also, the little asterisk on my writing time. This is because I also use this time for errands and marketing BUT only once I have my writing goal done for the day. Sometimes that goal is a word count. Sometimes it's a scene I need done. Whatever it is, I don't leave the chair until it's done.<br />
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I'm never going to be the gal who jumps out of bed in the morning singing to the blue birds. But I have found that a morning routing helps me to be more productive and get to spend more time with my family.<br />
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If a night owl routine works for you then that's great and you should stick with it. But if you aren't as productive as you should be during the hours of darkness, consider switching to a day schedule. It's honestly not too shabby.<br />
<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-20253753069014702332016-09-16T17:07:00.000-05:002016-09-16T17:07:35.359-05:00A healthy author is a happy authorSo last week, I mentioned that I've been working through several changes the last few months. I thought it might be interesting for you guys to see what I've been up to. It's also good for me to put these changes out there so I can see my own progress.<br />
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Today I want to talk about changes I've made for my health.<br />
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I was not a healthy author, but I had convinced myself I was fine. Oh, the lies we tell ourselves are always the easiest to swallow.<br />
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It was easy to pretend I was fine because I'm a naturally small person (please don't throw tomatoes at me). It's all genetics and mostly due to the fact that I'm so ridiculously short (4'10" in case you didn't know). So I told myself that since I still looked okay in the mirror, all was well.<br />
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But it wasn't.<br />
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I wasn't eating well, my sleep schedule was a hot mess and exercise was pretty much non-existent.<br />
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And while my sloth-like lifestyle wasn't showing up in the mirror, it was hitting me where it counts...rather where the words count. My writing was slow and tedious. Just like me.<br />
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So, I decided to make a change.<br />
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Now, just let me be clear about a few things. This is not one of those blog posts where I share my amazing 300 calorie a day banana diet and talk about the marathon I ran last month. I'm an author, but even I don't write fiction that unbelievable.<br />
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I didn't go hog wild. I made some simple changes that I hope are improving my health and that I think most of us can incorporate without turning our current lifestyle on its head. Here are the little things I'm doing different:<br />
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1. Breakfast<br />
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So, I never use to eat breakfast, unless you count coffee, which you shouldn't. I'm generally not hungry when I first wake up in the morning so I would just skip it until I started feeling dizzy around 3pm at which point I would shove whatever was quick and easy into my pie-hole. This was usually an assortment of my kids leftover mac n cheese from lunch, cookies, chips and random items from the cupboard. Hardly healthy.<br />
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So now I actually have breakfast, like a real one. Today I had an egg and sausage burrito. You'll note that my breakfast is not half a grapefruit and some unidentifiable grain with chia seeds on top. Maybe at some point in the future I'll want to try chia seeds, but that day is not today. Instead, I'm focusing on getting a hearty meal in that gives me the energy I need and keeps me from reaching for the crap food.<br />
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2.Vitamins<br />
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So, I'm doing better with breakfast, but I'm not a saint. I still work from home where I am surrounded by cookies, chips and all the junk food my taste buds could desire. And while I try to plan well-balanced meals for my family, I don't always hit the mark. So I've incorporated some multi-vitamins into my day so I can make sure that I'm getting all the proper minerals and such.<br />
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This may seem trivial, but I really have noticed a difference. By making sure I'm getting the right ingredients into my body, I've found that my concentration is better through the day and I don't have the 3pm energy meltdown that I used to experience. I've completely eliminated the need for an afternoon coffee. I might still have one if I'm in the mood. But I don't have to have it. If you're interested in what I'm taking, it's a pill and a liquid which you can find <a href="https://www.youngliving.com/en_US/products/multigreens-capsules" target="_blank">here</a> and <a href="https://www.youngliving.com/en_US/products/ningxia-red" target="_blank">here</a>. <br />
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3. Exercise<br />
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Ah, this was the demon. An author life is a sedentary life. We work on our computers most of the day. How many times have you heard the phrase "butt in chair" to signify and author getting their work done? Yeah, lots. And when we aren't writing, we're still on our computers with marketing efforts, or reading to stay current on our markets. Lots of sitting.<br />
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So I discovered that my phone comes with a built in pedometer. Nothing fancy and it's probably not the most accurate (a fitbit is now on my Christmas list), but it's there. I use it to gauge how much I'm moving in any given day and seeing that number really keeps my motivated. I now walk a minimum of 10K steps a day. I do this by walking my kids to and from school and walking on a trail behind my house. It's the first thing I do every day (which lets me build up an appetite for my breakfast).<br />
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Not only is the walking good for my ticker, I use that time to listen to several of my favorite podcasts so I can stay on top of what's happening in the industry and get tips for improving my own writing and author career. Two bird, one stone and all that.<br />
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4. Chiropractor<br />
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Before I started going, I never would have told you I had back pain. And yet there were times when I would stand up from a long spell of sitting at my desk and have to stretch and move to work out kinks in my back. And I often found myself sore getting up in the morning.<br />
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Now I go for an adjustment once a month and I can't possibly recommend it more. If you spend hours at your desk, writing or otherwise, your back is going to take the brunt of that sedentary lifestyle. Since I've started I don't have anymore morning pain and I don't have the same issues when I stand up after long periods of time. My legs don't fall asleep as often and I just feel better. If you only pick one change form this post to work on, start with this one.<br />
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5. Morning person<br />
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This was probably my biggest and hardest change, and honestly, it probably needs its own blog post. For those of you who've been around a while, you know that I was previously a hardcore night owl. I'm talking up until 3 or 4am every night. The schedule worked...technically, but it was starting to really wear on my body. Apparently I'm not 20 anymore.<br />
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I found myself exhausted at night, but staying awake anyway in order to get work done. Then my wired brain would fall into bed exhausted and think about all the tasks I didn't get done. When I finally dragged myself out of bed in the morning I was basically useless for the first two hours of consciousness. It was kinda awful.<br />
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Now I wake up at 6:30am. I'm not thrilled with getting up before the sun, but I know I'm a healthier person because I can go to bed at a decent hour and get the sleep I need.<br />
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Now that I'm paying more attention to my health, I've found that my productivity has gone way up. I mean way up. Just this month I've written over 23K words. That's not an earth-shattering feat, but it's a far cry from what I wrote this summer (cough, nothing, cough).<br />
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Being an author is a brain game, but our brains don't exist in some ethereal plain. They are attached to bodies that we have to care for. I for one, am planning on this body holding it together so I can write books for a long time to come.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-82038378592658059032016-09-09T11:22:00.001-05:002016-09-09T11:22:29.739-05:00Changes for the betterOh, hi there! Remember me? I'm Sarah, the lady who's supposed to be running this blog. Ringing any bells? Maybe. Maybe not. It's been a while. Oh, you're sweet, I missed you, too.<br />
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My name is Sarah and it has been 56 days since my last blog post.<br />
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And that makes me sad.<br />
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I love this little blog and all you fabulous people who read it. But the reality is I was also starting to hate it. I was burnt out...on everything.<br />
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This summer I didn't blog (obviously), I barely wrote any new fiction words at all, I slowed way down on responding to queries and was a pretty sucky agent if I'm being honest (which is kinda the point of having a blog).<br />
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Every time I sat down at my computer to work, my brain turned to mush and all my motivation leaked out. Instead of continuing to bang my head on my desk, I focused on me, because I obviously needed some work.<br />
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I took that time to spend with my family who was feeling a little neglected. I thought about what I want and where I see myself in five years. I gave myself permission to stop and reevaluate.<br />
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So what now?<br />
<br />
For starters, I'm moving the blog to once a week. I love the time I spend here, but I know that three posts a week will put my right back in burn out mode and that is bad. So rather than give it up all together, I'm going to scale back and hopefully find the joy that initially got me started blogging. I've also scrapped all the really crappy blog posts that I had originally been planning for this fall and now have a decent list of posts that should take me through the fall. Since I'll have time to really think about them and spend time focusing on quality over quantity, I'm hoping you get more out of them as well.<br />
<br />
I'm making a lot of other changes. I'm not quite ready to announce all of them officially yet. But I promise to share when the time is right. I think we can learn a lot from each other when we are open and honest. It can demystify the wide world of publishing and help each of us better manage our expectations and goals.<br />
<br />
What does this mean for you?<br />
<br />
For starters, I hope it means a better experience when you visit me here at my little piece of the web, but I hope this post shows more than that.<br />
<br />
I hope it helps you to give yourself permission to step back when you need to. I hope it puts your own set-backs into perspective when you can see someone else fail. And I hope it inspires you to see me not allow that failure to stop me from pushing forward with my goals.<br />
<br />
The internet can sometimes be a photoshopped image of the real world. We often only get to glimpse the successes and it's natural for people to want others to see them in a positive setting. But that's not how the real world works. We all have failures and stumbles along our path. We all have days where we know if anyone peaked through our windows they'd be convinced we live in a nut house. We all screw up.<br />
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Those are hard things to say. But it's important for all of us to hear them. <br />
<br />
So today, I'm owning that and pushing on. I hope no matter where you are in your journey, you'll choose to push on as well. Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-38737680469011443002016-07-14T17:20:00.001-05:002016-07-14T17:20:47.583-05:00A consolation postSo, I've pretty much turned into the worst blogger ever.<br />
<br />
Ah, I remember when I use to write all my posts for the week on Sunday and then sit back and glory in my organized productiveness. I'm starting to wonder if someone was sneaking crack into my coffee back then.<br />
<br />
Lately, it feels like the days are getting shorter and I'm losing hours. Hm....maybe I'm experiencing alien abductions and they're wiping my memories so all I'm left with is a deep sense of having not gotten everything done. It's possible.<br />
<br />
Anywho, there's about another month of summer left and then hopefully our new family schedule will make things easier. Until then, the likelihood of on-time, consistent blog posts is very low. I do want to let you know that I have lots of posts in various forms of readiness and some really fun (or fun to me) plans for the rest of the year. All that to say, please don't leave me. I need you guys.<br />
<br />
As a consolation prize for my lack of blogging and the likely emptiness you all feel (you don't have to say the words, I know), here is a video.<br />
