Author’s Top 5 Writing and Marketing Tips
marketing
Samuel Valme
Advice & How To Cooking
8 days

Successfully marketing your book to the leadership community requires a targeted approach that focuses on providing valuable content, building credibility, and leveraging relevant platforms. By understanding the specific needs and interests of the leadership community, you can tailor your marketing efforts to effectively reach and engage with this audience. Here are five book marketing tips and insights, specifically tailored to reaching the leadership community:

1. Define Your Target Audience: To effectively market your book to the leadership community, it's crucial to clearly define your target audience within this community. Consider the specific subgroups or niches within leadership, such as executives, entrepreneurs, or aspiring leaders. Understanding their interests, challenges, and aspirations will help you tailor your marketing messages and reach the right people.

2. Leverage Thought Leadership Platforms: Position yourself as a thought leader by utilizing various platforms that cater to the leadership community. Start by creating a blog or website where you can share valuable insights, practical advice, and thought-provoking content related to leadership. Engage in guest posting on influential leadership blogs, contribute articles to relevant publications, and actively participate in leadership-focused forums and communities.

3. Build an Author Platform: Establishing a strong online presence as an author is essential for marketing your book to the leadership community. Create profiles on social media platforms such as LinkedIn and Twitter, where many leaders actively engage. Share valuable content, engage with your audience, and build relationships with influencers and industry experts. Consider hosting webinars or virtual events focused on leadership topics to further establish your expertise.

4. Seek Endorsements and Reviews: Endorsements and positive reviews from recognized leaders in the industry can significantly boost your book's credibility and attract the attention of the leadership community. Reach out to influential leaders, industry experts, and fellow authors who align with your book's themes and request endorsements or reviews. Offer them a complimentary copy of your book and express how their support will help impact and inspire other leaders.

5. Participate in Leadership Conferences and Events: Engaging in leadership conferences, industry events, and workshops provide a great opportunity to connect with your target audience directly. Attend these events as a speaker, panelist, or exhibitor, and leverage the platform to showcase your book. Offer special discounts or promotions for attendees, distribute promotional materials, and engage in networking to build relationships with potential readers and collaborators.

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writing
Lorenzo Davis
Biographies & Memoirs
1 month

The first thing that an aspiring writer needs to know is identity;the second thing that a writer needs to know is the specific reality that gives birth to the elements of the equality:that is definition is general choice while discretion is unknown productivity and known discernment only imagines reality to acknowledged visible and invisible inspirational qualities. Therefore the writer must have a goal (1) to advance methodology in how utility is correlated. (2) to guide theology in rational interests. (3) to draw perspectives from facts; objectivity and meaning witnesses two confounding variables; (4) comfortable reflection, and (5) evident reporting: These are compassionate events that describe compassion as a marketing guild created to focus the guide in future written expeditions of art, noted crafts that predict the practice itself, which eliminates confirmation bias.

    • Lorenzo Davis Lorenzo Davis 1 month ago
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    • (1) Communicate knowledge about the futility of the community and you will see your vision become your mission.

      (2) Never be afraid to conquer the appearance that logic of the game of marketing knows all to well.

      (3) Unionize your model of approach to authenticate priority services of indictment and marginal awareness to the simplicity of your content message as a whole unique rhythm.

      (4) Asked questions that you have already experienced yourself-- having the answers to.

      (5) Rest for Intent; that is if nothing more practical could be hilarious and jovial, then resting is a cult.

      Finally Stop: and read what others have to say.

      (777) Marketing is a contract between the noble political class and the culturally exhibited community; that is promotion is defined as an enigma to the picture that links media to the proper chain of command.
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writing
Suzanne Catalano
Contemporary Romance Romance
1 month

(1)When I am driving, I am in my most thoughtful and meditative state of mind. The voice in my head wants to be heard, and some of it is pure gold, some is garbage. I use a dictation app to capture my thoughts. I find that by taking out the process of typing, conjugating and editing my thoughts stay better on track.

(2)When I read books by others, I pay attention to how they develop characters, plots, etc. I remember what works well and what does not. From this practice, I hone my own skills regarding these elements.

(3)When writing, I do well in cool, quiet places. (4)When editing, I can be in a busy environment. I can hear music. (5)When I have 'writers block', I pause to sort M&Ms. I often have a bag of M&Ms on hand and I eat them by color; first all the reds, then the blues, yellows, and so on. The process of sorting often gets the words flowing before I run out of colors.

