Not quite as many links today, but they're all FOCUSED n stuff. These links are about using social media to help spread the word about yourself and your work. Enjoy, and try at least one tip to get your name out there where people can find you.
Social Media Examiner: 5 Tips to Build and Grow Your LinkedIn Network. If your still perplexed about LinkedIn (I know I am), this article will help you sort out some of the details.
Arielle Ford: Why Authors and Social Media are Meant for Each Other. Some general suggestions about social media, several examples using Facebook.
Justine Musk: Pinterest--creating a vision board for your creative project. Ways to use Pinterest to kickstart your muse.
SheWrites: Top 10 Don't-Miss Sites for Marketing Your Writing (Without Breaking the Bank). Advice on using several sites for promotion.
My Name Is Not Bob: April Platform Challenge. 30 days of tasks that will expand your platform and bring more readers right to your social media door. You can still do these even if it's not April.
That should keep you busy for a while. I hope you find something helpful here that helps you find your audience.
Showing posts with label Promotional Resources. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Promotional Resources. Show all posts
Friday, May 4, 2012
Friday, March 16, 2012
Friday Links for Friday--The Business of Writing
Today's batch of links is focused on the overall business of writing. Goalsetting, how to ensure quality, seeing yourself as an entrepreneur, etc. This is the hard stuff we have to do instead of sitting around scribbling in notebooks all day. (In a perfect world, I'd be scribbling in notebooks ALL THE TIME. While drinking coffee and watching hockey or ogling band boys. Alas, this is not a perfect world.)
Jane Friedman--guest post by John Warner--How “Literary” and “Entrepreneur” Are Becoming Intertwined
Chiseled in Rock (Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers)--post by Tamelah Buhrke--Is Micro-publishing the Game Changer?
Jody Hedlund--Walls on the Way to Publication: A Necessity or a Nuisance. A little of both? I think her approach to setting up your own walls to determine your readiness for publication are not a bad idea. It's easy to rush stuff out. It's harder to be sure it's really good.
Passive Voice Blog--It's the Rare Writer Who Actually has Ambitions. This post has excerpts from and links to a full post by Kristine Kathryn Rusch. Long but worth a read.
The Creative Penn--Writing for Life: 5 Practical Goals for Writers. Guest post by C. S. Lakin. Great advice.
Deanna Knippling--How Much Is Your Writing Worth? Wow, that was depressing. Also--warning--white on black. I suggest using Readability. (Via The Passive Voice.)
Mystery Writing is Murder--Promoting a Pen Name. I have... way too many. *collapses in exhausted heap*
Michael R. Hicks--Adjusting to Being a Full-Time Author. Part 1 and Part 2. Really good, meaty, sensible advice I wish I had known, oh, sometime mid 2011. (Oh, and there's about 5 parts now. Go read them all. They're linked at the bottom.) Again, black on white. Don't have Readability yet? Go fetch it.
David Farland--Marketing Before You Write. Writing for a specific audience. Interesting thoughts. Pretty sure this approach would work best if you make sure you're still writing what you love.
And that's it for today. Hope you found something useful, and have a great weekend!
Jane Friedman--guest post by John Warner--How “Literary” and “Entrepreneur” Are Becoming Intertwined
Chiseled in Rock (Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers)--post by Tamelah Buhrke--Is Micro-publishing the Game Changer?
Jody Hedlund--Walls on the Way to Publication: A Necessity or a Nuisance. A little of both? I think her approach to setting up your own walls to determine your readiness for publication are not a bad idea. It's easy to rush stuff out. It's harder to be sure it's really good.
Passive Voice Blog--It's the Rare Writer Who Actually has Ambitions. This post has excerpts from and links to a full post by Kristine Kathryn Rusch. Long but worth a read.
The Creative Penn--Writing for Life: 5 Practical Goals for Writers. Guest post by C. S. Lakin. Great advice.
Deanna Knippling--How Much Is Your Writing Worth? Wow, that was depressing. Also--warning--white on black. I suggest using Readability. (Via The Passive Voice.)
Mystery Writing is Murder--Promoting a Pen Name. I have... way too many. *collapses in exhausted heap*
Michael R. Hicks--Adjusting to Being a Full-Time Author. Part 1 and Part 2. Really good, meaty, sensible advice I wish I had known, oh, sometime mid 2011. (Oh, and there's about 5 parts now. Go read them all. They're linked at the bottom.) Again, black on white. Don't have Readability yet? Go fetch it.
David Farland--Marketing Before You Write. Writing for a specific audience. Interesting thoughts. Pretty sure this approach would work best if you make sure you're still writing what you love.
And that's it for today. Hope you found something useful, and have a great weekend!
Friday, March 2, 2012
Friday Linkage--KK Gets Herself in Gear (Hopefully) Edition
So, now that the taxes are turned in and all I'm stressed over is nine million deadlines, back to Friday linkage!
Roni Loren: Fiction Groupie--Authors Interacting with Readers Online. Possible drawbacks to interacting with your readers online. Probably not what you think...
