“Don’t be afraid of yourself when you write. Don’t check-rein yourself. If you are afraid of being sentimental, say, for heaven’s sake be as sentimental as you can or feel like being! Then you will probably pass through to the other side and slough off sentimentality because you understand it at last and really don’t care about it.”
-Brenda Ueland
Emerald
Emerald
is an erotic fiction author whose short stories have been featured in
anthologies published by Cleis Press, Mischief, and Logical-Lust. She
serves as an assistant newsletter editor and Facebook group moderator
for Marketing for Romance Writers (MFRW), and she selects and posts the
monthly inspirational quote on the MFRW Marketing Blog. Her first solo book, If... Then: a collection of erotic romance stories, is out now from 1001 Nights Press. Find her online at her website, The Green Light District.
Thursday, September 18, 2014
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
Blog Talk: Creating Good Guest Posts for #MFRWauthors
Let's talk about writing Guest Posts for other blogs.
There are benefits to being a guest on another blog. The exposure you gain magnifies because you are able to reach out to more readers. Since most bloggers have guest spots, its not too difficult to find blogs you fit with. Writing a guest post puts you in front of a whole new audience and can increase your own blog's following. Blog readers that haven't yet heard of you now get their first impression and may then follow you... and maybe even buy your books!
When guest blogging, it's important to do more than simply promotion. Here are some GENERAL GUIDELINES to follow:
Be Relevant to the Host Blog. Know before you sign on that your genre is a fit for this blog's followers. You don't want to post erotic romance on a sweet romance blog. You also likely won't want to post paranormal on a contemporary blog.
Be Polite. Follow all the guidelines the Host Blog provides. They are hosting you so its the least you can do. Most will tell you when they need your post and how they want it provided.
Be Aware. Know what the format of your host blog is. You will want to submit the correct things the host blog regularly includes. For example, know if they include a book cover or a banner. Can you include an excerpt? What length?
Be Knowledgeable. It's about more than self-promotion. We all need to promote our books but most blogs are looking for more content in a blog post. Unless agreed upon otherwise, your post should have a topic for discussion. Write about something you have knowledge on - maybe a topic that fits with your latest book.
Be Connected. Include links back to your own website or blog when relevant to your post. Back links will connect your blog to the host blog and benefit both. Use these links to reference prior posts on similar subjects.
Be Loud. Follow up on you guest post by promoting it on your own social media outlets. Visit the host blog on the day of your post to respond to comments and interact with followers. One idea I use sometimes when guest blogging is to write a brief post on my own blog that drives traffic to my guest post. This sends my followers to a new blog they might enjoy.
There are benefits to being a guest on another blog. The exposure you gain magnifies because you are able to reach out to more readers. Since most bloggers have guest spots, its not too difficult to find blogs you fit with. Writing a guest post puts you in front of a whole new audience and can increase your own blog's following. Blog readers that haven't yet heard of you now get their first impression and may then follow you... and maybe even buy your books!
When guest blogging, it's important to do more than simply promotion. Here are some GENERAL GUIDELINES to follow:
Be Relevant to the Host Blog. Know before you sign on that your genre is a fit for this blog's followers. You don't want to post erotic romance on a sweet romance blog. You also likely won't want to post paranormal on a contemporary blog.
Be Polite. Follow all the guidelines the Host Blog provides. They are hosting you so its the least you can do. Most will tell you when they need your post and how they want it provided.
Be Aware. Know what the format of your host blog is. You will want to submit the correct things the host blog regularly includes. For example, know if they include a book cover or a banner. Can you include an excerpt? What length?
Be Knowledgeable. It's about more than self-promotion. We all need to promote our books but most blogs are looking for more content in a blog post. Unless agreed upon otherwise, your post should have a topic for discussion. Write about something you have knowledge on - maybe a topic that fits with your latest book.
Be Connected. Include links back to your own website or blog when relevant to your post. Back links will connect your blog to the host blog and benefit both. Use these links to reference prior posts on similar subjects.
Be Loud. Follow up on you guest post by promoting it on your own social media outlets. Visit the host blog on the day of your post to respond to comments and interact with followers. One idea I use sometimes when guest blogging is to write a brief post on my own blog that drives traffic to my guest post. This sends my followers to a new blog they might enjoy.
Paloma
Paloma Beck is a Romance Author living a life of contradiction... she's a happily married carpooling mom writing sexy romance. It's almost naughty! Paloma writes full-time and has three series in the works with others on the fringes. Her books span both the contemporary and paranormal romance genres.
Paloma serves as MFRW's Blog Director.
Sunday, September 7, 2014
Interviews for Newsletters
Back again. This
month I’m talking about how to do interviews for your newsletters. Interviewing an author for your newsletter is
basically the same as doing so for a blog.
However, if you’re printing your newsletters and mailing them out or if
you want to keep them to a format that looks like a page, you have space issues
that differ from those involved in posting a blog.
