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The Steve Laube Agency

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Helping to Change the World Word by Word

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Home » Career » Page 11

Career

Myths of The Author Platform

By Dan Balowon May 13, 2014
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The word platform on black keyboard with blue key

There are three myths about “Author Platform” that I want to address today.  Since I started my publishing career in marketing, I’ve seen the issue from a number of different angles and hopefully today’s post will be helpful.

Myth #1
Author platform is a new issue in the last few years created by the use of social media.  

There has never been a time when author platform was not important to a publisher. Did successful books on parenting or marriage ever come from someone who wasn’t already actively helping parents or marriages?  Theological books not written by respected theologians?  Novels written by people who weren’t students of their genre? Haven’t there always been celebrity books?

The original “platform” for a successful non-fiction Christian book was the pastor of an influential church, such as Peter Marshall or Norman Vincent Peale. They wrote newspaper columns and magazine articles. The addition of television and radio created recognizable names.

Today, “Author platform” is simply a way to quantify the credibility and noteworthiness of one’s words.  If I say something, although true, but I am not viewed by a significant number of people as an expert in that area, my words carry very little weight.  But have someone that is well-known with credibility write those same words, it is a message that will sell.

None of this is new. What is new is the term “author platform”.

Myth #2
There was no such thing as social media before Facebook, Twitter or Pinterest.

The original social media utilized by Christian authors were newspapers, magazines, radio and television for the outbound messages and letters written in response. The process was slow, but it was social media.  There was interaction between author and reader.

The principles have always been the same…garner a constituency that likes what you have to say and when it is time to write a book, a publisher knows your “people” are ready to buy your book.

The current focus on certain social media platforms is simply a way that you show a publisher that you can get the word out to a lot of people and give the book a good start. It is available to everyone.

Same concept, new tools.

Myth #3
All social media followers are eagerly awaiting an author’s next book.

In some cases, author platforms built on social media can be deceptive.

These days, there are techniques to generate a lot of Facebook “likes”. If it takes 20,000 Twitter followers to impress a publisher, you can follow 20,000 people and maybe they will follow you. There are ways to increase your numbers. But are these devoted followers?

Look at it this way, realistically, how many people can you effectively follow? One hundred? Five hundred? More? 20,000?  No way.

Facebook and Twitter are becoming the modern equivalent to a purchased mass mailing list from the pre-internet/email days. If an organization got a 5% response from a direct mail effort, they were dancing on their desks, holding hands and singing “Kum Bah Yah” as a staff. Mostly responses are significantly lower.

Social media followers generated by a technique other than an actual desire to follow will yield low single-digit responses…meaning if you have 5,000 “followers” and send a message, you should be happy if 150 people reply.  A list of devoted followers will respond closer to 20% or more. So, a thousand devoted followers are better than 5,000 casual followers.

Getting Positive 

Here is what author can do with all this.

Develop Real Platform – Take as much time establishing and growing your author platform as you do writing your book.  Build it the right way, with devoted followers who like what you do and who follow you because they want what you have to offer. Those followers will spread the word about your book, which is exactly what you want.

Also, since many of the email spam filters have done such a good job killing off a lot of malicious spamming (Gmail for one) the use of opt-in email newsletters are making a comeback as an effective tool.

A real author platform has all the pieces working together (website, email, social media, personal appearances, books, articles, blogs) to build an author’s credibility and noteworthiness.

When all is said and done, the goal of an effective author platform is that when you do send out a message to your followers, something tangible and positive happens.

If we don’t take this to heart, the term “author platform” will become “The Emperor’s New Clothes” story for this era in publishing…with everyone thinking it was so important when it was all just an illusion.

Thoughts?

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Category: Branding, Career, Dan, Get Published, Marketing, PlatformTag: Career, Marketing, Platform

The Paranoid’s Guide to Things That Are Out to Get You

By Dan Balowon May 6, 2014
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This is the second in a three-part series on attitudes, specifically for people in publishing, but probably applicable to just about anyone. Two months ago I addressed the issue of pessimism. Today, we’ll talk about the first cousin of pessimism…fear. If a book were to be written about fear, it would be the titled something along the lines of this blog-post. It would be a short volume with dozens …

Read moreThe Paranoid’s Guide to Things That Are Out to Get You
Category: Book Business, Career, Dan, TheologyTag: Career, Fear

Success! Are You Ready?

