Showing posts with label Authors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Authors. Show all posts

Friday, November 9, 2012

When does it become Too Much?

Remember the adage, the empty can rattles the most?  As a writer, I live in fear of being categorized the “empty can,” the one that rattles ceaselessly about everything and anything.  In today’s ever increasingly, easy to access via social media world, the author has to interact with their readers.  It’s encouraged and expected, which is fantastic, but for an author, there is the double edged sword.  When does it become too much?

I could say, when one name comes up twenty times a day in the facebook feed… with them promoting themselves.  Or when, every time you turn around and download your email, their name is there in the send and receive pile.  But it’s not really that simple is it?

So I went a-hunting, to see what was out there, in terms of the ‘how to’ of author self promotion, this blog is the results of my investigations.

A word of warning:

The wise words of Andy Straka (1), were among some of the first I found, summing up my fears very effectively.  Sometimes too much self-promotion can hurt relationships. No one wants to be around a constant self-promoter. Your relationship with someone is far more important than the particular book you may be pitching at the moment. You know what?  I think he’s right.  How many times have we seen an advertisement on television, only to say, “Oh not that again!” But it’s true.  If we keep telling the world how good we are, you run the risk of it becoming too much.  These then become the facebook pages we either unlike or hide or in the worst possible outcome, get tagged as spam.  They are the ones we drop from our twitter feed and they are the friends we leave behind.

Target your words to keep them meaningful:

It’s easy to find one place where you participate in online discussions.  Facebook, Twitter, Goodreads or even your blog (yes there are many platforms and I have only chosen a handful here).  But if you focus on one platform only, you run the risk of becoming rapidly obsolete.  As an author, it is our job (yes, alas it is) to get out there and interact outside our comfort zone. 

While there is the argument that says we should keep in contact with our current readers, we don’t want to stagnate.  We need to find new readers of our words, reach a new audience and grow our followings. To do that, we need to look elsewhere and network effectively.  Blog Hops, Guest Blogs and participate in a wide array of groups will help, but we need new and interesting material each and every time.

We also need to weigh and measure what we are saying.  If our sum total of interactions is “Look at me! Look at me!”  then our readers will become gradually more disenchanted as we self promote ourselves and forget their needs.  

That’s not to say we shouldn’t tell everyone about our high points of being published, achieving personal milestones.  But we need to have balance in our interactions.  What we do should include a good size dose of meeting with others, carrying on meaningful discussions with our peers and our readers and learning from them.  And most of all, our readers need to feel wanted/included/valued.

Protect your platform at all costs:
 
Your platform is your public face where you maintain your presence online.  It is the one people come to know, and will interact with and should become one of your most important marketing tools as an author.  So  it’s important that we know how to protect it.

Simple.  Follow the rules. (This is a personal bug bear of mine…) Over the last few years I have seen all kinds of scary things such as how to flout the guidelines of Amazon (2)  to ignore the terms and conditions of facebook, twitter etc.,  I find this scary because at the end of the day, authors are supposed to be Professionals.  

I can’t think of anything worse than building up a following, with thousands on a platform, just to lose it because we believed the rules did not apply to us.  To me, this is like signing a contract with a publishing house to give them worldwide rights to a book and then selling, say, the German rights to another company just because we can.  As professionals, we would never consider doing that to the publishing houses we have signed with, yet some are willing to be unprofessional in other avenues.

How does Over Communicating and Over Marketing hurt authors?

As with any industry, when you over communicate, your followers begin to see it as spam.  Laura Lake quantifies the situation like this:  a few weeks ago I unsubscribed to a newsletter. Why? The communication became overwhelming. I was following this company on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and RSS Feed. I was receiving close to 5 to 7 communications daily about upcoming events. Perhaps that doesn't seem like a lot but take that times 5 times a week and you'll see my point - that's approximately 25 to 35 emails weekly. I wanted information on the events and I was even interested in attending them, but I was turned off by all of the communication. True, Laura is not an author, but the message remains the same.  