Jane Friedman--Where to Find Free Market Listings.
Barnes and Noble Book Review--Kind Reader--Despair and William James. Reasons to NOT despair if you're not wildly famous yet.
Patricia C. Wrede--Weaving Plot Threads. Structure and craft.
Passive Income Author--The Uncommon Truth About Marketing Your Books. Marketing vs. you know, yutzing around.
Dean Wesley Smith--Shifting Goals in This New World. Goalsetting in the Brave Freaky New World of Publishing.
More Intelligent Life--Writing is the Greatest Invention. Well, duh.
Sunset. Anne Lamott on Finding Time. Read it. 'Cause it's Anne Lamott, ferpetesake.
The Creative Penn--Technical Aspects of Creating a Non-traditional Ebook. Yeah, this made me want to go out and do all kinds of crazy stuff. *eyes to-do list* STOP IT, BRAIN!
The Business Rusch--Writers: Will Work for Cheap. Kind of appalling, really...
So... there's another Friday of Linky Linkage. Hope you found something useful!
Roni Loren: Fiction Groupie--Authors Interacting with Readers Online. Possible drawbacks to interacting with your readers online. Probably not what you think...
Jane Friedman--Where to Find Free Market Listings.
Barnes and Noble Book Review--Kind Reader--Despair and William James. Reasons to NOT despair if you're not wildly famous yet.
Patricia C. Wrede--Weaving Plot Threads. Structure and craft.
Passive Income Author--The Uncommon Truth About Marketing Your Books. Marketing vs. you know, yutzing around.
Dean Wesley Smith--Shifting Goals in This New World. Goalsetting in the Brave Freaky New World of Publishing.
More Intelligent Life--Writing is the Greatest Invention. Well, duh.
Sunset. Anne Lamott on Finding Time. Read it. 'Cause it's Anne Lamott, ferpetesake.
The Creative Penn--Technical Aspects of Creating a Non-traditional Ebook. Yeah, this made me want to go out and do all kinds of crazy stuff. *eyes to-do list* STOP IT, BRAIN!
The Business Rusch--Writers: Will Work for Cheap. Kind of appalling, really...
So... there's another Friday of Linky Linkage. Hope you found something useful!
Friday, January 20, 2012
Links for Your Perusal
Livia Blackburne--How to Incorporate Backstory that Hooks the Reader.
A Newbie's Guide to Publishing--Konrath's Resolutions for Writers 2012. A little late, but hey, it's still January.
Jodi Hedlund--How to Drive Yourself Crazy as a Writer. Ways to make your life a LIVING HELL!! Read the article. Avoid the practices.
Write it Forward (Bob Mayer)--12 Daring Predictions from the Indie Author Trenches. Thought-provoking stuff.
Jane Friedman--Guest post by Brad King--The Design of Authorship. What does it really mean to be an author? How is technology changing that definition?
The 99 Percent--Setting the Scene for a Productive Day. Using your environment to trigger more productive work sessions.
Study Hacks--Flow is the Opiate of the Mediocre: Advice on Getting Better from an Accomplished Piano Player. Yeah, it's about piano playing, but easily adaptable to any artistic endeavor.
Justine Musk--How to Flunk Social Media.
Dean Wesley Smith--New World of Publishing: Failure is an Option. Quitting is Not. Excellent advice on goalsetting.
Writer Unboxed (Jane Friedman)--The Secret to Finding the Time to Write, Market, Promote and Still Have a Life.
A Newbie's Guide to Publishing--Konrath's Resolutions for Writers 2012. A little late, but hey, it's still January.
Jodi Hedlund--How to Drive Yourself Crazy as a Writer. Ways to make your life a LIVING HELL!! Read the article. Avoid the practices.
Write it Forward (Bob Mayer)--12 Daring Predictions from the Indie Author Trenches. Thought-provoking stuff.
Jane Friedman--Guest post by Brad King--The Design of Authorship. What does it really mean to be an author? How is technology changing that definition?
The 99 Percent--Setting the Scene for a Productive Day. Using your environment to trigger more productive work sessions.
Study Hacks--Flow is the Opiate of the Mediocre: Advice on Getting Better from an Accomplished Piano Player. Yeah, it's about piano playing, but easily adaptable to any artistic endeavor.
Justine Musk--How to Flunk Social Media.
Dean Wesley Smith--New World of Publishing: Failure is an Option. Quitting is Not. Excellent advice on goalsetting.
Writer Unboxed (Jane Friedman)--The Secret to Finding the Time to Write, Market, Promote and Still Have a Life.
Friday, January 13, 2012
Friday Links
Patricia C. Wrede--When They Don't Wanna. What to do when your characters get all recalcitrant n stuff.
Passive Income Author--5 Clever Tactics to Get More E-Book Sales per Reader. Non-hokey ways to keep your readers coming back for more.
Anne R. Allen's Blog--Guest post by Roni Loren--Why One Author Chose Traditional Publishing--and How to Decide if It's Right for You. Thoughts on the pros and cons of traditional vs. indie.
