What Every Writer Needs?
I was sent this great list of social networking created by Chris Brogen, thanks to Russ Henneberry for providing the link.
It sounds like alot, because it IS a lot. There is so much that goes into being a sucessful writer. The days of writing a book and sitting back letting the publisher do all the advertising is gone. The author’s following is as (or more) important than the book following. I am exahusted just thinking about all that I need to do. It’s so hard with a family and full time job. I can’t even find time to write, how am I going to do the rest?
Here are some authors that do a great job:
Jackson Pierce, Stephanie Pellgerin, Erin Healy (no blog but love her site), Alex Boles (my sister!), I also follow multiple lit agents most importantly Rachelle Gardner. She has my full manuscript. I am waiting to hear what she thinks.

Social Media Monster
An Author’s Plan for Social Media
- Set up a URL for the book, and/or maybe one for your name. Need help finding a URL? I use Ajaxwhois.com for simple effort in searching.
- Set up a blog. If you want it free and super fast, WordPress or Tumblr. I’d recommend getting hosting like Bloghost.me.
- On the blog, write about interesting things that pertain to the book, but don’t just promote the book over and over again. In fact, blow people away by promoting their blogs and their books, if they’re related a bit.
- Start an email newsletter. It’s amazing how much MORE responsive email lists are than any other online medium.
- Have a blog post that’s a list of all the places one might buy your book. I did this for both Trust Agents and Social Media 101.
- Make any really important links trackable with a URL shortener. I know exactly how many people click my links.
- Start listening for your name, your book’s name. ( Covered in this post about building blocks.)
- Consider recording a video trailer for your book. Here’s one from Scott Sigler (YouTube), for his horror thriller, Contagious. And here’s one from Dallas Clayton for his Awesome Book. (Thanks Naomi for pointing this out).
- Build a Facebook fan page for the book or for bonus points, build one around the topic the book covers, and only lightly promote the book via the page.
- Join Twitter under your name, not your book’s name, and use Twitter Search to find people who talk about the subjects your book covers.
- When people talk about your book, good or bad, thank them with a reply. Connect to people frequently. It’s amazing how many authors I rave about on Twitter and how few actually respond. Mind you, the BIGGEST authors always respond (paradox?)
- Use Google Blogsearch and Alltop to find the people who’d likely write about the subject matter your book covers. Get commenting on their blog posts but NOT mentioning your book. Get to know them. Leave USEFUL comments, with no blatant URL back to your book.
- Work with your publisher for a blogger outreach project. See if you can do a giveaway project with a few bloggers (here’s a book giveaway project I did for Donald Miller’s A Million Miles in a Thousand Years book).
- Offer to write guest posts on blogs that make sense as places where potential buyers might be. Do everything you can to make the post match the content of the person’s site and not your goals. But do link to your book.
- Ask around for radio or TV contacts via the social web and LinkedIn. You never know.
- Come up with interesting reasons to get people to buy bulk orders. If you’re a speaker, waive your fee (or part of it) in exchange for sales of hundreds of books. (And spread those purchases around to more than one bookselling company.) In those giveaways, do something to promote links back to your site and/or your post. Giveaways are one time: Google Juice is much longer lasting.
- Whenever someone writes a review on their blog, thank them with a comment, and maybe 1 tweet, but don’t drown them in tweets pointing people to the review. It just never comes off as useful.
- Ask gently for Amazon and other distribution site reviews. They certainly do help the buying process. And don’t ask often.
- Do everything you can to be gracious and thankful to your readers. Your audience is so much more important than you in this equation, as there are more of them than there are of you.
- Start showing up at face to face events, where it makes sense, including tweetups. If there’s not a local tweetup, start one.
- And with all things, treat people like you’d want them to treat your parents (provided you had a great relationship with at least one of them).
Brandi
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Oh wow! Thanks for mentioning me! I always get excited when someone calls me an author.
1 Stephanie said this (June 7, 2010 at 4:19 pm)
You are welcome! Publication is a formality, I believe being an author is a state of mind
2 Brandi Schmidt said this (June 9, 2010 at 8:53 am)
I think the key here is not to get overwhelmed — start SOMEWHERE — don’t freeze up and get paralyzed — just get started somewhere.
3 Russ Henneberry said this (June 3, 2010 at 12:23 pm)
Thanks Russ! I am glad you are a friend.
4 Brandi Schmidt said this (June 7, 2010 at 8:11 am)