Apr 20

Free Writing Stuff

I’ve got to start with these writing memes .  .  . (right-click your mouse and “save picture as” on anything you want to save).

picard-write

 

 

As much as I like Captain Picard he is merely pointing out the obvious.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Whereas these Avengers are pointing at me and their statement is much more visceral . . .

AsxtqypCIAAf424.jpg_large

 

 

This is the header on my Twitter account (Alex_Austin) and I can’t tell you the scores of people who have commented.  Apparently the picture works, I know that it works on me about half the time.

 

tumblr_mdla5s9OqO1rnvzfwo1_400

 

 

 

 

 

 

book-coverssmAlthough my desktop picture changes often, I always have this jpg in icon form so I can refer to it when needed.

 

 

 

 

 

I am going to get all my book covers printed and mounted.

Here’s a great idea for a writer you know (or for yourself), it’s relatively low-cost and looks great.  Of course, they have deep meaning and I have vowed to fill up a whole wall.

 

 

AMAZON BOOK TRACKING SPREADSHEET

And lastly, I would like to share an Excel spread sheet I made.  It works by dropping your Kindle Direct Publishing . Month-to-Date Unit Sales into it. It’s going to sound a lot more complicated than it is. You must have Microsoft Excel, Apple Books, or one of the free versions like Open Office.  Here is the link to the sheet.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/s1ju13xp4shj1st/Daybooksales.xlsx

You will have one file for each month and each file has a tab for each day. In cell A1 of the first tab you will put the month in the format of 4/1, 5/1, 6/1, etc. That will populate the date and day on each tab.

BOOKSPREADSHEET

Otherwise, the file works just like you wanted it to. The only thing you’ll have to do manually is when you create a tab for May, you’ll have to create a formula to link to April 30 to calculate the +/- sales from yesterday. Since months have different ending dates this will always need manual intervention from you.

Just drop in YOUR titles and in the “$ from sales” cell, drop in the profits from each of your books.

I realize this sounds tough, but we all know an “accountant-type” and if you asked for a little help this would be a breeze for them.

 

 

 

 

Mar 23

Using technology to help write a book.

I love writing books and I love technology.  It seems like mash-up waiting to happen.Nbooks

I like writing my outline and first drafts out in longhand.

I have dozens of notebooks filled with books, stories, pictures, diagrams, maps and outlines.  I’ve gone through a myriad of styles and kinds, some romantic and fun like the leather-bound, parchment-paper-filled one in the front in the picture to the right, to the plain-Jane legal pad bought on vacation in the middle.

T20130323_091506hen there are pens!  I’ve tried fancy fountain pens to cheap Bics. I love the Sharpie that is in the front in the picture to the left, not only do they feel good in my Blinearsmhand, they seem to last a long time.

Ink color matters to me, red is always for editing.  Green is for color and by that I mean description.  Blue is for added emotion and purple is for when I have been drinking.

Writing long hand has a couple of inherent problems as far as I’m concerned:

BnonLinsm5#1. Sometimes I can’t read my own writing.

#2. I can’t find things.  If I wrote in a linear fashion this wouldn’t be such a problem.  I not only stray from linear to nonlinear, some of what I write could be considered cartography, architecture or doodling.

#3. After I spend all that time writing it, I still have to enter it into the computer and I’m not the world’s fastest or most accurate typer and that is a huge understatement.

 

So now to change my inefficient ways.

About 3/4′s of the way through the Time Change Books I started using Scrivener and I love it, but this is about getting it to Scrivener.

Here are the techniques I have been trying:

Mac Dictation.  It’s free if you own a Mac, fairly easy to learn. great recognition and semi fast.  I am getting better at this, yelling out “comma”, “period”, and “new paragraph”.  Did I mention it was free?  I did buy a fancy microphone and headset for it but took it back because the built-in microphone in the Mac does a great job.  I have entered 25,000 words of Time Change Book 3 this way and it’s getting easier.

S Pen on Galaxy Note II.  I’ve had six generations of iPhones, two weeks ago I left Apple for Samsung.  I’m liking it.  Not only has it replaced my Kindle for reading eBooks, but it’s replacing my notebooks for note taking.  For me it has near 100% character recognition (it doesn’t like the way I make capital “I”‘s, so it keeps me from writing about myself).  I am pretty fast entering it as text into a computer file almost as fast as I can write it out.  When I get twenty pages or so, I dump the text in Scrivener and then I’m 33% on my way to a finished project.