<br />
This is from the agent panel I was on at Utopiacon this year and features some other very lovely and talented agents. I haven't watched it because watching myself on video is a form of cruel and unusual punishment, however, I probably make a fool of myself at least once, probably twice. So...you're welcome.<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-24764771208659251952016-07-08T08:00:00.000-05:002016-07-08T08:00:02.220-05:00Am I done yet?If you haven't heard it before, let me be the one to tell you that greatness in literature is created not in the writing, but the editing. No one flops out a first draft ready to take on the world. While most of us understand the great need to edit and polish our manuscripts, the looming question is always how much.<br />
<br />
When I first began my journey toward publications I would hear of authors working on their 16th or 17th draft. The idea of making that many edits made me want to quit before I even got started. I've learned along the way that those many drafts aren't a requirement, but the question is still present. When will I know I'm done editing?<br />
<br />
There still isn't any hard or fast rule, but here are five semi-helpful benchmarks to help you answer the question: Am I done yet?<br />
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<br />
<br />
<b>Thesaurus Switcheroo</b><br />
So you've edited the big stuff. Your plot is hole free and your character arcs are like double rainbows. You've fine tuned your dialogue and everything feels good. But you still find yourself in edits. Because instead of moving on, you keep switching perfectly good words for other perfectly good words.<br />
<br />
Newsflash, this thing is never going to be perfect. There will always be a better word. Stop. You're done. <br />
<br />
<b>Fear and Loathing between the pages</b><br />
You've read your manuscript so many times you have entire paragraphs memorized. You could quote your character's breakthrough scene like it's Ice Ice Baby on Karaoke night. And now, you can't stand to read it one more time. You are actually skimming parts. Not because they are boring, but because you cannot bring yourself to read that scene for the 50th time.<br />
<br />
You don't have to read it anymore. Stop. You're done. <br />
<br />
<br />
<b>Because you must</b><br />
Maybe you have a deadline with your publisher. Maybe you promised your editor you'd have the final draft to them by a certain date. Either way, your deadline has come and it's time. Unless you honestly haven't put in the time to edit your manuscript, you need to turn it in.<br />
<br />
Publishing is slow enough as it is. Don't make it any worse. Stop. You're done.<br />
<br />
<b>Arson isn't a bad idea</b><br />
Every writer reaches that point when they have edited their book so much that they are now convinced they are in possession of 300 pages of complete horse manure. You're convinced that despite what other people say, you've written the literary equivalent of a compost heap. The only thing to do now is light the whole thing on fire and start over.<br />
<br />
Don't do this. You're manuscript isn't crap. Stop. You're done.<br />
<br />
<b>The final countdown</b><br />
You were convinced you were done editing three weeks ago, but every time you read it you find other places to make improvements. Each time you tell yourself this is it, but it never is. Now you have eighteen word docs all name Book_Title_Final, Book_Title_Final2, Book_Title_Final3, etc. This isn't healthy. You're going to make yourself sick, blow up your computer, delete the wrong file or all three.<br />
<br />
You can only be done once. Stop. You're done.<br />
<br />
Seriously, only you the writer can know when your book is really done. But don't let a fear of missing perfection keep you from pursuing your dreams. No book will ever be perfect. So at some point, you just have to let go and say "I'm done."Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-16567234555569072442016-07-06T08:00:00.000-05:002016-07-06T08:00:26.531-05:00Celebrity endorsements: Do they sell?The author blurb. It's become an entrenched part of the publishing world whether we like it or not. The question then becomes, do they actually work. <br />
<br />
I recently went to the make-up store, a place I avoid in general. As I was making my hasty retreat to the sales counter I noticed a nail polish display. About 8 different colors were being promoted, but the kicker was the celebrity endorsement. Kylie Jenner was posing seductively on the display with her nails front and center. The sign, with her face and well manicured hand simply said. "Kylie is wearing Kommando."<br />
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<br />
Kommando is a khaki/nude color and (in my opinion) the least exciting color on display. Seven of those eight color choices had at least five bottles available. Guess which one was completely sold out.<br />
<br />
If you guess Kommando, get yourself a cookie cause your brain is firing on all cylinders.<br />
<br />
Even though there were several other really pretty colors, the one associated with a celebrity was selling the most bottles. So what does that mean for us as writers?<br />
<br />
Yes, blurbs work. <a href="https://insights.bookbub.com/how-to-get-blurbs-for-your-book-use-them-in-your-marketing/" target="_blank">Bookbub</a> put out a great article on some actual quantitative testing they did on blurbs. It's fascinating if you like that sort of thing. Spoiler: they work.<br />
<br />
Of course, not all blurbs are created the same. Getting a blurb from a NYT Bestseller is going to be more effective than that guy from your critique group who published a short story in a magazine three years ago.<br />
<br />
Also, blurbs are useless if you don't use them. When I got a blurb from the USA Today HEA blog, I put that sucker everywhere. In fact, I have the quote framed and display it whenever I have a signing (Fun story, the lovely Serena who wrote that blurb was at the table right next to mine at Utopiacon, small world). So, if you are lucky enough to get a blurb, don't waste it by burying it on a hidden page of your website and never sharing it with the world.<br />
<br />
When it comes time to ask for a blurb, the key is to be polite. When I was getting ready to publish my first book, I reached out to some really big names in YA for blurbs. They all declined, no shocker, but the door is still open in the future because I kept everything polite with please and thank you. It's not rocket science.<br />
<br />
If you've got no idea where to start, here's a great article about an author who managed to score a huge foreword for her book. And she shares <a href="http://publishingacademy.com/authors/sell-more-books/how-to-get-celebrity-expert-book-endorsements/" target="_blank">actual template emails</a> to help spur your creative juices.<br />
<br />
<br />
The long and short of it is that blurbs work. They aren't essential, and a blurb alone won't rocket you to bestseller status, but it's nice work if you can get it.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-77993105605436042242016-07-04T08:30:00.000-05:002016-07-04T08:30:32.691-05:00Agency Lessons: What is NA?Agency Lessons is a weekly post that gives authors and readers an inside
look into the mind of a literary agent and a peek behind the curtain of
how books are made.<br />
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I was at UtopiaCon last week (which is why you got zero of the blog posts I promised myself I would pre-schedule, sigh). I had a ton of fantastic conversations about writing and publishing and books and whee! It was a whirlwind for sure. But I had an epiphany about one of the many subjects of debate while on my drive home and I wanted to share it with you guys.<br />
<br />
NA isn't new anymore. Well, It's a baby in the grand scheme of publishing, but with the speed things move around here it's already old news. Editors are not regularly requesting it and Amazon gave it its own category, so it's a thing for sure.<br />
<br />
The question I hear most is, what thing is it?<br />
<br />
Some people call it coming of age, but that's also what we call YA. Others say it's college books, but that leaves out a whole group of people who are just graduated and still clueless. Still others claim it's YA with sex, but even that misses the mark considering the boundaries YA has been pushing in recent years.<br />
<br />
So this is what I came up with.<br />
NA is Friends.<br />
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<br />
They don't have their lives together, even if they have a degree and a job. Those jobs keep changing and most of them have no idea what they want to do with the rest of their lives. Careers are still being decided.<br />
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<br />
Love lives are like a revolving door at Macy's. Not that they aren't all looking for that special someone. They just haven't found them. Or they did find them and then did something stupid when they were "on a break" and ruined it completely. For most of the Friends characters, they are still learning who they are so then they can figure out who they want to love.<br />
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<br />
While most of them have a job of some kind, money isn't flowing in through the unrealistically large apartment windows. Some come from a silver spoon and are learning how to make it. Others know exactly what hard work is. Still others are willing to make sacrifices in order to pursue their dreams. While the cast is lacking in ethnic diversity (keep that in mind while writing NA), it does a great job of showing people from many different upbringings.<br />
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<br />
In Friends, life is still about deciding who you are
and making mistakes along the way. And that's the essence of NA.<br />
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<br />
As soon as the characters got their act together, got married, settled down to have kids and found their life's calling, the show ended. It wasn't new adult anymore. The characters were now fully minted adults. And as viewers we could see that shift happening. That doesn't mean the end of your NA needs to show your characters becoming adults. It means that's where the line is. It's a little blurry and it can look different on different characters, but there is definitely a line.<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-3439002089658850152016-06-20T10:37:00.002-05:002016-06-20T10:39:30.661-05:00Agency Lesson: It's not you, really it's notAgency Lessons is a weekly post that gives authors and readers an inside
look into the mind of a literary agent and a peek behind the curtain of
how books are made.<br />
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<br />
I found this post in my archives. I have no idea if I ever published it here or shared it as a guest post (clearly I need a better system). But the advice is still valid so I'm sharing it today and ask for your forgiveness if it's a repeat.<br />
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<br />
<div class="MsoNormal" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; text-indent: 0in;">
There are a lot of sites and blog posts out there dedicated to helping
writers with the dreaded query letter (my personal favorite is <a href="http://www.queryshark.blogspot.com/">Query Shark</a>). Unfortunately,
most of the blog posts about writing query letters I’ve read lately have left a
sour taste in my mouth. </div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; text-indent: 0in;">
Was their advice wrong? Not at all. Just maybe a bit too … hopeful.</div>
<div class="MsoListParagraph" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; margin-left: 0in; margin-right: 0in; margin-top: 0in; mso-add-space: auto; text-indent: 0in;">
The
advice all tends to be the same. Follow the guidelines to perfection. Only
query agents who represent your genre. Don’t pull any bonehead moves (mass
emails, spelling the agent’s name wrong, sending a link, etc). Write a good
query letter.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; text-indent: 0in;">
Do this and you’re golden. The serious writers, the ones who scour the
web for query writing advice, already know this stuff. They’ve studied the
guidelines and rewritten their query a dozen times or more until it shines like
the Hope Diamond. Then they send their baby out in to the world full of all
kinds of warm fuzzy feelings. They followed all the advice and now the requests
should start pouring in.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; text-indent: 0in;">
Only they don’t.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; text-indent: 0in;">
Cue dramatic crying and eating cookie dough ice cream out of the pint
with a serving spoon. “What’s wrong with me?” the heartbroken writer asks. </div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; text-indent: 0in;">
Thing is, your query might need work. Or your writing just isn’t good
enough. It happens people. You might have a brilliant concept, but not the
skills to pull it off yet. Good news for you: you can get better.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; text-indent: 0in;">
But what if your query is so good it hurts, and your writing makes
little blue birds sing? You can have the perfect submission and still not get a
request. And it isn’t because agents are blind or the entire publishing world
is out to get you. Here are five reasons you might get a rejection that have
nothing to do with you.</div>
<b><span style="mso-bidi-font-family: Calibri; mso-bidi-theme-font: minor-latin;"><span style="mso-list: Ignore;"></span></span>The market is a fickle beast</b><br />
<b> </b>
<br />
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; mso-add-space: auto; text-indent: 0in;">
One minute paranormal vampires are all
the rage, and the next they’re the butt of every literary joke out there. It
doesn’t mean writers ran out of good vampire stories. It does mean publishers
don’t feel the market can sustain any more of them. Could they be wrong? Sure.