Mystery Writing is Murder--Inexpensive Ways to Improve Your Writing or Get Published in 2012. Need help with your professional development goals for 2012? Find some ideas here.
Publishing Perspectives--Guest post by Jane Friedman--Experimenting with Serials for Fun and Profit. Some ideas about publishing series and serial fiction as well as pros and cons of this approach.
Publetariat--5 Proofreading Techniques Every Talented Writer Should Know. Ways to break down your proofreading tasks for efficiency and effectiveness.
Kidlit.com--Big Revision. Big revisions vs. "tinkering" with the manuscript.
Jody Hedlund--Write Tight--3 Pieces of Advice I Wish I'd Known Earlier. Advice on streamlining your writing.
Indies Unlimited--Writing Exercises Return With a Twist! Fun for those who like regular writing prompts.
Passive Income Author--5 Clever Tactics to Get More E-Book Sales per Reader. Non-hokey ways to keep your readers coming back for more.
Anne R. Allen's Blog--Guest post by Roni Loren--Why One Author Chose Traditional Publishing--and How to Decide if It's Right for You. Thoughts on the pros and cons of traditional vs. indie.
Mystery Writing is Murder--Inexpensive Ways to Improve Your Writing or Get Published in 2012. Need help with your professional development goals for 2012? Find some ideas here.
Publishing Perspectives--Guest post by Jane Friedman--Experimenting with Serials for Fun and Profit. Some ideas about publishing series and serial fiction as well as pros and cons of this approach.
Publetariat--5 Proofreading Techniques Every Talented Writer Should Know. Ways to break down your proofreading tasks for efficiency and effectiveness.
Kidlit.com--Big Revision. Big revisions vs. "tinkering" with the manuscript.
Jody Hedlund--Write Tight--3 Pieces of Advice I Wish I'd Known Earlier. Advice on streamlining your writing.
Indies Unlimited--Writing Exercises Return With a Twist! Fun for those who like regular writing prompts.
Friday, January 6, 2012
New Year's Linky Links!
Talk to YoUniverse: Tightening Your Plot by Layering. A great checklist for one element of rewrites.
Palm Beach Pulse: Palm Beacher James Patterson's 10 Tips to Improve Your Writing. Good advice, regardless of your personal opinions on Patterson's writing.
Etexts from University of Virginia Library: Fenimore Cooper's Literary Offenses, by Mark Twain. I started to read The Last of the Mohicans, and I have to say my opinion of the writing was much like Twain's. I recommend watching the movie instead. It has a better plot and 100% more Daniel Day Lewis in buckskins.
Marketing Tips for Authors: 15 Commandments for Getting FREE Publicity by Carolyn Howard-Johnson. Some ideas to expand your list of promo ideas.
Writer's Digest: How to Use an Outline to Write a First Draft.
Writer's Digest: 50 Simple Ways to Build Your Platform in Five Minutes a Day. A long list with a lot of ideas.
Jody Hudlund: How Much Time Should Writers Devote to Social Media? Useful guidelines based on where you are in your writing career.
SFWA: Fantasy Worldbuilding Questions. A comprehensive guide to worldbuilding for fantasy authors. Probably good for other sorts of authors as well.
Ebpublishing a Book: Promotion Stages. There are several parts to this series. It's worth a click-through.
Palm Beach Pulse: Palm Beacher James Patterson's 10 Tips to Improve Your Writing. Good advice, regardless of your personal opinions on Patterson's writing.
Etexts from University of Virginia Library: Fenimore Cooper's Literary Offenses, by Mark Twain. I started to read The Last of the Mohicans, and I have to say my opinion of the writing was much like Twain's. I recommend watching the movie instead. It has a better plot and 100% more Daniel Day Lewis in buckskins.
Marketing Tips for Authors: 15 Commandments for Getting FREE Publicity by Carolyn Howard-Johnson. Some ideas to expand your list of promo ideas.
Writer's Digest: How to Use an Outline to Write a First Draft.
Writer's Digest: 50 Simple Ways to Build Your Platform in Five Minutes a Day. A long list with a lot of ideas.
Jody Hudlund: How Much Time Should Writers Devote to Social Media? Useful guidelines based on where you are in your writing career.
SFWA: Fantasy Worldbuilding Questions. A comprehensive guide to worldbuilding for fantasy authors. Probably good for other sorts of authors as well.
Ebpublishing a Book: Promotion Stages. There are several parts to this series. It's worth a click-through.
Friday, December 30, 2011
More Links for your Linky Perusal
Writer Unboxed: The Number 1 Overlooked Skill for Any Author. It's not what you think. Well, unless it IS what you think, in which case it's not not what you think.
StoryFix.com: Make December Your NaNoWriMo Revision Month. Tips on revising your novel, whether you wrote it in November or not.
Publetariat: About Writing (Introduction).
Jody Hedlund: 6 Tips to Make the Learning of Fiction Techniques Less Painful.