Consider what you are saying and where.  Think about how many times your followers/readers are seeing the same message.  

If you think that you could be a perpetrator or this new and unusual torture, take heart!  Help is available.

What you can do if you are over marketing/communicating about yourself:

Unfortunately, while there have been some notable situations where negative publicity have worked in the favour of authors, we cannot rely on this working for us.  So we need to prepare a game plan for dealing with the fallout of negative reactions to our marketing.

It’s never too late to evaluate what you are doing and find a new way to interact.  Check how many times a week you tweet/message or even send out your newsletters saying exactly the same thing.  Check the content to make sure it is valuable and interesting and not targeted at the same group over and over again.

Give your readers something to look forward to… do you have giveaways, snippets, family trees or even timelines on your website for your stories?  Can you add freebies?  These are all quick and easy marketing ideas that cost you nothing, except a little bit of time.

If you have a monthly or on release newsletter, give your followers a choice of whether they want to follow your paranormal releases newsletter or your contemporary.  Not every reader is interested in every genre you write in.

Have other authors in your genre and outside too, leave a guest post for you.

Become a Blog Hop host.  New authors bring their own followers and you may be lucky enough to pick up a couple of new followers.

Add interesting and informative posts to your blog site.

Most of all, step out of your shoes and be discerning about your interactions with others.  Weigh and measure before you hit send.

Imogene

To read more about the science of marketing, visit:
http://marketing.about.com/od/internetmarketing/a/Marketing-Communication-How-Much-Is-Too-Much.htm
http://robinmizell.wordpress.com/2007/09/29/part-7-free-publicity-for-book-authors/
http://ezinearticles.com/?5-Ways-to-Deal-With-Negative-Publicity&id=4032314
 http://marketing.about.com/od/strategytutorials/a/socialmediamktg.htm

Friday, March 30, 2012

Awesome April Month for Imogene Nix

Yep, April is Awesome month for me.

Why?  Well, on the 2nd, we see the release of Star of Ishtar.  I love this story, because it fleshes out Grayson and Elara (who we see lots of during the Warriors of the Elector Trilogy.)



Next, I have several guests coming to visit me.  These include:

Amber Riley - featuring Book 1 of her amazing Kindred Blood Trilogy "Flash of the Firefly" on April 11

and then



Carly Fall - with her "Finding My Faith" title.  (The Six Savior Series, Book 2) on both 12th & 13th April.  There will be a giveaway, so pop on back those days!


And where is Imogene?  Well I feel like the song "I've been everywhere man" is playing in my head.

I will be the Feature Author over on TRS Blue.  Drop in and say hi!



I am also on the Blog Hop Trail!  CBLS are helping me out and I will be at the following locations throughout the month of April


Apr 9: Curse of the Bibliophile (Giveaway/Review)
Apr 10: Deep in The Heart Romance (Interview/Book Feature)
Apr 11: Coffee Beans & Love Scenes (Book Feature)
Apr 13: Romance Book Junkies (Book Feature)
Apr 14: Full Moon Bites (Book Feature)
Apr 15: Storm Goddess Book Reviews & More (Interview/Book Feature)
Apr 16: Delighted Reader Book Reviews (Interview/Book Feature)
Apr 17: Hywela Lyn (Book Feature)
Apr 18: Close Encounters with the Night Kind (Book Feature)
Apr 19: Carly Fall - Where Fantasy Meets Romance (Interview/Book Feature)
Apr 20: Bookin' It Reviews (Book Feature)
Apr 21: Words of Wisdom from the Scarf Princess (Giveaway/Review)
Apr 22: Kacey's Konnections (Book Feature)
Apr 23: Turning the Pages (Book Feature)


So...are you tired yet?  It's going to be a big month...so hang on to your hats!

Imogene

Monday, March 5, 2012

Re-Virginification - what is it all about?