It doesn’t change anything.</div>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; mso-add-space: auto; text-indent: 0in;">
<b>An unsold book doesn’t make anyone money</b></div>
<br />
New Adult is sweeping the nation, but
publishers are just now starting to buy them. Not because they don’t think
they’re any good. Just like an agent doesn’t want to sign a book they can’t
sell to publishers, publishers don’t want to sign a book they don’t know how to
market to readers. They are figuring out new markets like the rest of us. Your
book might be so original an agent (or publisher) doesn’t know how to sell it.<b> </b><br />
<br />
<b>Clients come first</b><br />
<b> </b>
<br />
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; mso-add-space: auto; text-indent: 0in;">
You have an amazing YA contemporary
with hints of magical realism that takes a fresh look at teen relationships.
Great. So does an author already signed with the agent you’re querying. Bad for
you. Many agents work with their clients to talk about what they are writing
next. So even if the client’s book isn’t anything more than a one page outline,
if the concepts are similar it wins against your completed, fully polished
manuscript every time. Yes, I’m fully aware of how much that suck<b>s.</b> </div>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; mso-add-space: auto; text-indent: 0in;">
<b>You've hit on the next big thing </b></div>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; mso-add-space: auto; text-indent: 0in;">
I can see all your confused looks from
here. “Wait a minute,” you say. “Isn’t that what every writer wants to do?
Don’t we all want to be the first?” Yep. But this just doesn’t happen very
often. Here’s an example for you. I haven’t seen a genie story come through the
slush pile in six months. Last week I saw at least five, and most of them
sounded really good. Does that mean genies are going to be the next big thing?
Maybe. Let’s say they are. How many of those genie stories do you think an
agent should represent? If you guessed one, you’re today’s big winner. So even
if your story is fresh and really well written, it now must be the best genie
story. Because if genies aren’t the next big thing, no agent wants to be caught
holding five genie stories she can’t sell.</div>
<br />
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; mso-add-space: auto; mso-list: l0 level1 lfo1; text-indent: -.25in;">
<b> Agents are book lovers</b></div>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; mso-add-space: auto; text-indent: 0in;">
What happens when you read a really
good book? One that stays with you and changes how you think or feel about
something. I don’t know about you, but I tell people about it. I become a fan
and make it my personal mission to get other people to love that book. That’s
an agent’s job, too. They become the biggest fan of their clients manuscript
and do everything they can to convince publishers to love it. Now picture
trying to do that for a book that you like, but don’t love. “Yeah, this book
was pretty good. You should stop everything you’re doing and read it now.” It
just doesn’t work. So while an agent may like your book. Maybe they even like
it a lot. If it isn’t love, they are going to pass. </div>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpLast" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; mso-add-space: auto; text-indent: 0in;">
<br /></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; text-indent: 0in;">
Is that enough doom and gloom for you? Before you throw the pages of
your manuscript down in disgust and shout “You vile impersonation of a book”
while standing on the sidewalk in your bathrobe, here’s a nugget of hope.
Despite all the reasons why your stack of rejection letters could rival the
Eiffel Tower, there are still plenty of reasons why agents would beat each
other senseless with hardback copies of 50 SHADES OF GREY for the chance to
represent you. </div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="line-height: normal; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; text-indent: 0in;">
If you love writing, then keep doing it. And if you dream of being
published, then keep working toward that goal. There’s no guarantee that all
that hard work will eventually pay off with the publishing contract of your
dreams. But no dream comes with a guarantee. That’s what makes them as sparkly
as a rainbow unicorn. </div>
Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-67464932240575045732016-06-17T13:22:00.001-05:002016-06-17T13:22:44.349-05:00Publishing can (and should) be scarySo I did a big scary thing today.<br />
<br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgGkJADXyrNYbrXnla5QZJfFZJ1JXiF4KtlL5Jw5PcEJM_zC29kyHKca2T7dMxkKqhQP1aCozKIe2Pn6G7hydMwEwWJniHti9BlQCy150nXnm76m_5LkI6eeBwTL2vVMFdV5mHnUXyua1bf/s1600/sully.gif" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="236" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgGkJADXyrNYbrXnla5QZJfFZJ1JXiF4KtlL5Jw5PcEJM_zC29kyHKca2T7dMxkKqhQP1aCozKIe2Pn6G7hydMwEwWJniHti9BlQCy150nXnm76m_5LkI6eeBwTL2vVMFdV5mHnUXyua1bf/s320/sully.gif" width="320" /></a></div>
I applied for a writing opportunity that would be a huge commitment. Commitment of my time, my resources, my energy. I'm equal parts ecstatic and terrified.<br />
<br />
And that's a good thing.<br />
<br />
We talk a lot about creating distance from your work. You can't let the negative reviews impact you. Once you publish the book belongs to your readers. Don't let rejection impact your ability to keep writing.<br />
<br />
This is all solid advice.<br />
<br />
But you can take it too far. You can become so separated from your work that you lose that emotional connection with your words. In order to make sure you aren't hurt, you put less of yourself into your work.<br />
<br />
The result is a less scary publishing process. But probably less successful.<br />
<br />
Readers can feel the soul we poor into our work. If that's missing, your readers will know.<br />
<br />
And that's why it's okay to be scared when you write your next story, start a new genre, make a big business committment, send those queries.<br />
<br />
Because that fear is a result of caring. If we didn't care, there would be nothing to fear.<br />
<br />
So today I did a scary thing and I'm not going to try to talk myself out of being nervous/terrified/nauseous. Those emotions prove I care. And if you don't care, then why bother.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-80317501927486866162016-06-16T16:23:00.000-05:002016-06-16T16:23:06.667-05:00Writing your next book is not a super marketing strategyWhat I'm about to say flies in the face of just about every piece of marketing advice out there for new writers right now. I realize that. I promise I have not gone off the deep end (yet). Stick with me and I will explain.<br />
<br />
<i>The best thing a new author can do to promote their work is write the next book.</i><br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-WaNBIG_xExA/V2Lr8EXBKjI/AAAAAAAAQO0/cyBXeFtwtoMrwscnqiYeLG6koNh4j38uQCLcB/s1600/bat%2Bmegaphone.gif" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-WaNBIG_xExA/V2Lr8EXBKjI/AAAAAAAAQO0/cyBXeFtwtoMrwscnqiYeLG6koNh4j38uQCLcB/s320/bat%2Bmegaphone.gif" width="266" /></a></div>
<br />
If you follow any of the big blogs or listen to the most popular podcasts, this is going to be the advice you hear most often. Authors and marketing pros who will tell you that nothing sells a back list like a front list.<br />
<br />
Respectfully, I disagree.<br />
<br />
I say that as an author who is currently seeing a significant uptick in sales after just publishing the third book in my trilogy.<br />
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<br />
I realize those statements look like they contradict each other. They don't and here's why.<br />
<br />
Ten years ago when eBooks were infants in the book world everything was different. Amazon Kindle launched with right around 400,000 books. When you break down all the different genres and subject matters you can see that discoverability wasn't as much of an issue ten years ago. Good books floated to the top without much friction and authors didn't need to jump through hoops to get the word out. Early Kindle adopters were eager to find new books to read. Even just a few years ago an author could make their book free for a few days and ride the tails of increased visibility for months. <br />
<br />
So, it made sense that the best thing for an author to do was write more books. After all, Amazon already made it remarkably easy for your book to be found and your target audience was much smaller (based on early Kindle users) so large base marketing efforts would likely have been overkill.<br />
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Today, the landscape is remarkably different. Instead of 400K, Amazon boasts millions of books. Millions. And since eBooks never go out of print, that number will only continue to grow. Books are rarely discovered organically. There are just too many on the market for that to happen. With new books coming out daily, readers don't need to go digging to find their next read.<br />
<br />
So if you launch your book with minimal marketing and don't really gain any traction, what exactly will launching a second book do for you? Another book is pointless if no one knows who you are.<br />
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Many authors will talk about the importance of virtual shelf space. The more books you have available, the bigger your shelf and the more visible you are to readers. And this makes sense to an extent. If a reader does happen to find you, they are more likely to commit if they see you have several books. It makes you appear as an established author instead of just a lone wolf with a single title. But the reader has to find you first. You aren't visible to them by virtue of just having a lot of books. You are visible when they discover one of your books (via some marketing effort) and then find all your others. Simply having a huge back list won't move you up the charts.<br />
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I also worry about this advice when it comes to burn-out. I feel bad for the authors out there who keep focusing on putting out more books. They are shelling out a good amount of money on covers, editing, formatting, etc. But they aren't seeing results. So they spend money on another book...and another. Until they have a handful of books out, and should be doing fine according to the conventional advice, but they still don't have readers. So they quit. Because no one told them that just writing another book won't cut it.<br />
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Before readers can find your virtual shelf, they need to know you exist. Readers have to find you in the sea of millions of eBooks. You have to put in some marketing efforts.<br />
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I consider myself lucky. I'm not making enough to support myself (yet), but my books do fairly well. While I recognize that luck does play a huge role in publishing, I will also tell you that I've put in a lot of effort to both my pre and post launch marketing efforts. My book came out over a week ago, but I still have a summer filled with marketing tasks. I know that my books existing isn't enough to keep them selling. Yes, the third release helped. But the time and effort I put into marketing carried the brunt of the load. <br />
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I'm not saying you shouldn't keep writing. More books keeps you fresh for the fans you do have and helps you continue to grow as an author. Always keep writing. Also, it's important to note that sometimes, regardless of your efforts, a book never really catches on. In that case, you need to be able to put out your next book and try again. Just understand that putting a book into the market without letting anyone know it exists is not a marketing strategy for your back list. It is an almost guaranteed way to increase a virtual shelf that no one is reading.<br />
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Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-42701151249522598002016-06-13T09:49:00.003-05:002016-06-13T09:49:38.113-05:00Agency Lessons: Stop double dippingAgency Lessons is a weekly post that gives authors and readers an inside
