Monday, 21 November 2011

The Business Of Being A Writer

I have a notoriously faulty memory, to the point where I will call family members on their birthday, not to congratulate them but to talk about some mundane subject I had been meaning to call about. Diaries rarely work, normally they end in some hidey hole I don’t find until I move house. So I have taken to writing things on my hand with pen in a bid to appear organised, and on occasion, prompt my memory. Today’s reminder came in the form of BC.

After rejecting several meanings, both religious and otherwise, I finally remembered what it stood for: Business Card. Writers rarely think of what they do as a business, that every person they meet, from the pretty girl behind the counter of the cupcake store, to the editor who gives them 2 mins to pitch their novel, is a potential champion of their book, their information and a possible link to media coverage. For indie authors this can be vital, because most people will keep a business card over anything else given to them. They are terrific promotional tools because they are inexpensive. They are also terrific icebreakers and informational aids.

A business card has to have a specific purpose, and as a published/self-published writer I would recommend you have two. One specifically for your e-book or book, and the other for you as a writer and (if writing non-fiction) an expert. My business card’s purpose was to establish myself as an expert writer and e-book specialist and to recruit Joint Venture partners to help me sell my e-book. You will remember from my previous posts, that a Joint Venture partner is part of your army of promoters. They do not promote you to get that pleasant fuzzy feeling inside; they will promote you in exchange for you giving them part of the profits. If you give them money to help they will move heaven and earth to promote you through social media, on t-shirts, in song... You take advantage of the people they know, to become more widely read and recognised.

The result of my efforts is below:



On the front of the business card I have the cover of my e-book – simple and eye catching, done by a professional cover designer, not my next door neighbour’s two year old. I have the name of my e-book and a six word pitch or ‘silver-bullet’ that tells people exactly what the book is about. It is short and concise and does not include the entire storyline of my novel or dramatic and unnecessary words like ‘stupendous’ and ‘so funny it will make your socks fall off!’. It gives my name and expertise along with my phone number (more relevant if you are recruiting your promotion army in your own country), email, blog and the webpage where I currently sell my e-book. The colours of my information match the colours of my book cover.

On the back of the card I have my pitch once more, along with my websites and my social media information (Twitter, and when it’s up and running, Facebook will join the party). The most important feature of this whole card is the QR code. This code takes the scanner not to the ramblings of my blog but to my e-book page with my whole pitch including bonuses, extras and samples. At the bottom of the card it tells smart phone users where they can download a QR code reader if they don’t have one. If they don’t have a smart phone, they can manually look up the websites printed next to it.

A business card specifically for your book has just as much potential, with the QR code going to a Youtube video of your book trailer, or to three sample chapters of your novel. The best part is you can change which web address your QR code points to. So if you hand out a card and three months down the track you decide you may have been a little racist in your first trailer, you can direct the person to a different trailer with a couple of clicks in your QR code generator. On a business card for your book you want to have the name of your novel, the publisher’s name if you have one, your 6 or 7 word pitch, the cover image, your contact information and your book’s website. Have your own author website and pick only one of the websites that sells your novel, you don’t want your card crowded with the sites of all your sellers in letters no-one can read.

There are ads all the time on ebay promoting 250 free business cards and all you have to pay is postage. So no more excuses! While your e-book may be digital, your promotion should not be restricted to the screen. There are so many networking opportunities out there, conventions, festivals, talks and courses that you cannot afford to hand people your information on a piece of scrap paper.

My recent novel a comedy set in Facebook, The Grand Adventures of Madeline Cain, is available at http://emilycraven.bkclb.co/the-grand-adventures-of-madeline-cainYou can also purchase E-Book Revolution: The Ultimate Guide to E-Book Success at http://emilycraven.bkclb.co/e-book-revolution-the-ultimate-guide-to-e-book-success.

8 comments:

  1. This was a very interesting post. I have recently designed my own business cards after having done some research on what formats seem to work best. It has helped develop the image my co-author and I are creating for our middle grade novel, The Secret DMS Files of Fairday Morrow. There are so many amazing tools out there to build your brand with today- I used VistaPrint for my cards and was very pleased with the outcome. I'm a new follower! Glad I stopped by : )
    ~ Jess
    GFC Follower, Fairday Morrow
    http://thesecretdmsfilesoffairdaymorrow.blogspot.com/

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    1. Hi Fairday,

      Get to have you along! VistaPrint is where I do mine from too and I agree they are very reasonable for what they produce. It's great to see others realising the importance of business in the writing profession!