Copyblogger: Are Internet Idiots Annihilating Your Productivity?
The Creative Penn: The 12-Step Cure for Writer's Block.
Glimmertrain: Steal This List. Suggestions to help jumpstart a stalled story or improve your storylines overall.
Savvy Authors: The 7 Secrets of the Prolific. By Hillary Rettig.
The Writing Spirit (Julie Isaac): Louisa May Alcott Didn't Need a Computer. Complete with 19th century writing magazine in .pdf.
Justine Musk: Cool Quotes by Badass Women.
StoryFix.com: Make December Your NaNoWriMo Revision Month. Tips on revising your novel, whether you wrote it in November or not.
Publetariat: About Writing (Introduction).
Jody Hedlund: 6 Tips to Make the Learning of Fiction Techniques Less Painful.
Copyblogger: Are Internet Idiots Annihilating Your Productivity?
The Creative Penn: The 12-Step Cure for Writer's Block.
Glimmertrain: Steal This List. Suggestions to help jumpstart a stalled story or improve your storylines overall.
Savvy Authors: The 7 Secrets of the Prolific. By Hillary Rettig.
The Writing Spirit (Julie Isaac): Louisa May Alcott Didn't Need a Computer. Complete with 19th century writing magazine in .pdf.
Justine Musk: Cool Quotes by Badass Women.
Friday, December 9, 2011
And for Today's Linkage....
Study Hacks: The Steve Martin Method: A Master Comedian's Advice for Becoming Famous. Not directly from Steve Martin, but still an interesting look into his career.
Seth Godin: Drip, Drip, Drip Goes the Twit. Marketing advice. Sort of a slow and steady wins the race kind of thing.
Copyblogger: How to Blog Like Bond. James Bond.
and a companion piece, Dr. Evil's 7 Tips for Achieving Worldwide Marketing Domination.
Wired: Need to Create? Get a Constraint.
Wired: 9 Equations True Geeks Should (at least pretend to) Know. Something makes me want to use these as writing prompts.
Nova Ren Suma: On Inspiration. Guest post by Alexander Chee.
Write it Forward (Bob Mayer): Kernel Idea Examples. Followup to last week's link on kernel ideas.
Editorrent: Paragraph Power...At the End. Interesting, quick post about rearranging a paragraph of dialogue for best impact.
Jody Hedlund: How to Keep Writing When the Honeymoon is Over.
Seth Godin: Drip, Drip, Drip Goes the Twit. Marketing advice. Sort of a slow and steady wins the race kind of thing.
Copyblogger: How to Blog Like Bond. James Bond.
and a companion piece, Dr. Evil's 7 Tips for Achieving Worldwide Marketing Domination.
Wired: Need to Create? Get a Constraint.
Wired: 9 Equations True Geeks Should (at least pretend to) Know. Something makes me want to use these as writing prompts.
Nova Ren Suma: On Inspiration. Guest post by Alexander Chee.
Write it Forward (Bob Mayer): Kernel Idea Examples. Followup to last week's link on kernel ideas.
Editorrent: Paragraph Power...At the End. Interesting, quick post about rearranging a paragraph of dialogue for best impact.
Jody Hedlund: How to Keep Writing When the Honeymoon is Over.
Friday, December 2, 2011
Friday Links
Novel Publicity & Co: Cease & Desist--10 Bad Twitter Practices to be Stopped Immediately! I agree with all except the bad language thing... *whistles innocently*
C. Hope Clark: A Writer is Multi-talented, Multi-directional. Don't limit yourself, peoples!
The Passive Voice: Constructing the Narrative Arc.
Mediactive: Author's To-Don't List. I would add--don't make a big honkin' using the wrong word error in a Author's To-Don't List, but that's because I haven't had my coffee or my Zoloft yet this morning. Still, good advice. (Extra points if you spot the error and post it in the comments.)
Carina Press Blog: Angela James: Don't Turn Your Passion Into an Obsession. Advice on avoiding burnout.
Livia Blackburne: Showcase the Sexy, but Don't False Advertise (and other lessons I learned writing my book pitch). Self-explanatory.
The 99 Percent: Op-Ed: In the Particular Lies the Universal. About finding the power of your own gifts and voice.
OpenForum: 11 Radical Slogans that will Change Your Business.
Copyblogger: The 5 Keys to Content Marketing Mastery. Applies to any sort of writing. Or other ventures, for that matter.
Write it Forward (Bob Mayer): The Kernel Idea: The Alpha and Omega of Your Book. Aimed at NaNoWriMo-ers, but solid advice for any writing venture.
C. Hope Clark: A Writer is Multi-talented, Multi-directional. Don't limit yourself, peoples!
The Passive Voice: Constructing the Narrative Arc.
Mediactive: Author's To-Don't List. I would add--don't make a big honkin' using the wrong word error in a Author's To-Don't List, but that's because I haven't had my coffee or my Zoloft yet this morning. Still, good advice. (Extra points if you spot the error and post it in the comments.)