look into the mind of a literary agent and a peek behind the curtain of
how books are made.<br />
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Every Wednesday the good folks of Corvisiero get together and go through our query boxes. It's cathartic and helps to keep us on track with the never ending supply of hopeful writers. Last week I noticed a startling trend. It wasn't a good kind of startling.<br />
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Over the course of several hours I ran into no less than three queries for projects that had already been queried to me in the past. To be clear, I'm not talking about projects sent to another Corvisiero agent and then sent to me. I'm talking a query addressed directly to me.<br />
<br />
I don't keep a physical log of queries, because let's be honest, that would take forever. But I do keep all my emails so I can easily search by email, name or subject line to go back and find and old query. No, I don't remember the name of every author that queries me, but I do remember premises.<br />
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Here's what I think when I see a double-dip query:<br />
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<b>1. Poor organization</b><br />
No one loves a good spreadsheet more than I do, but you don't have to obsess over Excel to keep track of your queries. You need to develop a system that works for you so you can track who queries were sent to and when. Not only does this help you to not stress that the agent you just queried hasn't responded yet, it let's you know who already has your query so you don't query them again.<br />
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Being organized is a must for an author who wants to make writing their career. You have to keep track of deadlines, multiple versions of your manuscript from multiple editors, your marketing efforts, and your finances. I need to know that my authors can handle keeping track of their own information, because I don't have time to be a personal assistant and neither does any other agent out there.<br />
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By double querying me you are indicating that you can't keep track of your own query process and that's a red flag against your ability to manage your author career. <br />
<br />
<b>2. Inability to move on</b><br />
So, almost without exception, these double dip queries aren't coming a few days or weeks apart. I tend to ignore those as more of an oops or bad copy/paste in the midst of querying. The double-dippers tend to re-query months or in some cases years after the initial query. This make me cringe and tremble in horror for two reasons.<br />
<br />
A project that you were pitching two years ago is most likely dead in the water. Editors have moved on from whatever they were taking on two years ago. Readers have moved on. Everyone has moved on except the double-dipper.<br />
<br />
As the author, at some point you have to say this project isn't going anywhere. You need to set it aside and work on something else. Because here's the reality. Getting an agent is no guarantee of selling to an editor. Your project might pitch for six months...a year...and never get picked up. Your agent is going to expect you to have something else to pitch so you can both move on. They are not going to beat their heads against the wall pitching the same project for years. Not only is it a waste of time, it looks bad for that agent and will project poorly on everything they pitch in the future.<br />
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<b>AN EXCEPTION</b><br />
There is only one exception to the double-dip, so listen carefully. Let's say you query a few agents and all of them come back and tell you the story starts n the wrong place and needs less telling. So you make the wise decision to scrap the first 50 pages and do a deep edit for telling. Your manuscript is much better.<br />
<br />
Any of those agents who invited you to re-query are a no-brainer. Send that puppy off. But what about the ones who didn't? If you got a generic rejection, no, don't do it. But if that agent said to cut the beginning, then go for it. Don't be surprised if they pass, but it's worth a shot.<span style="color: red;"> <b>CAUTION!</b></span> Do not edit the first five pages of your manuscript and requery. Only re-send to the same agents if you have mad significant changes to the project. Got it? Good.<br />
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So do yourself a favor, keep good records and be prepared to let go of a manuscript that isn't going anywhere. If you get this into your mindset before you start querying, you'll be in much better shape on the other side.<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-6059634940850469992016-06-10T08:00:00.000-05:002016-06-10T19:56:03.636-05:00How to pay for publishingBefore I start, I want to let you guys know that today is the final day for the Acceptance series to be on sale. Starting tomorrow, these books go back to their regular prices. If you're planning to pick them up, better do it now. :) <br />
<br />
One of the downfalls I currently see in marketing advice is that seasoned pros forget what it was like to be a brand new newbie with all the hopes and dreams still swimming around with all the fear and anxiety that a nebulous future can provide.<br />
<br />
I've stopped cringing every time I need to buy swag or pay for an outstanding proofreader. But that wasn't the case when I published my first book. I was counting every penny, weighing the pros and cons, and deciding what was a must and what I could do without and still give my book a fighting chance.<br />
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Because when you self-publish, you fund the whole darn thing. Instead of an advance paid to you, you pay for all the publishing costs before you know if your book will may a single dime. It's scary, and overwhelming, and for a lot of authors it's reason enough to forget self-publishing all together, even if they really want to.<br />
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Which makes me sad.<br />
<br />
So, I came up with a quick list of ways for authors to make money to publish their book. I realize that some of these will require a lot of work. For some, you might have to work for months to save anything. But if you believe in yourself and your work, it's worth it. Now, on to the list.<br />
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<b>1. Sell all the **** you don't need</b><br />
Stop what you are doing and look around the room you are in. How much of the stuff sitting around you do you really need? Could you get rid of some of it and be fine? Would getting rid of it possibly make your home happier?<br />
<br />
Time to break out the boxes and fill them up with all the what-not you don't need anymore. A garage sale can be a ton of work, but it can also be highly profitable. I made several hundred dollars at my last sale. If that's not your thing, try posting your items on Craig's List or check FB for local sale pages. I also suggest looking at consignment stores or children's sales if you have that sort of thing, they can be a great way to unload and rack up the dough.<br />
<br />
<b>2. Overtime</b><br />
This isn't an option for everyone, but if you work at a place that offers overtime, start raising your hand. Even and extra hour of two a week can really start to add up and chances are you won't miss the time. Just make sure when your paycheck comes in, you siphon off that extra and put it right into your savings jar. Otherwise, you'd be shocked how quickly that extra bit disappears.<br />
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<b>3. Sell your body parts</b><br />
Not your organs. You need those and it's very illegal. But selling plasma is totally legal and a completely legit way to make money. The process takes about an hour and you can do it up to twice a week. Generally, the more often you give, the more you make. Plus, it's an inactive process, so you could take a notebook and get some writing down while you make money. That sounds like a good deal.<br />
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<b>4. Give up the splurge</b><br />
This one requires more of a sacrifice, but then again, all good things do. Time to give up your Starbucks and brew your coffee at home. Instead of going out for lunch, pack a sandwich at home. Put that new shirt back on the rack and wear something you already own. Many Americans spend way more money than they realize on small items. We tell ourselves it's only a few bucks. But a few bucks, a couple times a time, every day in a week really adds up. Cut back on those little expenses and you'll be surprised by how much you save and probably shocked at how much you were spending without realizing it.<br />
*Bonus: if you're a smoker, you know exactly how much you could save by quitting. The question is, how bad do you want to publish that book<br />
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<b>5. Offer your services</b><br />
Are you a graphic designer? Set up a fiverr account and offer to make logos or design social media headers for other authors. Are you handy with book formatting tools? There's money to be made there as well. Maybe you don't have a skill that other authors will want. What else can you do? Can you sell arts and crafts? We have several local individuals who do well by making up meals and selling them to third shift workers who have a hard time finding decent meals at midnight. If you are without skills (besides writing of course) then elbow grease is always an option. Maybe you can mow lawns or clean houses. Ask yourself what you're willing to do to make your book dreams a reality.<br />
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You'll notice none of these are get rich quick schemes. Newsflash, neither is being an author. But if you're willing to put in the time, make some sacrifices and work hard, you can save up to make sure your book publishes they way it deserves. And those same skills will serve you well as an author, too.<br />
<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-16482457052136538172016-06-08T11:05:00.002-05:002016-06-08T11:05:53.373-05:00Patience learned from Kelly ClarksonEven if you don't watch American Idol, chances are you've heard the newest release from Kelly Clarkson. If not, take a second and watch her live performance here. In fact, even if you've heard the song 20 million times, watch the live performance. Just trust me on this one.<br />
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<h3>
<b>First...a little background info</b> </h3>
Kelly won American Idol back in 2002. Quick math, that was 14 years ago. She put out six albums before releasing Piece by Piece, which debuted at #1.<br />
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This song is gut-wrenching. It's raw, personal, and highly emotional. It also differs in that the rhythms are slightly less than traditional and many of the lines don't even attempt to rhyme, instead focusing on the message of the words.<br />
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Piece by Piece details the hurt Kelly experienced as a child and the healing she's gone through as an adult since her marriage in 2012 and the birth of her first child in 2014.<br />
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<h3>
<b>Timing is crucial for creatives</b> </h3>
I'm telling you all of this so you'll understand how long Kelly waited to release this song.<br />
<br />
This isn't a new emotion for her. This isn't a song she just whipped up one night. Clarkson wrote this song when the time was right for both her and her audience.<br />
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As talented as she is, I don't think she could have pulled off a song like this back in 2002 or even 2010. She waited until she had developed her voice. Not just her singing voice, but her storyteller voice (yep, songwriters need that and yes, Kelly co-wrote this song).<br />
<br />
<h3>
<b>Timing matters in building your audience, too </b></h3>
She also had to wait for her audience to be ready. As a newer performer, Kelly had to focus on giving the fans what they wanted. She gave them songs they could sing and dance to and built her fan base up to the level it is now.<br />