Like my new word? Cool, isn't it. I was chatting with a friend tonight and we were talking about characters who have long dry spells. Of the
intimate kind.

This led me to think about something that writers do on a regular basis. We invent words. We i
nvent worlds and scenarios that lead to these new ideas. (Because, of course, that is what we do!) Among my own is Barsha! Sounds like a curse word, right? And you'd be right in thinking that. It's gutteral and short. That word took 8 hours to filter through my brain though. Sometimes the process is instant and yet for others the right word may take hours, days or even weeks to hit upon.

The whole concept of authors inventing words has a long and illustrious history. Shakespeare is one of the most well known made up words that we use today:
  • Bedroom,
  • Faint-Hearted,
  • Advertising,
  • Bedazzled,
  • assassination
  • moonbeam,
  • puke,
  • submerged
Did some of those surprise you? Yes, I was surprised too. But even more so to realise that the term Neologism is the term given to the making up of words. According to wikipedia:

A neologism nˈɒləɪzəm/; from Greek νέο- (néo-), meaning "new", and λόγος (lógos),
  • meaning "speech, utterance") is a newly coined term, word, or phrase, that may be in the process of entering common use, but has not yet been accepted into mainstream language. Neologisms are often directly attributable to a specific person, publication, period, or event. Neolexia (Greek: a "new word", or the act of creating a new word) is a fully equivalent term.

The term, neologism is first attested in English in 1772, borrowed from French néologisme (1734). ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neologism)

There is also a roll call of authors who have made up the most words:

According to Gavin Alexander, lecturer in English at Cambridge university and fellow of Milton's alma mater, Christ's College, who has trawled the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) for evidence, Milton is responsible for introducing some 630 words to the English language, making him the country's greatest neologist, ahead of Ben Jonson with 558, John Donne with 342 and Shakespeare with 229. (http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2008/jan/28/britishidentity.johncrace)

Yes, authors play a very large part in the evolution of language.

But, back to my term, Re-Virginification: it is the term for a long term spell ( in this case 2000 years) of abstinence. Works for me, anyway.

So, the next time you see a made up word in a book, remember that the author walks in the footsteps of some of the greatest.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

10 Questions to Delight and Despair over…with Shannon West

For the month of January, 2012, I decided to do something a little different with my blog. As many of you know, Starline (the first in the Warriors of the Elector Trilogy) is due to be released in February (Well actually it looks like January 23 now!) with Secret Cravings Publishing (how exciting is that??). So I thought, wouldn’t it be nice to get to know a few of the authors from Secret Cravings….so below meet our Author du jour…


Shannon West


This is me in my dreams, LOL....Actually, I have a day job that I have to work to support my writing habit, so I must conceal my real identity. This company which shall be nameless would frown upon my writing predilections, so....Shannon is my pen name.

Could you give me a brief rundown of your currently available items with Secret Cravings?

Winning Bette, a m/f Hot Flash novella about an older woman with secrets and a younger man who discovers them

Lube Job, a m/m short story just for fun and hot sex


Come Hell or High Water, an erotic m/m romance about (believe it or not) Christmas wishes that come true

Georgia Heat, a m/m romatic erotic novel about two hot young men who can’t seem to get it together and stop fighting long enough to live happily ever after.

Street Angel, a new novel, and one of SCP’s free reads in installments on their website every week. About a young, beautiful prostitute who teams up with a hot cop on the trail of a young boy who has been kidnapped, drugged and forced to walk the streets of Atlanta.

Fire and Ice, an upcoming paranormal, historical, m/m/m menage erotic romance! Whew! Could I make it any more complicated? About a gorgeous, supernatural Light Elf from Scandinavia circa 600 A.D. (think Vikings) and a beautiful slave boy and the sexy barbarian they meet on a quest to kill a monster ravaging the country side. One of my crazier and most fun efforts. Coming soon from SCP.