      Warmly,

      Emily

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    1. Thanks for the comments Dianna,

      Just to let you know why I removed your post: I don't mind authors mentioning the name of their books or sending people to their website or page, but I'm not too keen on people trying to sell their books from my blog by giving the amazon link. But I have done a revamp of your post below, leaving the name of your book in:

      Cheers,

      Emily

      Dianna Bellerose:

      Thank you for your post, it is very helpful. I did my business cards with Vista Print, and I love it. Here it is a link to my book: Fire and Ice by Diana Bellerose

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    1. Hi Patrick,

      I want to thank you very much for the detailed comment. I'm not sure if you have seen the rest of my blog entries but they cover most of the things on your list including the number one "write a good book". I wanted to give a quick explanation as to why I have removed your post and reposted it below minus the numberous amazon links. It's great you are so enthusiastic about amazon, and I know most authors make most of their money from them, but i'm not interested in promoting them as the sole place you should be putting your ebooks, that's just setting yourself up to be hemmed into a big corporate corner. You should not allow anyone to be the sole distributer of your book, because that is what has lead to traditionally published authors getting pennies for their hard work. Amazon is working a good model now, but it does not mean it will continue to do so forever. Brian Pratt, a successful indie author noted that though Barnes and Noble don't sell as many of his books as Amazon, he still gets thousands of dollars a month through them, not an amount to be coughed at, and it gives those who don't own a Kindle the chance to read his books too. I also wanted to repost it because it was quite hard to read because the lines were so short!

      In regards to editing, formatting, covers, I totally agree hiring professionals to help is the best way to success, however even hiring professionals you have to have a heavy hand in the editing and covers, a professional will not magically whip it into shape for you, it's the same when you are traditionally published, you need to provide descriptions, visions and rework the manuscript based on an editors comments. A successful author has a careful eye over all aspects, even if they are boring, because they are essential.

      Thanks again for stopping by.

      Cheers,

      Emily

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    2. FROM PATRICK

      Hello.

      I am not a big fan of business cards to sell/promote your ebook ---i think the focus should be to "write a GOOD book in a strong niche" that people will enjoy and/or find useful and helpful to their lives !

      However,very happy you are encouraging POTENTIAL ebook authors to join THE EBOOK REVOLUTION in 2011 and beyond !

      There is no better time to join the e-book revolution---NOW is CERTAINLY the time.

      However,if you want to become a BESTSELLING EBOOK AUTHOR
      or make AT LEAST $500 to $3,000 USA funds monthly from your ebook,you MUST have the "Sweet 7" or :( What is mandatory for Kindle,etc. ebookstore or financial success !!)

      1) Write well

      2) Get Professional ebook editing

      3) Get Professional ebook formatting

      4) Get a Professional ebook cover( visually stunning/appealing)

      5) A good or appealing,enjoyable,interesting "author biography"

      6) A great ebook (story) description ( WHY i should buy your fiction or non-fiction ebook ??!)

      7) Learn about EBOOK marketing,ebook promotion,and social media (Twitter,Facebook,Youtube) for authors/bloggers.

      As an ebook author,you should 100% FOCUS on writing well
      (and learning from other successful/popular/noteworthy
      ebook writing blogs !!! ) and leave the TIME-WASTING,
      BORING,tedious,difficult or onerous work of editing,covers and formatting to EXPERIENCED ebook professionals or you will get easily discouraged ANDhighly stressed by the EBOOK PUBLISHING process !!

      Rule One:
      Write a good book!(What is good writing
      or a good ebook ??)It must be VERY enjoyable,interesting,
      entertaining, informative,enlightening,USEFUL & HELPFUL (if non-fiction)among many other things,including having the proper spelling,correct grammar (putting the right words
      in the right order),etc.

      A good fiction or non-fiction ebook author is a good storyteller !Great writing COUNTS !

      As Joe Konrath says----at the end of the day, the one thing that truly matters is writing a good story.Because without that,there is nothing to sell.

      More Joe Konrath wisdom---A successful writer is one who can
      defend every single word in their story.Because the ones they can't defend should get cut.

      Amazon is where you may reach your largest audience of potential readers, so you should first focus on publishing on Kindle Direct.For new,aspiring & experienced ebook authors----Why Amazon's KDP or the Kindle ebookstore ?? Many OUTSTANDING & logical reasons !!

      MEGA loved by the Google search engine,VERY quick author payments,amazing Amazon sales algorithms,EASY & free self-publishing,high ebook royalties AND "if you can make it there you can make it anywhere" ( not that you want to OR need to !).I think most ebook authors should focus ONLY on the bigger ebookstores and NOT waste their PRECIOUS/VALUABLE time on INEFFECTIVELY selling their ebook through other UNPOPULAR or low traffic sales channels,including their blog,website,minor ebook retailers,etc.!!However,to EACH THEIR OWN !!

      In other words,a potential BESTSELLING EBOOK AUTHOR(You ??!!!!!!!)should try to-----FOCUS your efforts & time
      WHERE the greatest RESULTS & REWARDS are !!

      No one is getting YOUNGER,including myself (and yourself,etc.) !!(you have a LIMITED time on Earth, so you should MAXIMIZE your time,resources,energy,results/money & efforts )!

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