<br />
This isn't isolated to just Clarkson. Queen Bey (all hail) had the same amazing patience in releasing her Lemonade album. She gave the fans all the club tunes they could ever want (you should sing All the Single Ladies and do the dance now, because I know you know it). Then once we all fell in love with her, she released the music that spoke to her soul.<br />
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<h3>
<b>You aren't ready to write all the stories</b> </h3>
So what does this mean for us writers. It means there are stories we aren't ready to write yet. Some of them are too big for us. We need to work out our fingers and find our voices in order to tell the story the way it deserves. I have a story like this. It's nothing more than an idea that floats around my head. I haven't written one word of it on paper, not even the wisp of the thought. I'm not ready to write it yet. I'm not strong enough in my craft. Someday I hope to get there and the story will wait for me. We need to have the patience of Clarkson and Beyonce to wait until we're ready for some stores to be told the right way. <br />
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<h3>
<b>Your audience might not be ready either </b></h3>
We also need to wait for our audiences. I'm not saying you can't write hard hitting stories. In fact, those are the ones that most resonate with readers. What I'm saying is that you should save the experimental, not what anyone was expecting type of stories for later in your career.<br />
<br />
One of my favorite King novels is The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon. I won't spoil it if you haven't read it yet, but it's a deviation from standard horror. But as much as I love it, I don't think it would have done well earlier in King's career. He needed to start with demonic dogs and possessed cars, because that's what the genre and the readers demanded. Once he established his fan base and his prowess as an author, he could branch out into books that didn't fit in the mold.<br />
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<h3>
<b>Write with her heart and your head</b> </h3>
I'm a fan of the advice that you should write the book that your heart demands be written. However, authors need to also have an awareness of their own skill level and their reader expectations. When you finally write the book the pushes you the most as an artist you want to make sure both you and your readers are ready for its awesomeness.<br />
<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-40412495615514945222016-06-07T10:12:00.000-05:002016-06-07T10:12:01.388-05:00A special offer (because of guilt)Okay, I feel really bad. Like I woke up this morning and it was the first thing on my mind kinda bad. I made my book free and then completely forgot to tell you all about it until there were only a few hours left to get it. I'm a dork and totally dropped the ball.<br />
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<br />
So I want to make it up to you. I can't make Rejection free because there are rules and I have to follow them. But I can make it as cheap as they'll let me. So for a few more days I'm going to leave both <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Rite-Rejection-Acceptance-Book-1-ebook/dp/B00P26DB08" target="_blank">Rite of Rejection</a> and <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Rite-Revelation-Acceptance-Book-2-ebook/dp/B017L29UNC" target="_blank">Rite of Revelation</a> at only $.99 each.<br />
<br />
This means you can still get <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Acceptance-3-Book-Series/dp/B01FZ5GMVA" target="_blank">the whole series</a> for less than $5. That's less than a carb-loaded fast food sub!<br />
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I know, I know. It's a whole dollar more than yesterday.<br />
<br />
But it's less than it will be, because I can't leave these prices forever. I've got bills to pay and fast food subs to buy. <br />
<br />
In all seriousness, I'm totally sorry I didn't tell you guys sooner and I promise to do better next time I have such big news.<br />
<br />
Don't forget that you can get the novella that takes place in the 24 hours between books one and two totally free. Just sign up for my newsletter. In fact, that's the only place to get it. Plus, my newsletter folks totally knew all about the sale last week.<br />
<br />
Also, a huge thank you to everyone who did pick up copies. Both books two and three are in the top 10K of all of Amazon and Rejection is THIS close. We're ranking on all kinds of lists and I couldn't be more tickled. So thanks for getting the books, telling your friends, and just being awesome in general. <br />
<br />
I'm going to continue my post publication housework (i.e. this place is gross and someone should clean it). We'll be back tomorrow with regularly scheduled posts.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-33857375691591207192016-06-06T19:17:00.001-05:002016-06-06T19:17:13.926-05:00Rite of Rejection is free!So, today is release day for Rite of Redemption, the final book in the Acceptance series. I've been running around doing all the fun release day business and I realized, now at 7pm, that I forgot something.<br />
<br />
I completely forgot to let you know about a book sale. I'm seriously cringing at my idiocy right now.<br />
<br />
Anywho, I'll keep this short and sweet. For one more night (tonight) you can get Rite of Rejection for Free and Rite of Revelation for only $.99!<br />
<br />
Seriously, you can get the whole shabang of a series for less than $4.00! That's like giving up one Starbucks. Or two bags of chicharones. I'm not judging your cravings.<br />
<br />
Here's all the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Acceptance-3-Book-Series/dp/B01FZ5GMVA" target="_blank">linkage info</a> for where you need to go to get your free book. Enjoy and Happy Reading!<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-67456285137584580322016-06-01T20:49:00.002-05:002016-06-01T20:49:53.144-05:00You don't have to start in the middleAbout this time last year, I got a bit of a wake up call.<br />
<br />
My first book had been out about six months and I was feeling really good about how it was doing. Sales were good, reviews were good, and I was tossing around the idea of continuing the book into a trilogy. I finally felt like a real author so I started connecting more online with other authors.<br />
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And then that green eyed monster showed up.<br />
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No, not that one. I'm talking envy.<br />
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All these other others seemed to be way more together than I was. They were ordering banners and announcing tons of signing events and were generally a million steps ahead of me. My feelings of owning the title of author were quickly turning into imposter syndrome.<br />
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I had to take a deep breath and re-evaluate.<br />
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Because although I considered these other authors my peers, we were not on the same footing. These other authors had been in the game a lot longer than 6 months. They had a ton of books out compared to my one. They had put in the time and energy into lifting their careers to a higher level.<br />
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I wasn't there yet...and that's okay.<br />
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My immediate urge was to go order a banner and pay way too much money for events where I would likely sell very few books. None of that made sense for me. Because I wasn't there yet. I didn't need to start my journey in the middle of someone else's.<br />
<br />
As authors, there will always be someone just ahead of us in our careers. Instead of feeding our jealousy, we should let these authors feed our motivation to work harder.<br />
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And waiting pays off. A year later, I'm about to release my third book. I finally ordered that banner because I'm going to my first conference signing this month. Instead of overspending for events that won't help me, I am attending events that make sense. And I've even reached the point where I'm getting invitations to attend events.<br />
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I'm not saying this to brag. I'm pointing out that a year ago I would have given my right arm to be where I'm at today. I could have spent a ton of money and forced myself into this position, but it would have been a horrible move. Instead, I let those other authors inspire me to do more.<br />
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There are still authors ahead of me. I pray they never stop moving, because having them right there in front of me is an amazing motivator to keep going. To put my head down, focus on improving and growing as an author. And if I do that, who knows where I'll be next year.<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-55754462186614212942016-05-30T08:00:00.000-05:002016-05-30T08:00:17.928-05:00Agency Lessons: Should you enter that contest?Agency Lessons is a weekly post that gives authors and readers an inside
look into the mind of a literary agent and a peek behind the curtain of
how books are made.<br />
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Seems like every week I see a new contest popping up on Twitter or Facebook. There are contests for everything from the first line only to your whole manuscript. As a writer, I can see where you might start to wonder if these contests are worth it.<br />
<br />
Many of these contests include active agents as judges or offer them the opportunity to request manuscript from participants. Of course, this doesn't really get you anything you couldn't get from just querying. Others offer critiques from established authors. Again, this is fantastic, but not something you can't find outside of a contest.<br />
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Before you think I'm anti-contest, let me tell you why I think you should enter them.<br />
<br />
Success breeds confidence and that often leads to more success.<br />
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Winning a contest, getting requests from agents, and even being selected for someone's team is a big victory for a writer still searching out their path to publication. Even if the contest doesn't offer something you can't get elsewhere, it's worth it to enter for the mental game.<br />
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Publishing is a long road. It's often lonely and it's chock full of people saying now. Contests are a way to get involved in the writing community and gain some successes, even if they don't directly lead you to publication.<br />
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Now...there are a few caution flags I would throw up before you enter any contest.<br />
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<b>1. Make it fresh </b><br />
Agents like to peruse these contests for fresh manuscripts, and there will be more agents looking at your work than just the ones officially listed. When I see the same manuscript submitted to the same contest in back-to-back years, it's an immediate turn off.<br />
<br />
Why? I have to immediately wonder why this author hasn't written something new. Is this author so hung up on this manuscript that they are unable to move on? Are they so committed to it that they won't be able to accept it if an agent is unable to sell it to an editor? Have they edited it to death so now it's nothing more than a shell of other people's suggestions? Just don't do it.<br />
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<b>2. Make sure you're ready</b><br />
If you enter your first 5 pages in a contest and an agent requests the full, you had better be ready with a shiny and polished full manuscript. It can be tempting to jump into a contest when you've got something you think is great, but unless the contest specifically states unfinished manuscripts are accepted, don't do it. Trust me, there will be more contests.<br />
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3.<b> Make it worth your time</b><br />