Training Tristan, an upcoming m/m romantic erotic story about a young cop in the closet who meets a swishy boy who will out him if they’re seen together. Trouble is, he can’t stay away.
Wow! You've been busy, haven't you? They all sound so intriguing... :)

Onto the 10 questions...

1. What is your main genre, and how did you get started in it?

My main genre is male/male romance, or as some e publishers call them—Romantica, a combination of romance and erotica. I got started with a friend and fellow author named Remy Devereaux who also writes for SCP and co-authored several of the books. This is his genre, and I found I really enjoyed it. I didn’t know if I could write it at first. Then I thought, hell, I love men, and I love the idea of them having sex, (preferably with me, but any old port in a storm) so why not? The writing seemed to flow pretty well from my typing fingers, so I just went with it. Now I love the relationships between the young men. They can be so sweet and loving and yet rough and wild. The sex can be rough and wild too, just the way I love to write it.

2. Okay, what is the most exotic location you have written in? And how did that come about?

Hmmm? Exotic? I don’t think I’ve written much in exotic locations. It’s usually me and my computer surrounded by screaming kids and loud tv’s, but I did write a few chapters of Georgia Heat on my laptop on the beach.

3. Have you got a current WIP and can you give us any hints as to what we will find within the book?

Why yes, I do. I’ve got an idea, really, since I just finished a story and can’t get time to sit down and put it on paper. It’s about a rich, handsome man who receives a letter from an old college friend. The friend is in trouble, being victimized by a beautiful, heartless male prostitute who is taking all his money and refusing his love and pleas to marry him. Later, when he learns the friend commits suicide over this boy, he decides he needs to revenge himself on the prostitute by turning the tables on him. The only trouble is, once he meets him, he’s in serious danger of falling in love himself.

4. Coffee, Tea, Hot Chocolate or something stronger? And why?


Definitely something stronger! You need to be a little buzzed sometimes when you write about hot sex. Makes the words flow a little uninhibitedly. So I like to write these scenes when the house is quiet, late at night, alone with my trusty glass of red wine.

5. What was the hardest scene you have ever written, and why do you think it was difficult? (emotionally for you and/or your character)

Has to be a menage scene I wrote once for Fire and Ice. Trying to decide just who puts what into who and how was a little complicated. Lots of fun, though.

6. If you had the opportunity to try something in your books, what would it be?

I like to dabble a bit in spanking and BDSM. Nothing harsh or too much, but love to read it and I think I’d like to write about it.

7. If you could invite 3 of your characters to a dinner party, who would you choose and what do you want to learn from them?

Brandr, the Light elf from Fire and Ice, cause he’s just so hot and supernatural to boot. He could tell me all the ways to do a proper menage scene. Then probably Mark from Georgia Heat, just because he’s my perfect Alpha male. He could teach me to make my alphas even tougher. And Will from Come Hell or High Water, because he’s wicked funny and sexy and very brave.
He could teach me to be myself and throw consequences to the wind.

8. What would you do differently on your road to becoming published?

Start younger, be less afraid of what people think about your style and what you love and who you love!

9. You are going on a holiday and can only take 5 things with you. What would you pick and why?

My man, my laptop, my Nook, some wine, and some chocolates.

10. If you could give a piece of advice to a reader who wants to write a book, what would it be?

Just do it! Get the words down, find a crit partner who can help you polish and edit and then send it in! There are so many wonderful independent publishers waiting to see it. Don’t be afraid, and don’t let it languish on your computer. Just go for it--

You can catch Shannon West at http://www.remyshannon.weebly.com

Her current releases include…
Street Angel
Come Hell or High Water
Lube Job
Georgia Heat


Shannon West has kindly offered your choice of back list or Come Hell or High Water in a pdf file so, in order to win, name their most recent release with Secret Cravings.
Prizes will be drawn randomly on 6th January...



So come on, don't be shy!