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon April 24, 2014
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Recently one of our faithful readers asked, since there are so many blogs about handling failure, if I would write a blog on how to handle success. Here are a few of my thoughts, in no particular order: Once you are successful, prepare to… …be gracious. Whether you struggled for years to be published or if you’ve never heard the word “no” from an agent or editor, when …

Read moreSuccess! Are You Ready?
Category: Book Business, Career, Money, Platform, Tamela, Writing CraftTag: Career, Success

It Takes a Committee

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon April 17, 2014
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One well-known and frustrating fact about seeing a book finally accepted is the looooooong process. Trust me, literary agents would like to see the process move faster, too. Believe it or not, the fact that at most large publishers, a proposal must go through several rounds of review before a contract is offered is actually good for the author. Yes, you read that right. It’s good for the …

Read moreIt Takes a Committee
Category: Agency, Book Business, Career, Get Published, TamelaTag: Career, Editors, publishers

Why an In-the-Know Agent is Your Best Partner

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon April 10, 2014
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Even in the tightest market, new opportunities develop. Not only can authors keep up with these opportunities by being well-connected themselves, but this is just one part of your career where partnering with a great agent is key. Why? Because editors don’t always put out a call to every writers’ loop when they need proposals. Most don’t have time to become inundated with lots of …

Read moreWhy an In-the-Know Agent is Your Best Partner
Category: Agents, Book Business, Book Proposals, Career, Communication, Get Published, TamelaTag: Agents, Career, Get Published

Should I Respond to a One-Star Review?

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon March 27, 2014
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    Have you ever received a one-star review? Or do you dread the day that might happen? Or perhaps you are hoping to be published so you can get a review. Any review. When you start receiving reviews, some of them might not be as stellar as you had hoped. So what, if anything, should you do? Good, Bad, Indifferent? When I look at reviews of sites such as Amazon, I think it’s healthy to …

Read moreShould I Respond to a One-Star Review?
Category: Career, Marketing, TamelaTag: Career, reviews

Don’t Just Do It

By Dan Balowon March 25, 2014
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I don’t like the word “just”. Don’t get me wrong, “just” is a fine word, especially when used in a triple-word space in Scrabble.  It has all sorts of good uses and meanings…even used to fill time when we are thinking, along with the other great words and phrases of our culture, such as “like”, ”um”, “I mean” and ”you know.”  I simply do not like the word “just” when it is used to place limits on …

Read moreDon’t Just Do It
Category: Career, Creativity, Dan, PlatformTag: Attitude, Career

How to Be A Reader’s Favorite Author

By Dan Balowon March 18, 2014
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Last week in this space, I wrote about how you could become a publisher’s favorite author (other than selling millions of books).  Today, we’ll go a little different direction and talk about what you would need to do to become a favorite author to your readers. A key difference between how you relate to a publisher and how you relate to a reader is that one is business and one is personal.  An …

Read moreHow to Be A Reader’s Favorite Author
Category: Branding, Career, Communication, Craft, Creativity, Dan, Marketing, PlatformTag: Authors, Career, readers

Two Important Ingredients for Success

By Karen Ballon March 12, 2014
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  I’ll never forget the day, just after church, when a friend pulled me aside and said, “My son can’t find a job and he needs to make some money fast. So he’s going to write a book. Any advice for him?” Yeah, well, the advice I had wasn’t for him, it was for her: “Don’t ever say anything like that to me again.” Whatever gave people the impression that writing was a get-rich quick …

Read moreTwo Important Ingredients for Success
Category: Book Business, Career, Creativity, Karen, PlatformTag: Career, perseverance, Success

How to Be A Publisher’s Favorite Author

By Dan Balowon March 11, 2014
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Three years ago, Seth Godin published his book Linchpin.  Since I follow Seth’s books and blog as a personal and professional challenge, I read it and was inspired by it’s concepts. In it, Godin speaks about some of the new realities in business relationships.  There used to be management and those who were managed.  But now, he says, there is a third group…linchpins.  These are people who make …

Read moreHow to Be A Publisher’s Favorite Author
Category: Book Business, Branding, Career, Dan, PlatformTag: Authors, Career, publishing
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