Most contests are run by established authors or bloggers, and there are plenty of them that I would highly recommend. That said, there are also some that don't really offer you anything as a writer and some could be harmful. For example, if there is feedback make sure it comes from a respected source. Not everyone with a website knows what they are doing and I've seen some feedback that could do more harm than help. Also, check out what you can win. While gift cards are great, what you really want is the chance to get your work in front of agents or editors. Make sure the contest will help you move forward in your career.<br />
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So should you enter that contest? If you've got a fresh, fully edited manuscript and the contest gets you a solid critique and/or access to agents, go for it! Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-19032568526821814092016-05-27T08:00:00.000-05:002016-05-27T08:00:26.166-05:00Little known random facts about publishingI have a few quick announcements before launching into today's post.<br />
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First, voting for the <a href="http://www.utopiacon.com/vote-in-utopia-awards-2016/" target="_blank">Utopia Awards</a> ends tonight at midnight (central time). Voting is open to the public and you don't have to register or even put in your name. If you haven't done so, I encourage you to take a few minutes and vote for your favorite reads from the past year. You might also notice a familiar title *cough Rite of Revelation cough* nominated in the first category.<br />
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Second, I am finalizing the blog tour for Rite of Redemption and will post the full schedule next week. If you have a blog and would like to participate, it's not too late. Just fill out this <a href="https://drive.google.com/open?id=1NC_DvQjawPih1QNkTRhcrD4EHfKqifUc3_joKJzidlM" target="_blank">short form</a> with all your contact info and I'll get you everything you need pronto.<br />
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<a href="https://drive.google.com/open?id=1NC_DvQjawPih1QNkTRhcrD4EHfKqifUc3_joKJzidlM" target="_blank"><img alt="https://drive.google.com/open?id=1NC_DvQjawPih1QNkTRhcrD4EHfKqifUc3_joKJzidlM" border="0" height="200" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjseJgQhNDqwv5dfRh5aFe4yzlPzwLETSkoj9AVc-6arSITPnWT0aqSmjxPwtvizTQSygUDtYF5qZ2A4Q6iebdNNY-7qR62YltvY8okaGjlVECVhmNSiiLgKjgDriqmIR3WgoS-bCQ0A_w7/s200/Rite+of+Redemption+eBook+Cover+1563x2500.jpg" width="125" /></a></div>
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Alright! With that out of the way, let's talk about how weird publishing a book is. Seriously, it doesn't matter what path you take, turning a steaming pile of words into a glorious masterpiece fit to be consumed by perfect strangers is just bizarre. (<a href="http://ctt.ec/lVhf2" target="_blank">Tweet This</a>)<br />
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<br />
There are plenty of odd nuggets that you might expect, but here are five random little know facts that I've discovered over the course of publishing three books.<br />
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<b>1. Chapter breaks are expensive</b><br />
This means nothing for eBook, but in your print copies, the more chapters you have, the more pages your book will be. This is due to page breaks and the fact that chapters generally don't start at the top of the page. The more pages you have the more expensive it is to print your book and it could mean distributors will force you to charge more for your book than you wanted.<br />
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There is a reason, big publishers rarely gamble on debut authors with extra long books. Those books cost more to print, but you can't charge more since the author is a debut and doesn't have a following yet. This is why I always tell new authors that they shouldn't count on being the exception.<br />
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<b>2. Microsoft word is created by the devil</b><br />
Chances are you already know this, but book formatting will really drive the point home just in case you forgot. Word is filled with a million settings, the vast majority of which we never use. Some of them will make you book look amazing. Others will make you want to punch a baby.<br />
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Case in point. My proofreader recently had to delete and retype a few sentences of my manuscript word-for-word, because the formatting was wonky and she couldn't figure out why. It was easier to delete and start over than to figure out what strange formatting word was using. So that's fun.<br />
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<b>3. Someday your book will not be your baby</b><br />
When your first book comes out, you will wrap it up in swaddling clothes and lay it in a...well you get the point. You will take a million picture of you and your book, shout about it from the rooftops, and expect payment for every single copy.<br />
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By the time you've got a few books out there, you'll basically throw that first book at random people on the street if they promise to read it. Not because you don't love your book, but because you realize that precious angel is in a sea of precious angels and that makes it not so precious.<br />
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<b>4. First royalty payments are also created by the devil</b><br />
Most of us understand that in a sea of millions of books there is little to no chance that ours will be the one that catches on fire and becomes an instant bestseller. Of course, that doesn't stop us from wishing and dreaming that it will happen. And that's why that first royalty payment is the devil.<br />
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You are first crazy excited because here is actual money that someone else is paying you for your book. When this happens for the first time it's all kinds of magic because you know you've crossed that barrier of just dreaming of being an author to becoming one. It's real! And then you read the statement and no matter how much it is, you're going to be disappointed. Because even though your head knows it's not a mega bestseller, try telling that to your heart. Chances are you will simultaneously want to frame and torch your first check.<br />
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<b>5. The weeks leading up to publication are stupid dumb</b><br />
There is so much to do before your book publishes. Seriously, So MUCH! And it doesn't matter which route you take. The list is endless. I keep going to do a task and see something that reminds me of a task that wasn't even on my list yet, but obviously needs to be done, and how could I be so stupid to forget it, and what was I doing again.<br />
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Yep, that's me right now. So eventually you reach a point where there is so much to do, and because each tasks takes you down a rabbit hole of to-do lists, you become frozen by it all. I swear to you, I sat at my desk for a good half-hour the other day just staring at my computer and all the random lists of things I need to do, frozen by the decision of what to do next. 30 minutes of nothing because of how much needs to be done. The sooner you realize that the whole thing is a hot mess and you'll never finish all of it, the better.<br />
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That's it! Don't forget to vote for the <a href="http://www.utopiacon.com/vote-in-utopia-awards-2016/" target="_blank">Utopia Awards</a> and let me know if you'd like to be part of the Rite of Redemption<a href="https://drive.google.com/open?id=1NC_DvQjawPih1QNkTRhcrD4EHfKqifUc3_joKJzidlM" target="_blank"> blog tour</a>. If you've got your own random facts about publishing, I'd love to hear them. Just tell me your crazy facts in the comments. Sometimes it helps to know we aren't alone in the craziness that is bringing a book to readers. <br />
<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-44179995484314246052016-05-25T08:00:00.000-05:002016-05-25T08:00:08.854-05:00When publishers go southBooktrope, Samhain, Elora's Cave, Month9...<br />
<br />
The collective writing community has been inundated lately with news of publishers closing shop, refusing royalties, or restructuring in ways that mean the end of the road for many authors. <br />
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As both an author and an agent, every new announcement sends a shiver up my spine. And it usually sends authors to my inbox asking what they can do to keep from being the next poor soul to find themselves with a book and no publisher.<br />
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Honestly, there's no surefire method for avoiding this. But here are a few tips to try to avoid the dangers.<br />
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<b>Public forums aren't the answer</b><br />
I know many an author that runs to the public forums whenever a publisher or agent shows interest in their work. They send out that "Hey, has anyone had any experience dealing with X" message out hoping to hear about how amazing X is.<br />
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But here's the problem. You generally aren't going to hear about any negative aspects of X in a public forum until it's too late. When your name is tied to your income (as it is for an author), it's reasonable to be hesitant to speak out. No one wants to be labeled as the author that causes trouble, and because we generally don't speak about what's going wrong, most authors think it's just them. Public forums are great, but they generally aren't going to tell you when you should be worried.<br />
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<b>An agent is not a foolproof system</b><br />
Sometimes I know about a sinking ship before it happens. Yes, we have a list of publishers that are still in operation that we don't submit to. No, I'm not telling you who they are. But for every questionable publisher out there that I know about, there's probably another I know nothing about.<br />
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Unless I've had a client there, our agency has had a client there, or I've gotten the dish from another agent, I have no idea if a publisher is going to fold up six months from now. This is one of those times I wish I had a crystal ball. But I don't. An agent can help steer you away from danger, but only the danger she/he knows about.<br />
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<b>Talk to authors at all the stages</b><br />
Talking to authors at a prospective house is a great idea, but don't just talk to their headliner who is doing well and getting all the press. Talk to someone who is a few months from their pub date. Talk to an author six months after their pub date.<br />
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Did they release on time? Do they feel the edits were thorough? Was everything delivered as promised when it comes to marketing and promotional help? Are the royalty statements on time? Do they make sense? Ask the hard questions. So long as you aren't asking how much another author is making, they shouldn't have any reason not to help you.<br />
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<b>Look for the clean-up</b><br />
With so many of these situations, I hear authors say the warning signs were there, but they didn't add them up. Mistakes happen in all avenues of publishing. A royalty statement can have errors, the wrong file is sent to you for proofing, etc. The people working in publishing are human and therefore, they aren't immune to mistakes. Ask about how mistakes were corrected?<br />
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Did the publisher correct the mistake immediately? Did they take months to acknowledge a mistake? This is where the differences come out. A mistake that is rectified is just a mistake. A mistake that is not acknowledged is a warning sign.<br />
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<b>Remember, it's business</b><br />