Carina Press Blog: Angela James: Don't Turn Your Passion Into an Obsession. Advice on avoiding burnout.
Livia Blackburne: Showcase the Sexy, but Don't False Advertise (and other lessons I learned writing my book pitch). Self-explanatory.
The 99 Percent: Op-Ed: In the Particular Lies the Universal. About finding the power of your own gifts and voice.
OpenForum: 11 Radical Slogans that will Change Your Business.
Copyblogger: The 5 Keys to Content Marketing Mastery. Applies to any sort of writing. Or other ventures, for that matter.
Write it Forward (Bob Mayer): The Kernel Idea: The Alpha and Omega of Your Book. Aimed at NaNoWriMo-ers, but solid advice for any writing venture.
Friday, November 25, 2011
Friday Links
Gigaom: Kindle Lending: Book Publishers Still Not Getting It. And a lot of writers, too, it seems, based on my Twitter feed and other sources.
Jane Friedman: 10 Phrases to Purge from Your Speech and Writing. I mildly disagree to a couple of these, but others are high on my list of pet peeves. And seriously, how could anybody not care about ice hockey? I mean really.
Write2Publish: What's Wrong With Traditional Publishing and How to Save It. Discussion of changing business models and the disadvantages of venture capital approaches.
Glimmer Train: Territory. Discussion of thinking about the "territory" of your work--common themes you keep coming back to. I tend to keep writing about bitter divorcees. What is that about?
Findability: Twitter Automation Tools. Honestly, I debated including this link because it looks to me like THIS is the person who doesn't "get" Twitter. I mean, why the heck can't I tweet about what I had for dinner? (Last night it was Sonic. Again.) And OMG, don't use automatic DMs when people follow you. That's just annoying. But there are some tidbits here that I think I'm going to poke around with and see what falls out, so I'm passing the link along. Your mileage may vary.
Puck Daddy: Cool First-Person Hockey Practice, Now With Stick-Cam! This is just cool. You're welcome.
Jeff Goins: Why You Should Tell the Ugly Parts of Your Story.
Novel Publicity & Co: Look at Your Writing Through Somebody Else's Eyes. Thoughts on distancing yourself from the work during the editing process. And part II of this post is also a good read.
TN Tobias: 10 Ways to Create a Plot Twist. Has some spoilers for some films, so avoid if you're spoiler-phobic.
Jane Friedman: 10 Phrases to Purge from Your Speech and Writing. I mildly disagree to a couple of these, but others are high on my list of pet peeves. And seriously, how could anybody not care about ice hockey? I mean really.
Write2Publish: What's Wrong With Traditional Publishing and How to Save It. Discussion of changing business models and the disadvantages of venture capital approaches.
Glimmer Train: Territory. Discussion of thinking about the "territory" of your work--common themes you keep coming back to. I tend to keep writing about bitter divorcees. What is that about?
Findability: Twitter Automation Tools. Honestly, I debated including this link because it looks to me like THIS is the person who doesn't "get" Twitter. I mean, why the heck can't I tweet about what I had for dinner? (Last night it was Sonic. Again.) And OMG, don't use automatic DMs when people follow you. That's just annoying. But there are some tidbits here that I think I'm going to poke around with and see what falls out, so I'm passing the link along. Your mileage may vary.
Puck Daddy: Cool First-Person Hockey Practice, Now With Stick-Cam! This is just cool. You're welcome.
Jeff Goins: Why You Should Tell the Ugly Parts of Your Story.
Novel Publicity & Co: Look at Your Writing Through Somebody Else's Eyes. Thoughts on distancing yourself from the work during the editing process. And part II of this post is also a good read.
TN Tobias: 10 Ways to Create a Plot Twist. Has some spoilers for some films, so avoid if you're spoiler-phobic.
Friday, November 18, 2011
Friday Linky McLinkerson
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photo from sxc.hu by hugoslv |
Baekdal: Busted: The 99 Cents Book Failed Miserably. The title is misleading, imo. Read the whole article for the important part down at the end.
Lindsey Donner: 4 Clear Facts About the Future of Digital Content. Aimed more at businesses, but still an interesting read.
iamnoveling: NaNoWriMo: Breaking Through Writer's Block.
CIA Tracks Revolt by Tweet, Facebook. Fascinating read. Makes me wonder if you could write an entire international espionage novel that was nothing but Tweets and Facebook posts...
Writer Unboxed: On Rejection. Guest post about one writer's struggle after her first publication.
Drunk Writer Talk: Building a Platform. Should you? Shouldn't you? When should you? Why should you? Why am I not drunk right now?
Bubblecow: Editing Your Own Book: Top Ten Tips.
Steven Pressfield: The 10,000 Hour Rule. What it really means.
The Fall of Print: Why Future Self-Publishers May Tend to Earn More by Writing Less. Interesting breakdown of the evolving self-publishing model.
Friday, November 11, 2011
Friday Linky Lingage
A cool mix of links this week, imo. Enjoy!
