tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5037107797013641705.post7767022508360967130..comments2024-03-26T05:15:39.663-07:00Comments on Equestrian Ink: The Power of Promotion and a Book ReviewJami Davenporthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05259390150273030284noreply@blogger.comBlogger9125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5037107797013641705.post-77970151465524058962012-09-14T12:43:24.651-07:002012-09-14T12:43:24.651-07:00I am chuckling, because if I had followed the advi...I am chuckling, because if I had followed the advice Dame Margot gave you, I would never have become an equestrian! Not only am I horribly "duck-footed" while walking, my hip joints are actually aligned so that when mounted, I'm physically unable to turn my toes in while my heels are down. Doesn't work. This caused no end of frustration to my childhood riding instructors, let me tell you! So I would obviously have been better off as a ballerina. Too bad I've never had the slightest interest... :-)RiderWriterhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05679157278313699794noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5037107797013641705.post-56450901581075860342012-09-03T05:51:10.828-07:002012-09-03T05:51:10.828-07:00Maggie--thanks for adding a push to us authors to ...Maggie--thanks for adding a push to us authors to help promote other authors. I hear stories about diva writers who are bullies about their books and themselves and it gives authors a bad name. Most of us are like you--eager to support each other!<br /><br />Laura, I agree that promotion doesn't always work, but I've also met relentless children's authors who make a living on school visits, which they promote to the hilt and which sell tons of books for them. So I guess it goes both ways. Alisonhttp://www.alisonhartbooks.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5037107797013641705.post-90478913809184978532012-09-02T10:50:10.581-07:002012-09-02T10:50:10.581-07:00I'd like to add one other point to this discus...I'd like to add one other point to this discussion. I have known several "mid-list" authors who did invest a lot of time and money (in the days when book tours were the main thing) in promotion--and many of them were dropped--despite all their efforts. So I have to say that in my experience promotion does not always help an author succeed. I think its pretty much true that without a lot of promotion you are VERY unlikely to become a "successful" author. But sadly, you can invest all that time and effort (and sometimes money)--which no one who has commented here seems to enjoy doing--and still not reap the rewards of success. There is a certain sort of extroverted author--I've met them--who really does seem to enjoy publicity work, and those are the enviable few. For them the stuff that the rest of us find so tedious is actually fun. I think I should hire one of these types as my stand-in(!)Laura Crumhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15200878892304748308noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5037107797013641705.post-15306856071442482872012-09-02T09:01:46.211-07:002012-09-02T09:01:46.211-07:00Linda hit the nail squarely on its head with this ...Linda hit the nail squarely on its head with this one:<br /><br />"The creative brain and the marketing brain are two different species ..."<br /><br />It's the same with muscles, and it's what my guest post is about (to appear later today, 9/3) that Linda and Laura kindly invited me to share with EI.<br /><br />I think we're all much better at promotion than we give ourselves credit for as long as we're promoting someone else's book! Look at the lovely article Alison has written about Six Degrees of Lost. This is one of many examples of authors promoting another author's book. <br /><br />I don't know about you guys, but I'm always giving shout-outs to books I love ... on Twitter, Facebook, and in person. I've even handed OABs (other authors' books) to strangers in bookshops or the library if I see them gazing at the shelves and perhaps wishing the fairy godmother of good books would recommend something. <br /><br />[brief pause while I fluff up my wings and recharge my wand]<br /><br />But when it comes to my own books? Not so much. I've sent them to book reviewers and I've set up a web site and a Facebook page, but then feel awkward about promoting them. <br /><br />So yes, it's about different parts of the brain and different muscles. Case in point you might enjoy: Many years ago, my daughter and I were lucky enough to meet ballerina, Margot Fonteyn, at Jacob's Pillow (courtesy of a relative who's very involved in the world of ballet). My daughter was ten and trying to decide between riding and dance lessons. Dame Margot said she'd faced exactly the same dilemma as a child. Then she stood up (oh, so gracefully) and demonstrated the two very different leg positions required for each activity. Toes and legs pointed straight ahead for riding; feet turn outward for ballet. She said, "You can do one or the other, but never both ... not if you want to succeed and enjoy yourself."<br /><br />And there you have it. Directly from a world-famous ballerina to the horse's mouth, as it were!Maggie Danahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09397320196343147825noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5037107797013641705.post-56131070627992403592012-09-02T07:59:18.058-07:002012-09-02T07:59:18.058-07:00Obviously, I am not the only one who finds promoti...Obviously, I am not the only one who finds promotion a creative buzzkill! Linda, I had no idea you were feeling burned out, too. Just keep focusing on the fact that you have three great books out--what an accomplishment!