As far as the questions go, they’re pretty much the
same. “How did you start writing?” “What inspires you?” “What is your ‘process’?” And the fun ones—“Long, hot, sudsy bath or
steamy shower?” “Steak or lobster?” “Chocolate or Cheesecake?” “If you were stranded on a desert island…”
Or, you can interview a character. “Why do you think someone would write a story
about you?” “Tell me about your hero. How
did you meet him?” “Why don’t you think
your relationship with him will work?”
What other material do you plan to use? A blurb from your guest's book? An excerpt? Buy links?
Contact info? It helps to figure out in advance how much space you have
in your newsletter and how much space you can give to each item. Back in the days of electric typewriters, one
page of pica type double-spaced equaled three-hundred words. Using Garamond 11 point type, justified with
1.15 line spacing, I can fit about 200 words in a text box that measures 5.5
inches wide by 4 inches tall.
How long your interviews, blurbs, or excerpts run will
depend on whether you want to start them on one page and finish on another. If you do so, don’t forget to add (To be
continued) at the bottom of the first page, and (Continued from Page *) at the
beginning of the piece when you pick it up on another page. I suggest you present intros to both your
guest and a taste of what you’re doing on you’re doing on your front page, and
then get to the meat of your interview, blurb, excerpt, etc., on the inside.
It helps to set up a template to work from and a submission
page you can send to your guests so you don’t have to type the same thing over
and over. You could maybe come up with
twenty questions and ask them to chose five to answer, and then provide space
for their blurb and excerpt, letting them know the word count you can
accommodate.
In journalism, there are two major principles: the six Ws—Who, What, Where, When, Why and
How, and the Inverted Pyramid. Always
give the meat of the story first, and then go into details later. The smaller the detail, the farther down the
page it belongs. That’s why journalists
fight for headlines and stories on Page 1 “above the fold.” The six Ws are in a specific order, which
should not be tampered with. People want
to know who did what to whom. Next they
want to know where and then when. They’re less interested in why or how. That info can go on page three below the
fold.
Now, I’d like you to meet my next Assistant Editor, Barbara
Donlon Bradley.
Writing for Barbara Donlon Bradley started innocently enough.
Like most she kept diaries, journals, and wrote an occasional letter, but she
also had a vivid imagination and wrote scenes and short stories adding
characters to her favorite shows and comic books. As time went on she found the
passion for writing to be a strong drive for her. Humor is also very strong in
her life. No matter how hard she tries to write something deep and dark, it
will never happen. That humor bleeds into her writing. Since she can’t beat it
she has learned to use it to her advantage. Now she lives in Tidewater Virginia
with two cats, one mother in law—she’s 85 now—her husband, and teenage son.
Friday, September 5, 2014
MFRW Facebook Group: Facilitating Guest Blogging @Emerald_theGLD #MFRWauthor
Greetings all! Before I get started, I’d like to again give a shout out of thanks to Kayelle Allen, MFRW’s founder, for covering for me here on the fifth of last month while I was on vacation. Because that’s what kind of an awesome leader Kayelle is. :)
Thus far in this series, I’ve talked about my responsibilities as the moderator of the MFRW Facebook group. Starting with this post, I’ll be branching out and covering aspects of Facebook more generally, given that I feel as though I’ve covered now much of what’s involved in moderating a group (though if you do have questions about moderation, by all means please feel free to mention them in a comment, and I’ll be happy to address them!).
This month’s topic comes to us courtesy of Paloma Beck, MFRW’s Blog Director, who mentioned to me that some members might be wondering about this particular Facebook function.
The MFRW Facebook group houses a document that allows members who host guest authors on their blogs to enter their blog information into said document for other members’ reference. In other words, the file is a centrally-kept source of places that offer cover reveals, spotlight features, etc., that is updated in real time whenever anyone edits it and is available for any group member to see or edit.
So, if you have a blog and are open to posting guest posts and would like other members to know that, feel free to enter your information into the sheet! Here’s how:
1) From the MFRW Facebook group page, go to the horizontal menu bar just below the header photo across the top of the page. Click the last entry, which is “Files.”
2) Locate the file titled “GUEST OPPORTUNITIES on Member Blogs” and click on it.
3) After you click, find the “Edit” button (with the little pencil icon next to the word on the button itself) in the upper-right corner of the document. Click that.
4) Enter your information in the format previous listers have used. An easy way to do this is to highlight the most recent entry, copy it, and paste it a line or two above that entry. Then delete that member’s information (leaving the category labels) and fill in your own.
If you have a new release and are seeking blogs where you could guest post or do a cover reveal, etc., this document is a great resource. To find it, simply follow steps one and two above!
Before I go (I saved the announcement for last this time :)), I do want to say that the MFRW Facebook group reached—and quickly surpassed—the 4,000 member landmark since my last Facebook-related post here! Thanks to all the members for making it such a growing, active group.
Until next time!