Patricia C. Wrede: To Sell Out... Thoughts on writers who think they have to "sell out" to land a best-seller or a contract. (To the commenter--no, that shouldn't be a comma. If it were, it'd be a comma splice, and comma splices are the work of Satan.)
Blue Rose Girls: How I Edit. An interesting breakdown of a professional editor's process. Mine's a little different, often because my deadlines are tighter than a bass player's leather pants.
Gigaom: On the Death of Book Publishers and Other Middlemen. Interesting discussion of self-publishing as well as the new models represented by Amazon and Kobo's direct contracts with authors.
Justine Musk: One Reason you Should Give Yourself Permission to Work on Your Badass Creative Project. Sing it, sister. Starting to realize I really, really like this blog.
paidContent.org: Kindle Free Book Lending Holy Sh*t! I'm seeing a lot of mixed feelings about this development. Me? I think it's awesome. Still some kinks to work out, of course, but yeah. Awesome.
Write for Your Life: Open Your Writing Mind with the Morning Papers. A discussion of the benefits of writing morning pages, a la Julia Cameron and The Artist's Way. I've tried these before with mixed results. Any insight from those who've had success with this practice?
Justine Musk: Are Fiction Writers Screwed, Part 2. This is about building platform, except it's not. Excellent post.
Jane Friedman: Self-Published Authors Have Great Power, But Are They Taking Responsibility? Didja really think we were going to make it through the week without a Jane Friedman link? If you did, you were sadly mistaken.
Have a great weekend!
Patricia C. Wrede: To Sell Out... Thoughts on writers who think they have to "sell out" to land a best-seller or a contract. (To the commenter--no, that shouldn't be a comma. If it were, it'd be a comma splice, and comma splices are the work of Satan.)
Blue Rose Girls: How I Edit. An interesting breakdown of a professional editor's process. Mine's a little different, often because my deadlines are tighter than a bass player's leather pants.
Gigaom: On the Death of Book Publishers and Other Middlemen. Interesting discussion of self-publishing as well as the new models represented by Amazon and Kobo's direct contracts with authors.
Justine Musk: One Reason you Should Give Yourself Permission to Work on Your Badass Creative Project. Sing it, sister. Starting to realize I really, really like this blog.
paidContent.org: Kindle Free Book Lending Holy Sh*t! I'm seeing a lot of mixed feelings about this development. Me? I think it's awesome. Still some kinks to work out, of course, but yeah. Awesome.
Write for Your Life: Open Your Writing Mind with the Morning Papers. A discussion of the benefits of writing morning pages, a la Julia Cameron and The Artist's Way. I've tried these before with mixed results. Any insight from those who've had success with this practice?
Justine Musk: Are Fiction Writers Screwed, Part 2. This is about building platform, except it's not. Excellent post.
Jane Friedman: Self-Published Authors Have Great Power, But Are They Taking Responsibility? Didja really think we were going to make it through the week without a Jane Friedman link? If you did, you were sadly mistaken.
Have a great weekend!
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Information Overload, Part I

--The Police, Too Much Information
The best thing about the Information Age is that there is SO MUCH STUFF!! If you’re like me and you love STUFF, it’s a veritable gold mine.
The worst thing about the Information Age? SO MUCH STUFF!!
As evidenced by my Friday link posts, I spend a lot of time following links from Twitter, Facebook, blogs, etc., looking for nuggets of Useful Information. Some of the stuff I find is great—it jumpstarts ideas, clarifies problems, helps me get my procrastinating rear end on a better path. But a lot of it is just crap.
For a while, I was sifting through blog posts and printing out everything that looked marginally interesting, then putting it in a pile. I’d read it later, I figured, and find all the wonderful nuggets of wonderfulness contained therein.
Well. That produced a really big pile of paper. So I tried a different approach.
ORGANIZATION
I like Staples. I got there a lot, and I come out with notebooks, pens, folders, binders, sticky notes…it’s a sickness. But I was looking at my pile of papers, then at the bag full of folders I’d just come home with from Staples, and I had a thought.
I sorted the papers into piles according to subject: Blogging, Social Media, Writing Tips, etc. Then I punched holes in them and put them into folders. (These are the 3-hole punch folders with the metal tabs in the middle, so when you’re done you have a sort of compilation rather than a bunch of loose papers in a folder.) Sometimes I download free .pdfs of material that seems useful. The larger of these I put into separate folders.
So. That produced a large pile of folders. Next step?
IMPLEMENTATION
Implementation is a good word here, because it sounds really important. I mean, if you’re implementing, you’re really Getting Shit Done, right?
Let’s hope. Anyway, I looked through each folder and decided what looked extra useful and what didn’t. I tossed stuff that didn’t hold up. Then I picked up one folder and started working through all the articles and blog posts there and taking notes. Everything that sparked my brain is now in a notebook, where it can foment and percolate and grow Important Intellectual Bacteria, or whatever it is that ideas do to turn themselves into Action Items. In this case, I ended up with a list of information and ideas on brand definition and development and how that ties in with platform.