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writing
Ellen Notbohm
Historical Fiction Literary Fiction
1 month

1. Listen at least as much as you write. Writing without listening to the people, elements and sensations around you is preaching. I listen to my world constantly, with all my senses and sensibilities. I find I don’t learn much when I’m doing all the talking.

2. Don’t get bogged down with rules or guidelines that may apply to others but not you. There’s no magic number of words or minutes you must write per day, no standard length a chapter or a book should be, no words you should never use. Trust your rhythms and instincts. Avoid absolutes like must, always, or never.

3. Reject sabotaging language. The lexicon of writing and publishing is fraught with negatives like rejection, writer’s block, false start. Reframe these energy drainers as tools. Rejection is a favor from a publisher who wasn’t going to do right by your work — a bullet dodged. Writer’s block is an invitation to take time to refill your creative well, consider directions previously unexplored. There’s no such thing as a false start, but there are warm-ups, practice, creative experimentation, freewriting. I frequently remind myself to not be my own biggest obstacle.

4. Dream in stages. All writing starts with a sentence. Sentences become paragraphs, paragraphs form scenes, scenes make up chapters, and the totality of the chapters renders a book. To miss the joy of creating beautiful sentences that then flow into paragraphs, and on to scenes, etc. is, to me, to miss the point of writing at all.

5. Don’t compartmentalize your writing. A wise mentor many years ago wrote these word to live by: “Expand your definition of what it means ‘to be writing’ if your definition doesn’t include daydreaming, false starts, walks in the woods, reading or watching a bird. You can be ‘working on a piece’ in many different ways.”

[This is condensed from my interview with Authority magazine titled Five Things You Need to Know to Become a Great Author. Also available on my blog The Writer by Starlight.]

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writing
Jacqueline Turner
Suspense Action & Adventure
1 month

1. Write from the heart
2. Try and imagine how you would feel in the characters situations
3. If you’re experiencing writers block, don’t give up! Everyone gets stuck sometimes, you just have to take a break and clear your mind before writing again.
4. Writing is about emotion, ideas, and beliefs. It’s about conveying your thoughts from your mind to a reader, not creating an action-packed scene just for shock value. Unless if you’re Shakespeare, then you can do both.
5. Read, read, read. A good writer wouldn’t know how to write if they hadn’t read the books to influence them first.

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writing
Terri Greening
Thriller Suspense
2 months

1. Find a place to write.
2. Set it up the way you want.
3. Keep it for yourself no matter what.
4. Try to write a little bit every day at least five days a week.
5. Read everything you can.

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writing
Lorenzo Davis
Biographies & Memoirs
2 months

Eat a healthy meal whenever you have accrued 7 hours of writing. This law was created by Yahshua who was taught writing by Allah. Surah Al-Ma'idah - 110 [The Day] when Allāh will say, "O Jesus, Son of Mary, remember My favor upon you and upon your mother when I supported you with the Pure Spirit [i.e., the angel Gabriel] and you spoke to the people in the cradle and in maturity; and [remember] when I taught you writing and wisdom and the Torah and the Gospel; and when you designed from clay [what was] like the form of a bird with My permission, then you breathed into it, and it became a bird with My permission; and you healed the blind [from birth] and the leper with My permission; and when you brought forth the dead with My permission; and when I restrained the Children of Israel from [killing] you when you came to them with clear proofs and those who disbelieved among them said, "This is not but obvious magic."

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writing
Carla Mulcahy
Romantic Suspense Romance
2 months

Set aside time to write every day and pick time that you are only focused on your writing.
Write all ideas down in a journal. Even if you think they aren't great ideas, you can turn them into great ideas to a new story. If you experience writer's block, put things aside and take time for yourself to just relax, regroup, and come back to it later.
Write about topics that you love and use your creative mind to make them great. I write my ending to the story before I write the whole book so that in my mind I know where the flow of the story needs to take me. I also choose a title to the book after the story is completed and try to match the title to a summary of what the book is most focused on.
I found that it is important to create your characters and keep notes on each of them so that it stays consistent throughout your book. I noticed I spelled the name differently in the book and did not notice that, and Grammarly is what I used wouldn't pick that up because technically it isn't spelled wrong. Proofread many times before submitting it for final. Happy writing everyone!