<br /><br />Laura, I know from past posts that you and I think alike on the whole promotion band wagon and how much we'd rather do ANYTHING else! Thanks for seconding the need for folks to post a short review for their favorite book -- on FB, Goodreads and their own blogs as well.<br /><br />Angelia -- thanks for chiming. Does anyone out there enjoy promotion?? I know someone must, because I meet them at conventions. They're the ones still smiling and handing out brochures . . .<br /><br />Oh for royalties without promotion! Alisonhttp://www.alisonhartbooks.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5037107797013641705.post-2168901639819919432012-09-01T18:34:55.972-07:002012-09-01T18:34:55.972-07:00Wow, it sounds like we all feel very similar but t...Wow, it sounds like we all feel very similar but the promotion beast.<br /><br />Linda - I also find it very difficult to both write and promote at the same time. I've tried many times and find I don't have the creative energy to write after investing so much energy in promotion. Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18370670423819447249noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5037107797013641705.post-46980256318188899102012-09-01T12:28:34.503-07:002012-09-01T12:28:34.503-07:00Linda is so right about the short reviews on Amazo...Linda is so right about the short reviews on Amazon...etc. They mean a LOT to the success of books these days. I hugely appreciate those readers who take the time to do this!Laura Crumhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15200878892304748308noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5037107797013641705.post-42189801526953101472012-09-01T12:18:30.153-07:002012-09-01T12:18:30.153-07:00Thanks for reading Six Degrees of Lost, Alison, an...Thanks for reading Six Degrees of Lost, Alison, and thanks for the shout-out and nice review.<br /><br />Yes, I am burned out by book promotion, too. I have three books out within a year (The Girl Who Remembered Horses, Six Degrees of Lost, and Walking the Dog, which releases in September.) At the time it sounded like a good idea, but several times lately I've lashed myself with the proberbial wet noodle saying, "what were you thinking?"<br /><br />The sad part is that all this online work promoting them has temporarily killed my creativity, or desire to write more (at least for the moment.) I know some authors who successfully juggle the time constraints of both writing and marketing, but I hear from many more who are similarly burnt out.<br /><br />I think next year I will just hibernate, and try to finish a partially-completed sequel to The Girl Who Remembered Horses, plus a YA novel in verse that I'm working on, plus a mystery with a girl and her horse (ha, sound familiar to anyone?)<br /><br />The creative brain and the marketing brain are two different species, and I find it hard to jump from one horse to another.<br /><br />For you readers - remember that the nicest gift you can give an author whose work you enjoyed is five minutes of your time to pen a review on Amazon, or Goodreads, or Barnes & Noble. We truly live for those reviews, and they mean a lot to the success of each book. And tell your friends, if you like something. <br /><br />Alison, I love the picture of the Ball jars. Your daughter has definitely inherited your creative side! Hopefully you'll find some spark to get back into writing next year too! We'll just all have to keep cheering each other on!Linda Bensonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17948970237555890150noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5037107797013641705.post-56256201143658636432012-09-01T10:27:22.175-07:002012-09-01T10:27:22.175-07:00Oh Alison, you are singing my song. I, too, hate p...Oh Alison, you are singing my song. I, too, hate promoting myself--it leaves a bad taste in my mouth to be constantly going on about how great my books are and how people should buy them. Unlike you, I burnt out on the whole conference/book tour thing at about my second book. I kept writing, but I refused to promote myself. I think I had the (misguided) notion that I could be like Agatha Christie--write good books, refuse to do publicity, and still become a successful author. The books would speak for themselves.<br /><br /> Wrong. The books were good enough (I guess) that publishers continued to buy them, but by no stretch of the imagination did I become "successful"--or rich, either.<br /><br />Now in the brave new world of the internet, I ought, I know, to do as Linda does and promote my books by all the various means available. But I don't, because I still don't like the feeling that self promotion gives me. I am tickled when another blogger reviews my books, but I don't ask others to do it, and my hope is that those who do review them do it because they genuinely like the books. Basically I'm a failure when it comes to promoting myself and my books. And that just doesn't work in the world of publishing today.<br /><br />Obviously I have no tips on promotion for you. But I can say that my choice has made me a happy person. I've lived my life on my own terms--I love spending my time with my family and animals, trail riding, gardening, homeschooling my kid...etc. I would not trade a minute of it for success that was bought by giving up big chunks of my time to self promotion (though my family might not have minded if it had bought us relative wealth).<br /><br />That said, I wish great success to Linda and all our authors who are motivated to do the work it takes to sell books. As you correctly point out in your post, an author HAS to do this work today--or success (and a new contract) will not come their way. I hope "Six Degrees of Lost" has a bright future.<br />Laura Crumhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15200878892304748308noreply@blogger.com