Publishing is a small world and we like to think of ourselves as a little family. But at the end of the day, this is still a business that we are a part of so we can keep the lights on and food on the table. I heard a podcast today where an author admitted she saw the writing on the wall months ago, but continued to give her publisher books because of the personal relationship they had. I wanted to hug her and shake her at the same time.<br />
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Getting along well with the people who help bring your books to readers is important and if you can become friends, that's great. But if your head starts telling you everything isn't rainbows and unicorns, you can't let your heart convince you to stay.<br />
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<b>This isn't the end</b><br />
Publishing is a landscape that changes almost daily. These types of announcements will probably continue. The same way that new companies will continue to form in the quest to find new and better ways to bring books to readers. Some of these companies will succeed and others will inevitably fail. This is the natural course of business in almost every industry out there.<br />
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As an author, just remember that your books are your books. And that means doing what's best for you. Ask for help, seek out guidance from those who have been there, and keep writing. Because no matter what the business landscape looks like, readers are still out there clamoring for more words to devour. <br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-53265035239985800932016-05-23T08:00:00.000-05:002016-05-23T08:00:11.008-05:00Free Books!<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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This is it folks! Two weeks until the release of Rite of Redemption. And my brain is officially fried. I feel bad for anyone who has gotten an email from me recently, because I doubt it made very much sense.<br />
<br />
So I don't have an Agency Lesson post today. I have several fermenting and I promise I'll get one up next week. To make it up to you, how about an entire collection of free books? That's better, right? All of the titles below are available for free for the next week and you definitely want to check these out.<br />
<br />
Also, you can enter the giveaway below to win a $30 Amazon gift card. Which you can then use to buy more books. *cough* Rite of Redemption *cough*<br />
<br />
Any who, be sure to check out the free titles listed below and get your name in to win that gift card. Because Mondays are made better with books.<br />
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<a href="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-GYiuI0PotcE/Vz_qKyZ2oOI/AAAAAAAAP44/Kqzb0SHnAH4sT2nD96S3Py3ThS90vIRTwCLcB/s1600/instafreebie%2Bgiveaway.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="266" src="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-GYiuI0PotcE/Vz_qKyZ2oOI/AAAAAAAAP44/Kqzb0SHnAH4sT2nD96S3Py3ThS90vIRTwCLcB/s400/instafreebie%2Bgiveaway.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>
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<a href="https://www.instafreebie.com/free/G5nqI">The Vampire Hunter's Daughter-Books 1-6</a> by Jennifer Malone Wright<br />
<a href="https://www.instafreebie.com/free/bWKBQ">Seeking Havoc</a> by Lila Felix<br />
<a href="https://www.instafreebie.com/free/ZbTUl">Shame</a> by Sarah M. Cradit
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<a href="https://www.instafreebie.com/free/nPlAt">The Amber Project</a> by J.N. Chaney
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<a href="https://www.instafreebie.com/free/Qr2Hg">Rite of Rejection</a> by Sarah Negovetich
<br />
<a href="https://www.instafreebie.com/free/Edkgo">Honey Queen</a> by Christina Mercer<br />
<a href="https://www.instafreebie.com/free/wNk3D">Unspoken</a> by Amy Richie<br />
<a href="https://www.instafreebie.com/free/CDJKo">The White Aura</a> by Felicia Tatum<br />
<a href="https://www.instafreebie.com/free/IHF7U">Lichgates</a> by S.M. Boyce<br />
<a href="https://www.instafreebie.com/free/yQFZO">Disarming</a> by Alexia Purdy
<iframe frameborder="0" height="500" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0" src="https://docs.google.com/forms/d/12Pm90w94ncfxXFNZMwDAsiIKn90Cnmb--Jn2ZTeGzDA/viewform?embedded=true" width="760">Loading...</iframe>
Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-13455838945019761632016-05-11T08:00:00.000-05:002016-05-11T17:31:30.301-05:00A Thunderous Experiment: The resultsSeveral weeks ago, I embarked on an experiment to see if Thunderclap was the powerful tool we all hope that it is or simply another wheel-spinning task that we do in the hopes of effectiveness. The campaign ran last week, so now it's time for results. This will be a long one so, get comfy.<br />
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<a href="https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-y7pkCOJhtQ4/VzOx2Qbu0fI/AAAAAAAAPxw/InOXVm19WpkvxNTsI0XPlFf8d3rN174agCLcB/s1600/question-clipart-03.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" height="161" src="https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-y7pkCOJhtQ4/VzOx2Qbu0fI/AAAAAAAAPxw/InOXVm19WpkvxNTsI0XPlFf8d3rN174agCLcB/s200/question-clipart-03.jpg" width="200" /></a><a href="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-nMTZFCmkr64/VzOxlhQicFI/AAAAAAAAPxk/PkVSPcCuOLQIiYEPOHScTmPC6bi7k0qXQCLcB/s1600/thunder.png" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="200" src="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-nMTZFCmkr64/VzOxlhQicFI/AAAAAAAAPxk/PkVSPcCuOLQIiYEPOHScTmPC6bi7k0qXQCLcB/s200/thunder.png" width="189" /></a><a href="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-4kQeP4c58ws/VzOxoXQ2fpI/AAAAAAAAPxo/O_Fs9lKWXusHfIg2MVkIAfGxekBZ2_AbQCLcB/s1600/clap.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="200" src="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-4kQeP4c58ws/VzOxoXQ2fpI/AAAAAAAAPxo/O_Fs9lKWXusHfIg2MVkIAfGxekBZ2_AbQCLcB/s200/clap.jpg" width="191" /></a></div>
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<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><b>A few things to note about Thunderclap:</b></span><br />
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<br />
1.The set-up to create a campaign is fairly easy, but it will take you a minute. I spent more time than I'd like to admit creating the image header for the campaign and trying to craft a 140 character message that would rock the world.<br />
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2. For a free account, there is a three day approval process before your Thunderclap will be live. So you can't wait until the last minute to create the campaign. Also, that approval process eats into the number of days you have to run the campaign. That said, I submitted my campaign at 2:48am and it was approved at 7:54am. So only five hours. It's possible, but don't bank on it.<br />
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3. Thunderclap is still new, but it's growing in popularity. This means more people are familiar with the set up and aren't as gun shy to link their social media accounts as they were when it first came out. The downside is more people are using it and you might find that your potential supporters are already getting sick of them.<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><b>Supporting the campaign</b></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><b>Because if you don't hit the minimum number of supporters, your campaign doesn't launch. </b></span><br />
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I launched the campaign on Wednesday, April 27th. My goal was to get to my 100 supporters as quickly as possible so I didn't have to spend the next 10 days fretting over the whole thing. In order to achieve this, I posted the campaign here and sent it to my newsletter followers. I also posted it on my Facebook fan page and solicited help from two FB groups I am a part of that allow for this type of promotion. Finally, I enlisted the help of a few friends to share the campaign on their own social media platforms to help me get a larger reach.<br />
*A note here, please check the rules of any group you belong to before posting something like this. In other words, don't be that guy that ruins it for everyone.<br />
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Unfortunately, At 24 hours before Go Live, I only had 50 of my 100 needed supporters. Admittedly, I only promoted the campaign on the first and last day because that's when people take action. It's just human nature, so I didn't waste time tying to promote it the whole week. In all, I managed to get 103 supporters with<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><b>Going live wasn't everything I'd hoped for...</b></span><br />
<b>But it wasn't completely pointless</b><br />
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One hour after the message blitz I'd racked up 168 clicks on the blog site linked in the blitz and three pre-orders. After 24 hours, I had 299 blog site clicks and four pre-orders. As of today, there have been 333 blog clicks and six pre-orders.<br />
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So what does that mean?<br />
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For one, the campaign results are very short lived. I got over half of my results in the first hour of the campaign. This makes sense since some social media feeds (like Twitter and Tumblr) are very time sensitive. People might scroll through a bit of their feed, but that only takes them back maybe an hour or two. Facebook posts have more of a shelf life, however, not all posts are seen by an individuals fulls reach. So, even if they have 500 friends, their message is only ever sent to the feed of a fraction of those people.<br />
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Two, out of the thousands of people who saw the message and over 300 people who actually clicked on the link, only six eventually took the leap to press the buy button. For those of you who like math as much as me, that's only a 1.8% conversion rate. In marketing terms, that's not bad. In sales terms, it's not great.<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><b>For my time, Thunderclap wasn't worth it</b></span><br />
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That's probably not a popular opinion since the service is free and relatively easy. But I probably won't be doing another one any time soon.<br />
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First, it's been widely established that social media posts that contain images, and especially videos, do better than plain text posts. Unfortunately, Thunderclap doesn't allow for an image to be included in the posts. So, right from the get go, you know the post isn't going to be as effective as it could be via another delivery method.<br />
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Second, I spent entirely too much time setting up the campaign, monitoring the progress and trying to get people to sign up. I hate asking people to do these for one main reason, there is no return attached. Yes, there is an assumed future back scratching involved, but that's not what I'm talking about. The best marketing strategies don't ask for favors, they provide them. But the nature of Thunderclap forces us to ask others for help without offering anything in return.<br />
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Last, Thunderclap is a one shot option. The message goes out and then that's it. But marketing doesn't work that way. Most of us need to be exposed to a message multiple times (the general belief is 7!) before we commit to a purchase or action. Can you imagine running seven Thunderclap campaigns in quick succession?! Instead of spending so much time posting messages to get people to sign up, I could have been posting actual messages that were meant for my target audience. I could have reached out to my newsletter and FB fans. I could have created teaser images that were more likely to be shared and spread organically.<br />
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In the end, Thunderclap turned out to be a lot of time and effort for very little result that doesn't have the opportunity for residual activity. My numbers suggest that after a day, the campaign had exhausted its usefulness. That's too much give for not enough output for me. <br />
