By Rob Parnell
Rob Parnell's Easy Way to Write
[Reprinted with permission of the copyright holder.]
You don't need me to tell you that self publicity is a writer's secret weapon.
Bearing in mind that when you decide you want to be a published author, it's most likely going to take you anywhere between two to five years to see your books in print - that's the reality of the publishing world.
So why not use that time to build a following? Why wait until the last minute to start your promotional activities when the Internet is a perfect place to get people reading your writing, and getting to know and like you through a regular blog?
It's not as if it costs anything - except your time - so you have no real excuse do you?
Where to Start
Go immediately to blogger.com and register a blog spot for yourself, either using your own name or some other phrase that means something to you.
Don't use Wordpress unless you're a complete masochist - and have oodles of time to waste on incomprehensible readme files. I have no idea why people use Wordpress at all - it's the most complicated interface I have ever come across and requires a degree in engineering just to install.
(Maybe that's it. Engineers are different from normal people - strange and unsociable with strange superiority complexes - maybe they need that level of complexity to feel validated!)
Blogger.com is easy. It does everything for you - and the dashboard where you can add your own stuff is beautifully simple to understand. The only drawback (if you can call it that) is that you need a gmail account to get started. No sweat.
What to Say
You don't need to have publishing credits to start talking about writing. It's your blog. You can say what you like. That's the beauty of the Net. Your opinion, your worldview is just as valid as anyone else's.
In fact, that's the trick I think: to be as honest and as frank as you can be. That's what will make you seem unique.
Don't just trot out the standard line on writing issues. Get in touch with how you really feel about your craft - and state it, boldly, with pride.
Blogs become popular over time because people dip into them, enjoy what they read - and remember you. And they remember sincerity for a lot longer than you simply trying to sell yourself, your books and your writing.
How Often You Should Blog
The major search engines trawl the Net at least once a week. Their spiders are looking for new content.
Therefore, in order for a blog to start appearing in search listings you need to keep updating it. Once a week ideally - but we all know that's not practical much of the time.
Regularity is the key - and relevance. Add topicality to your blog by mentioning world events, personalities and contemporary issues. These all raise your blog's profile - and its popularity.
Building a popular blog can take around a year or two - there's no getting around that. But that's why you need to start yours now. Think of your writing career as a long term investment. In a couple of years from now, wouldn't it be better to know that you've had blog readers - and loyal subscribers over that time?
Make sure you sign up for all the RSS feeds on offer - and you'll find, over time, you'll get more and more visitors.
Find an Angle
If nothing else, the media teaches us one thing: it's the angle that grabs attention.
Start a blog that details your week by week journey through your book or novel, for instance.
Write about a cause you believe in. Save the Whales, Obesity, Cancer Cures for example.
Take a religious or political stance (and get ready for vociferous responses!)
Or simply write about where you live, or the history of a place you love.
You'll find like minded people attracted to your site - and, one day, maybe a news service will contact you to use you as an authority in an interview. These things happen.
Can You Get Paid to Blog?
Yep. Put Google Ads on your blog. Blogger.com shows you how to do this. It's free and whenever anyone clicks on an ad within your blog page, you get paid. Easy. Money for jam.
You could also put an email catcher on your blog.
getresponse.com is free - as are many others, do a search on 'free autoresponders' - and most will integrate seemlessly with blogger.com.
After a few months you can try offering books and ebooks you've written to your subscribers. Or offer other writer's book as an affiliate.
Why not? Everyone's doing it - why leave money on the table?
In the Future You'll Wish You Started Now
Because when you do have your own published books out there in the real world, you'll have people you can tell about it. Publishers will like you for being able to say you have readymade fans to whom you can promote your work.
Book sales don't just happen nowadays. You have to find avenues of publicity and ways of increasing the probability you'll sell your books on the publisher's behalf.
And every little helps.
Keep Writing!
Rob@easywaytowrite.com
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Rob Parnell teaches online writing courses on such topics as Writing the Modern Thriller, which I am taking right now -- though my notion of "modern" is relative -- Fantasy Writing, Horror Writing, Writing for Kids, Re-writing, and much more. Sign up for his free writing newsletter.
Thanks for this. I liked it and I do find it motivating. I love writing and words and playing with words (sometimes I even make them up)And I've had short stories and articles pubished in print and online. I'm currently writing my second novel (no, the first was not published, but yes, I did write 350 pp)and I was thinking of starting a blog ... I'm wondering about the time element but at the moment, I spend a hell of a lot of time reading other people's blogs. I guess, it's time I started writing (and living) my own blog!
ReplyDeleteThanks again.