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M L Tompsett
New Adult Romance Paranormal Romance
4 months

1. Write what you love
2. If you're able - write the genre which is popular - this method is not always certain.
3. Home work. Research your characters - their careers, their medical history, even their clothing and cars. - Readers pick up on what is fact and what is fiction when it comes to certain topics.
4. If you think you are finished your manuscript, put it aside for a couple of weeks then go back over it. You will pick up mistakes, typos and rewrite paragraphs. Or change chapters. Look at it with fresh eyes.
5. Bad reviews are wasted words. Most of the bad one-or-two-star reviews are trolls copying and pasting a standard scripted paragraph to make you look bad. Did they even buy your book or read it? Never take a bad review to heart. If it is a real review - what are the positives to it? Or maybe use it to your advantage in your social media posts. Turn it around and make a negative to a positive and create new sales

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writing
Kiersten Marcil
Historical Romance Time Travel Romance
4 months

1. Have regular office hours dedicated to your literary career. Use those hours to write, research, market, grow your website, or even read other books in your genre. Just do something related to your writing during that time, preferably daily, even when you don't want to.
2. Ignore word count goals (unless they really do help motivate you). So many authors get so down on themselves because they didn't meet their word count goals. Hence why I think office hours are better because it focuses on progress not checking off tally marks that are not always achievable. So, even if you only have ten minutes during lunch, those are your hours, and all other snuck-in hours are bonus.
3. Give yourself permission to write garbage. Just write, write something, write some more. Don't be afraid of what is on the page. That's what revisions are for. First drafts are just about throwing up brain stuff and splattering it onto the page.
4. Keep a separate document (mine is called "potpourri") where you keep all the stuff you cut. Make sure to include chapter dividers in the body so you know where cut material came from. You never know when you will be able to reuse that material or might want to reinsert parts of it. Plus, "deleted scenes" make great content for newsletters.
5. Tried & true, so I repeat what has often been said: every scene must advance the story or the characters' story arc. If it doesn't do one of those things, be ruthless. You may love it, but it's like that bad ex- who strings you along, making you think it's good for you, when really that scene is just going to hurt you in the end. Cut and run. :)

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Lily Lawson
Literary Fiction Poetry
4 months

1. Only you can tell your story. Same applies to everyone else.
2. If you get stuck, change it up. Sometimes it helps remove the block. Try writing at a different time, in a different place or with a different medium. Maybe write something else for a while.
3. Writing does not have to be linear. Writing chapters out of sync may help or moving them around may make the story work better.
4. Don't wait for inspiration to strike, sit down and start,
5. Don't beat yourself up if you need to take a break or aren't as productive as usual, it will come back.

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marketing
Lily Lawson
Literary Fiction Poetry
4 months

1. You are marketing you not a particular book. Just because someone doesn't like one of your books it doesn't mean they won't like any of them.
2. Each book is unique - while some things may work for more than one book you may need to think a little differently each time.
3. Don't go to the same well too often, it will dry up. Have a few ideas up your sleeve to rotate.
4. Don't be afraid to try something new, you never know it might work.
5, If it's free and relevant do it. Marketing can be expensive, save where you can.

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Daniel DeMille
Science Fiction Teen & Young Adult
4 months

1. Make writing a daily habit.
2. Write in scheduled time blocks.
3. Take regular breaks - it's good to rest the eyes!
4. Allow inspiration to come from a variety of sources, sometimes unexpected ones too.
5. Consider trying writing sprints where you keep pace with other authors. For example, I've used https://wordsprints.org/sprints to help me keep up my writing pace.

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marketing
Daniel DeMille
Science Fiction Teen & Young Adult
4 months

1. Consistency pays off.
2. Authenticity and relevance are key.
3. Diversifying marketing channels has multiple benefits.
4. Patience and persistence can be rewarded at unexpected moments.
5. Choose to enjoy the journey every day.

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AuthorBaRose
Supernatural Suspense Contemporary Romance
4 months

Write every day even if it's just a paragraph
Don't compare yourself to anyone else.
Learn as much as you can from reading
Don't expect your book to be perfect. Editing is important.
Don't get discouraged. It takes time to evolve.

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