<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-34465165364857959232016-05-09T08:30:00.000-05:002016-05-09T17:25:19.090-05:00Agency Lessons: How not to get an internshipAgency Lessons is a weekly post that gives authors and readers an inside
look into the mind of a literary agent and a peek behind the curtain of
how books are made.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhc5QBMmxXApEJ7iMJkgodL_WRWxdd2u6baqs2iKjzZKE0wgcGjpAUyEkoF1ppePQha6My_8x6Pn6t_PalOmHTMzC1avxvo09ejS3p1pGebLtCfS1Xqw886VgIx5q2tJ3b2EdVw_xvqWYA6/s1600/Agency+Lessons.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="200" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhc5QBMmxXApEJ7iMJkgodL_WRWxdd2u6baqs2iKjzZKE0wgcGjpAUyEkoF1ppePQha6My_8x6Pn6t_PalOmHTMzC1avxvo09ejS3p1pGebLtCfS1Xqw886VgIx5q2tJ3b2EdVw_xvqWYA6/s200/Agency+Lessons.png" width="158" /></a></div>
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I received the following email yesterday. Names have been changed to protect the clueless. Typos have been left in.<br />
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<i>How's it going? <br /><br /> I visited your website today.. <br /> I'm currently looking for work either full time or as a intern to get experience in the job fiield. <br /> Please review my Resume and let me know what you think. </i> <i><br /> Your help is greatly appreciated, </i><br />
<i>Person not being hired</i><br />
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With all of my heart I want to believe that this is spam. I have never in my entire life wanted an attachment to be full of viruses more than I did today. I'll never know since there is no way on God's green earth I'm opening that attachment. Sadly, I'm feeling pretty 50/50 about the chances of it being spam versus an actual request for a job given the history of emails that have landed in my inbox.<br />
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I'm thinking the reasons this would be an automatic no should be pretty obvious. But just in case.<br />
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<i>How's it going? </i><br />
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Really? No name. No, Dear Person I'm very much hoping to work with. As a general life lesson, if you are A) approaching someone regarding a professional matter or B) approaching someone from whom you are going to ask for a favor, you should always use their name and go with formal over casual. Since this is both A and B, this greeting is a big fail.<br />
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<i>I visited your website today..</i><br />
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Great! Our website does state that we have an open call policy where people can send their resumes in at any time and we will pull from them when looking for new interns. However, the website also gives clear guidelines for what to submit and where. Hint: it's not a poorly worded email to me.<br />
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<i>I'm currently looking for work either full time or as a intern to get experience in the job fiield.</i><br />
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Outside of the continued typos, this is two very different things you are asking for here. One is requesting a job (I'm assuming as an agent) and the other is requesting an internship. Besides the previously covered business that I'm not the person you should be talking to, a little more information would be lovely. Exactly what it is you're looking for would be a great place to start.<br />
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<i>Please review my Resume and let me know what you think. </i><br />
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No thanks. For clarification, see all of the above.<br />
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Again, I'm praying to the starry heavens above that this is spam. Regardless, let's all let this be a reminder that our correspondence with others carries weight. From a query letter to a review request and even a response to a fan email. We should all be mindful that our emails are part of the platform we create as professionals. Make sure you're sending the right message about your brand.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-45009219791285408932016-05-06T13:00:00.000-05:002016-05-06T13:00:01.563-05:00Revelation of RedemptionSee what I did there...with the blog post title...? I'm feeling clever today.<br />
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I'm also feeling so excited to officially reveal Rite of Redemption out into the big, bad world. So, in addition to showing off this gorgeous cover, the final book in the Acceptance Series is now up for pre-order! Woohoo!<br />
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Also, before I lay it on you, I wanted to let you know that the Thunderclap for my experiment fully funded, so that's happening today. I'll be tracking the clicks and shares and all that good stuff so I can report back to you. I'll have data and what not next Wednesday, so be sure to tune back in if your interested in the effectiveness of it all.<br />
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So now without further ado:<br />
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<b>Rite of Redemption</b></div>
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<a href="https://www.amazon.com/Rite-Redemption-Acceptance-Book-3-ebook/dp/B01F50EZ3C" target="_blank"><img alt="https://www.amazon.com/Rite-Redemption-Acceptance-Book-3-ebook/dp/B01F50EZ3C" border="0" height="400" src="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-4Vt4rOUSIKY/VyzX_7_xkpI/AAAAAAAAPro/TxNJT2SC7jMKitAPryPeLjlYyNTFVkXaQCLcB/s400/Rite%2Bof%2BRedemption%2BeBook%2BCover%2B1563x2500.jpg" width="250" /></a></div>
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<b>Rebecca escaped the PIT, found a family among the Freeman...and watched
too many loved ones die. All she wants is the Cardinal to leave her in
peace, but he's made it clear that's never going to happen.
<br />
<br />When the Cardinal attacks other Freeman villages, she finally
understands that no one is safe from his wrath. As the only one who's
stood up to the evil that is the Cardinal, it's up to her to convince
the others that they can't hide forever. It's time to fight.
<br />
<br />The Machine predicted Rebecca would become the Cardinal's enemy. It may have gotten that one right.
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<br />In the conclusion to the Acceptance series, enemies become allies
and old friends emerge, but in the end, sacrifice may be the price of
freedom. </b></div>
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Yeah! I hope you're as excited as I am. You can go reserve your copy now and it will be ready for you on release day, June 6th!!!!</div>
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Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6546777349437459064.post-48058953741125540192016-05-02T08:00:00.000-05:002016-05-02T08:00:29.468-05:00Agency Lessons: YA vs. NAAgency Lessons is a weekly post that gives authors and readers an inside
look into the mind of a literary agent and a peek behind the curtain of
how books are made.<br />
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<a href="https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-8BHHUpVazsI/Vyb1sUETNKI/AAAAAAAAPmU/_UgFaWX2d9oPmrDTHZDyHFkl01hk7GdNQCLcB/s1600/Agency%2BLessons.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="200" src="https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-8BHHUpVazsI/Vyb1sUETNKI/AAAAAAAAPmU/_UgFaWX2d9oPmrDTHZDyHFkl01hk7GdNQCLcB/s200/Agency%2BLessons.png" width="158" /></a></div>
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<br />
I got a great email question this past weekend and I have a feeling maybe more than one of you has wondered about this. A reader asks:<br />
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
What is the difference between young adult and new adult? The only
difference I am able to find is NA is allowed to have sex and more
unsettling that 'NA is a fake genre'. All the other lines seem very
blurred and confusing.</blockquote>
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Oh boy, everybody get comfy while I try to break this down. The reason the lines are blurry is because so is life. We don't wake up magically one day on our 18th birthday as full grown adults ready to tackle board meetings and taxes. Growing up is a gradual process, often bumpy, that isn't defined by any certain age. At 36 I'm still working on the whole growing up business.<br />
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That said, there are a few key areas that we can look at to define the differences between these two growing markets.<br />
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<b>1. Age</b><br />
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We don't become magic adults at 18. However, age is a good place to start. Also, since there are lots of legal things that take place at 18, this tends to be a hard line that most editors I know follow. 18 and still in high school, YA. The second you start that first semester of college NA.<br />
<br />
The upper limit on NA is a little nebulous, but generally until people
start having their life together. If your character is still somewhat dependent on their parents financially or has to call mom the first time they make meatloaf, you are probably still in the NA zone.<br />
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<b>2. Independence</b><br />
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YA is all about trying to exert independence while still having that safety net of not being an adult yet. Mom and Dad are usually still present, though maybe more in the form of an annoyance or barrier to freedom than as a key player. In NA, we see a change. It's that first leap where parents aren't there, either because your character is in college or because they are living on their own. This is all about figuring out how to navigate that scary world you couldn't wait to be a part of, only to realize it's not everything the brochures promised. NA stories rarely include the parents, though they can often be present in the form of texts or check-in phone calls.<br />
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<b>3. The sex</b><br />
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<b> </b><br />
It's really all in the details for this one. Plenty of YA stories have teens having sex. While this used to be completely taboo and enough to get your book banned from every library out there, times they are a changing. The literary world recognizes that some teens have sex, so excluding it completely is unrealistic. However, we are talking about teens. As in not 18. So any sex is generally closed door or fade to black.<br />
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With NA, you're more likely to find scenes commonly found in adult romance. Sex seems are more accepted and tend to be a bit more forthcoming with the details. However, just like there are all kinds of adult romance genres, NA is starting to spread its wings. I just recently saw an imprint make a call for clean NA romance. Also, there is some movement that readers would like to see more genre fiction from NA, which may or may not include sex scenes. In short, it can be in there, but it doesn't have to be.<br />
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Hopefully this helps to clear it up some. NA is still an emerging market, which means the guidelines are still on the wishy-washy side. The good news is that if you are interested in writing for this group of readers, the doors are open and you can be one of the authors that sets the rules. Happy Writing!<br />
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Also, just a quick reminder that I still have the Thunderclap experiment going on. We have until Friday afternoon to hit the supporter goal, but I'd love to exceed the 100 minimum so I have more info to evaluate on this platforms usefullness to authors. If you haven't signed-up yet, you can do it <a href="https://www.thunderclap.it/projects/41090-redemption-draws-nigh?locale=en" target="_blank">right here</a> and it only takes a second. <br />
<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01052604405996474436noreply@blogger.com0