I also followed a lot of links that brought me to more interesting material, which I then organized into its own folders, both on my computer and in hard copy. I’m kind of looking at each folder as a mini-course in the relevant subject. I take a “course” every few days by sorting through these themed collections.
So here’s the process, in a nutshell:
• Collect anything that looks interesting
• Cull anything that proves not interesting
• Sort by topic
• Compile notes
• Form action items and plans to implement what you’ve learned
Next time: Information Overload Part II—applying this process to video and podcasts.
Friday, October 28, 2011
Friday Linkage

Rachelle Gardner: Master the Craft of Writing. Please. Before you send me your manuscripts. (Editor hat off.)
PsyBlog: Why You Should Keep Your Goals Secret. Not sure I agree with all of this, but I definitely have noticed similar things happening to me personally.
Derek Haines: When Your Writing is Crap.
Jeff Goins: Don't Avoid Painful Writing. I've also read a lot of advice that says not to write out of your own pain because it's too self-indulgent to ever be any good. As usual, I think both thoughts have merit, and both thoughts are wrong. Was that helpful?
The High Calling: LL Barkat on Writing. I haven't read her book, and I disagree with her statement that some things just "shouldn't be published," but there's some good, meaty thoughts here on writing and finding the depth and guts of a story.
Social Media Examiner: 5 Ways to Optimize Your Facebook Page.
Jane Friedman: My Secret for Battling Procrastination. Yes, I know none of you ever procrastinate.
Social Media Explorer: Education is the New Marketing.
Jenny Hanson, guest post by Jody Hedlund: Four Steps for Organizing Plot Ideas into a Novel.
SF Gate: Mark Morford: Hurry Up, Get More Done, and Die. Should probably be required reading for, like, everyone.
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
Friday Linkage

Writer's Digest: The Geyser 5-Step Approach to Revision.
Jane Friedman: Are You Worried Your Ideas or Work Will Be Stolen? Good, common-sense advice, as usual from Jane.
Tribal Writer: Why You Need to Write Like a Bad Girl, Part One.
Write to Publish: Good Reads 101: Part Two.
Happy Place: How to Keep the Grammatically Challenged off the Internet. This made me laugh.
The Business Rusch: New Paths
Jane Friedman: The Story Bible--What it Is and Why You Need One.
Thursday, October 13, 2011
Beau Coup Friday Links

Many, many links today...
The Passive Voice--What You Don't Know About Find and Replace in Microsoft Word. This information is both awesome and frightening. Use with care.
Fiction Groupie--The Post In Which I Rant About Blogging, Platforms, and the Pressure on Writers. This is an excellent post with much food for thought.
Erastes--Believe in what you write—even if it is “only for money”. Some words of wisdom.
Jane Friedman--The Evolving Model of the Entrepreneurial Novelist. Fascinating take on self publishing from Sean Platt.
Aliventures--7 Habits of Serious Writers. Amazingly enough, I do all these things. Go me!
Dystel & Godrick Literary Management--Writers with Imprints. Interesting development. I want my own imprint! Somebody give me one!
The Story Prize--Patricia Henley on the Rational Part of the Writing Process. There's a rational part to the writing process? Who knew?
Julie Isaac--How to Write Daily More Easily. Some great tips on increasing the consistency of your productivity.
The Guardian--Romantic Fiction's Passion for E-Books.
Patricia C. Wrede--The Hat Lecture. Great advice here for serious writers, and I love the presentation.
Livia Blackburne--The Psychology of Attraction: Uncertainty.
The Fall of Print--How a new survey of ebook discovery habits lends hope to self-publishers and tips for better marketing. Some interesting stats here.
Adam Westbrook--What Monty Python can teach the next generation of publishers. Good article, although not about all of Monty Python. Focuses on Terry Gilliam's creative process.
World Policy.org--Innovation Starvation. Neal Stephenson talks about the obligations of a science fiction writer. A meaty and thought-provoking read.
Last but not least: A friend of mine recently lost her job, and is working on building a Pampered Chef business. If you like Pampered Chef products (I think they're fantastic), consider dropping by her personal Pampered Chef page to place an order.
Have a great weekend!
Thursday, October 6, 2011
OMG SO MANY LINKS!!!

Anyway... on to the meaty linky bits.
Breaking In Before Breaking Down: Promotional Tips for Self-Published Authors
Will Boast: Cutting Out the Bad Bits. Via Jane Friedman, "Write More Raw Material Than You Need"
Rachelle Gardner: 10 Tips About Author Platform
Fuel Your Writing: Crowdsource Your Book With Pubslush. I'm fascinated by this new publishing model.
An Internet High Five. 'Cause we all need one.
Digital Book World: Social Media--The Art of the Nudge
Tribal Writer: 6 So-Called Rules for the Badass Creative Woman
Livia Blackburne: Revision Adventures: Building Strong Characters and Emotional Depth. Some great tidbits here that I plan to use.
AdAge MediaWorks: As Devices and Distribution Compete, Content Enjoys Renaissance I wonder if we need a new royalty/artist compensation structure to keep from driving the content distributors/aggregators out of business.