Emerald
Emerald is an erotic fiction author whose short stories have been featured in anthologies published by Cleis Press, Mischief, and Logical-Lust. She serves as an assistant newsletter editor and Facebook group moderator for Marketing for Romance Writers (MFRW), and she selects and posts the monthly inspirational quote on the MFRW Marketing Blog. Find out more about her at her website, The Green Light District.
Thus far in this series, I’ve talked about my responsibilities as the moderator of the MFRW Facebook group. Starting with this post, I’ll be branching out and covering aspects of Facebook more generally, given that I feel as though I’ve covered now much of what’s involved in moderating a group (though if you do have questions about moderation, by all means please feel free to mention them in a comment, and I’ll be happy to address them!).
This month’s topic comes to us courtesy of Paloma Beck, MFRW’s Blog Director, who mentioned to me that some members might be wondering about this particular Facebook function.
The MFRW Facebook group houses a document that allows members who host guest authors on their blogs to enter their blog information into said document for other members’ reference. In other words, the file is a centrally-kept source of places that offer cover reveals, spotlight features, etc., that is updated in real time whenever anyone edits it and is available for any group member to see or edit.
So, if you have a blog and are open to posting guest posts and would like other members to know that, feel free to enter your information into the sheet! Here’s how:
1) From the MFRW Facebook group page, go to the horizontal menu bar just below the header photo across the top of the page. Click the last entry, which is “Files.”
2) Locate the file titled “GUEST OPPORTUNITIES on Member Blogs” and click on it.
3) After you click, find the “Edit” button (with the little pencil icon next to the word on the button itself) in the upper-right corner of the document. Click that.
4) Enter your information in the format previous listers have used. An easy way to do this is to highlight the most recent entry, copy it, and paste it a line or two above that entry. Then delete that member’s information (leaving the category labels) and fill in your own.
If you have a new release and are seeking blogs where you could guest post or do a cover reveal, etc., this document is a great resource. To find it, simply follow steps one and two above!
Before I go (I saved the announcement for last this time :)), I do want to say that the MFRW Facebook group reached—and quickly surpassed—the 4,000 member landmark since my last Facebook-related post here! Thanks to all the members for making it such a growing, active group.
Until next time!
Emerald
Emerald is an erotic fiction author whose short stories have been featured in anthologies published by Cleis Press, Mischief, and Logical-Lust. She serves as an assistant newsletter editor and Facebook group moderator for Marketing for Romance Writers (MFRW), and she selects and posts the monthly inspirational quote on the MFRW Marketing Blog. Find out more about her at her website, The Green Light District.
Wednesday, September 3, 2014
3 Cool Giveaway Ideas for New Books @kayelleallen #MFRWauthor #amwriting
I recommend giving away something other than a book. If you give
away what you're trying to sell, who's going to buy? NY publishers spend thousands
of dollars giving away books on shows like Today, Good Morning America, Ellen, and
so on. If you don't have that kind of budget, what can you do?
Some authors hold Rafflecopter contests, but not every
reader will sign up for them (I don't like them and won't sign up for one) and some authors don't like them. Even if you do use it, what are you going to give away?
Deleted Scenes Mini Book
Did you cut some beloved scenes from your book? Put them together,
write a brief explanation for the reason you cut it, and create a mini book. Even
a few pages are fine. Format it well. Include: an image of your cover, the blurb
for the book, buy links, links for your social media and newsletter.
Remember when including social media this way -- if you're on Twitter, this is not the place to use
@kayelleallen -- clicking that does nothing. Use the full URL so it becomes an
active link. http://twitter.com/kayelleallen Save the document as an rtf if you plan to share it online, or
better yet, as a pdf.
Puzzle Booklets
The Last Vhalgenn |
I've had success with giveaway puzzle books. I like Word Search
puzzles myself, and discovered a site that lets me make and download them. http://puzzlemaker.discoveryeducation.com/WordSearchSetupForm.asp
After creating it (choose the
text option), copy and paste it into your word processing program. Be sure to copy
the solution page as well. I have a free app that lets me turn that into a pdf,
and I can use the puzzle as a giveaway. I created a set of puzzles for each book,
and combined them to make one big puzzle book. I also have pdf puzzles for each
individual book.
Create an Inside Peek Booklet
Another thing I did for my book The Last Vhalgenn was create a booklet about
the book itself. I included trivia about the story, the cover, pictures (make sure
they are licensed and/or royalty free), an excerpt, and buy links. I also added
my social media links. Click here to see the finished product. http://is.gd/vhalgenn_peek
I hope this has sparked a few ideas. I'd love to hear your
creative solutions. Please post them in the comments.
---
Kayelle Allen is the founder of Marketing for Romance
Writers. She is a multi-published,
award-winning author, and the owner of The Author's Secret, an author support
company. Her unstoppable heroes and heroines include contemporary
characters, futuristic immortals,
covert agents, and warriors who purr.
Homeworld http://kayelleallen.com
Unstoppable Heroes Blog http://kayelleallen.com/blog
Twitter http://twitter.com/kayelleallen
The Author's Secret https://theauthorssecret.com
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