Marketing for Romance Writers
Collaboration Day is twice a month. Initial share is the first Wednesday, and the
next is the third Thursday.
EXAMPLE:
Mary leaves a URL for a Facebook post. Jane opens
the link, and shares it to her own author page. Mary does the same for Jane. Sam
leaves a URL for Tumblr. Chris shares it to Tumblr, and Sam does the same for Chris.
All authors have increased their SEO* and their chances of being seen.
You do not have to be a member
of MFRW to take part, but consider joining us. We help promote one another and share
information. Our motto is Seek, Teach, Share, Learn, Succeed.
Join the IO Group here (it's
free) https://groups.io/g/marketingforromancewriters
Collaboration Day Instructions
1. Create
the post you want others to share, on any social media you prefer. Use whatever
wording, images, and hashtags are appropriate for your post.
2. Make
it live by sharing the post to that social media.
3. To get
the URL for the post, on most sites, click the date or time on the message to open
it in its own window or tab. Copy the URL. On Tumblr, click the three dots on the
upper right and choose "copy link."
4. Return
to this post and paste the URL in the comments section. It helps to leave a note
regarding the type of book or event, such as "new release", "historical",
"sci-fi", "LGBTQ", "contemporary", #PNR", etc.
There are no restrictions on genre or heat level.
5. On Collaboration
Day, highlight the URL of any post you wish to share, and then right click to open
a new tab or window.
6. Reshare
to your preference of pages or groups, etc. for your account.
PLEASE NOTE: If you think a post
isn't right for your account, you are under no obligation to share it.
You can add the comment "caught up to here".
No need to comment on each link.
Thank you for taking part!
*SEO: Search Engine Optimization
New Release
ReplyDeletehttps://x.com/KateHillRomance/status/1852719273723953600
shared!
DeleteHere's mine - Twitter / X https://x.com/kayelleallen/status/1855962313544646657
ReplyDeleteShared!
ReplyDelete