Jane Friedman (Guest Blogger Biba Pearce): 3 Tips for Professional Ebook Covers
Publish Your Own Ebooks: The Importance of Building an Author Platform. Yes, I'm a little obsessed with this topic right now...
The League of Reluctant Adults: Responding to Negative Reviews. This is FANTASTIC. Especially the art work. :-D
Wow, Barnes and Noble? REALLY? Maybe I'm not so excited about trying to keep you in business after all.
Have a great weekend!! And I think everybody should go to B&N and demand copies of Watchmen and Sandman. Just to see what happens.
Friday, September 23, 2011
Ceremonial Closing of the Tabs

Using an Agent to Get on Kindle--John Carpenter's publishing journey. An interested snapshot of a changing marketplace. Also I think I'll get this book for my son. Jane Friedman's blog.
Life Stages of a Writer--interesting take on how to look at your work. (Terrible background color--I used readability.com to keep from getting eyestrain.)
Tips on Successful Blogging--Creative Penn. These are both podcasts, but if you scroll down there are links to .pdf and online transcripts if you'd rather read. Blogging Basics and Advanced Blogging Tips for Authors.
Certainty Anchors. This is an excerpt from the book Uncertainty, by Jonathan Fields, about how ritual helps anchor creativity. Jane Friedman.
Product vs. Author Brand. Part 3 of the series on branding I linked to last week. From Write to Publish.
But What About the Quiet Ones? Writer Unboxed. About the challenges faced in promoting the "quiet" novel.
5 Stephen King Quotes Every Writer Should Heed. Because Stephen King is awesome, even though I don't like all of his books.
Marketing is Dead. Traditional marketing vs. "Tribe Building."
5 Timeless Insights on Fear and the Creative Process. More on how ritual enhances creativity, this time with five recommended books on the topic.
Downtown Trains... Oh, never mind. That's all about hockey. Moving right along...
15 Prompts to Help Kick-Start Your Story. Some useful tidbits here if you're looking to start a story or deepen one you've already written.
And that's all for today. Unfortunately it looks like I might have opened as many tabs as I closed on this round. Sigh...
Saturday, September 17, 2011
Closing Many Tabs Day
I had intended to do this on Friday, but I got distracted. These things happen...
Anyway. I have tons of tabs open in my browser, so as I close them down I'm going to share. (I kinda sorta stole this idea from Neil Gaiman, but he has lots of ideas so I'm sure he won't miss it terribly.) It's a wide variety of STUFF, so I hope there's something in here you'll enjoy.
A really embarrassing typo happens to an author. Susan Andersen's hero becomes altogether filthier after memorable editing error.
My friend Jennifer's Deviant Art page, with pictures for Halloween.
A breakdown of the first ten pages of the script for Inception.
Fear is the Downfall of Publishing. Blog post by Bob Mayer.
Epic Black Car--Social Media is a Tool, Not a Magic Bullet.
Epic Black Car--Romance Novelists are a Secret, Epic Army. (I found this one really entertaining.)
Livia Blackburne--How to Self-Promote Without Selling Your Soul.
Write to Publish--Branding: Where to Begin
Write to Publish--Branding: Part 2--The Basics
Write it Forward--The Real Gatekeepers in Publishing Now? Authors. More from Bob Mayer.
Husbands: The Series. A new web series from former Buffy the Vampire Slayer scribe Jane Espenson, et al.
Anyway. I have tons of tabs open in my browser, so as I close them down I'm going to share. (I kinda sorta stole this idea from Neil Gaiman, but he has lots of ideas so I'm sure he won't miss it terribly.) It's a wide variety of STUFF, so I hope there's something in here you'll enjoy.
A really embarrassing typo happens to an author. Susan Andersen's hero becomes altogether filthier after memorable editing error.
My friend Jennifer's Deviant Art page, with pictures for Halloween.
A breakdown of the first ten pages of the script for Inception.
Fear is the Downfall of Publishing. Blog post by Bob Mayer.
Epic Black Car--Social Media is a Tool, Not a Magic Bullet.
Epic Black Car--Romance Novelists are a Secret, Epic Army. (I found this one really entertaining.)
Livia Blackburne--How to Self-Promote Without Selling Your Soul.
Write to Publish--Branding: Where to Begin
Write to Publish--Branding: Part 2--The Basics
Write it Forward--The Real Gatekeepers in Publishing Now? Authors. More from Bob Mayer.
Husbands: The Series. A new web series from former Buffy the Vampire Slayer scribe Jane Espenson, et al.
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Another Helpful Link About Promo
On this blog, a thriller/horror author discusses promotional strategies and different ways to get your name out there so people can find your books. If you're like me, you find all this a little overwhelming, especially when it's so hard even to eke out time to write, much less promote. But take a look, and weed out the ideas that'll work for you, and after a while you'll have a workable promotional strategy that'll keep your books moving into the hands of readers.
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Promotional Resources
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