I’m not suggesting you go out and buy a Mac,  there is free speech recognition software built into Windows 7 that takes surprisingly good dictation. And I’m not suggesting you ditch your phone and go out and buy this big beautiful monster of a phone that I bought just to get handwriting recognition (I am suggesting it if you are a technology geek), it’s finding what works for you.

And besides, all this is probably a moot point  because you are smart enough not to write long hand.

 

 

 

Mar 10

Time Change B2 is Here!

Today I finally got “Time Change B2″ out which is book two in my time travel series.  I think a lot of “book two’s” start out as bloated “book one’s”.  I remember trying to cut book one and being at 135,000 words and still having more Time Change editto say.

So I went to Office Max splurged and printed a hardcopy.  I was going to take the hedge trimmers to it and instead just looked at it sitting on my kitchen counter.

I had two bound stacks of book 67,000 pages long. I could still cut ten to fifteen thousand words each, add the parts that I thought were missing and have the books I hope for.

Just like we all have a favorite child that we’re not supposed to mention out loud, I love book two more than one.

To me book two is all the fun stuff.  Book one established the situation, the locale, introduced us to the characters and set the mood—in book two all hell breaks loose. Characters become fully formed, tempers boil over and people get pushed to the limits.

I said that I started writing Time Change about 14 years ago,but that’s not so true with book two.

Other than a few scenes this is all brand new and I love the way it all comes together.

In the last month waiting to bring out Time Change B2 I wrote approximately 50,000 words into book 3. I really enjoy where it is going, the people (all new except Jack Riggs the protagonist) and locations (St. Lucia, Yellowstone and Egypt). Instead of taking place a century and a half ago, it takes place in an accelerated, futuristic version of the present.

There’s this great satisfaction in finishing something and I’m going to take a few minutes and savor the accomplishment. Then it’s back to promoting, marketing tweeting, blogging, pinning, tumbling, flickering, facebooking, then writing and oh yeah, working the real job.

Feb 26

How Many Books Are They Selling?

There is a way to tell how many copies of a book an author is selling  by looking at their Amazon book page.  Why is this important?  Market research? Curiosity?  A tool to help one dream? To Inspire?  Whatever your reason there is a way to tell approximate sales.

Here is your Rosetta stone, under product details go to the line that says:

Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #####

This number is the key.

Take for instance Stephen King’s “Salem’s Lot” (one of my favorites and the first King book I ever read) the Kindle version has an Amazon Best Sellers Rank of #4477.  That means he is selling about 24 copies of that book on average per day. The Math: 24 a day x 365 days a year = 8760 copies per year @ $7.99 = $69,992.40 a year from the Kindle version of Salem’s Lot.

Here’s another, “Ender’s Game” by Orson Scott Card this would be the mass market Ender's Game (Ender, Book 1)paperback version the Amazon best sellers rank is #88 that means he sells between 500-650 copies per day or 182,500 a year or about $1.2 million dollars worth a year.

Here are some approximate numbers you can use.

Amazon Best Sellers Rank

Rank 1 – 10 = 650-3000 copies a day

Rank 10 – 100 = 500 – 650 copies a day

Rank 100 – 500  = 200 – 500 copies a day

Rank 500 – 1000 = 150 -200 copies a day

Rank 1000 – 2000 = 120 -150 copies a day

Rank 2k – 3k = 60 – 80 copies a day

Rank 3k – 4k = 40 copies a day

Rank 4k – 5k = 24 copies a day

Rank 5k – 6k = 21 copies a day

Rank 6k – 7k = 18 copies a day

Rank 7k – 8k = 15 copies a day

Rank 8k – 9k  = 12 copies a day

Rank 10k – 11k = 11 copies a day

Rank 11k – 12k = 9 copies a day

These numbers are handy not only for choosing categories, but for accessing interest in a particular kind of book,

sales

and one more reason–it’s kind of fun.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

You can read more about sales ranking at: Rampant TechPress

Feb 20

Doing Research for a Book

I received this question on the Amazon Sales Page for my book Time Change Book One: The Jump”.

It was under the Forums section near the bottom of the page, “discussions”.

“I was wondering how the writer learned to know and research real people who would have loved it that time and place in civil war Virginia?”

My answer:

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

I like to get first hand accounts from the time period. I get these first hand accounts in newspaper articles or books. In Time Change B2 a doctor is going to give Jack a lobotomy, and I learned the operating room tools and instruments from an article written by a doctor trying to sell his instruments and describing what and how they were used. That was a big find.

 

Another time I found an out of print book written by a man who describes his personal meeting with Ralph Waldo Emerson. He talked about the sound of Emerson’s voice, his body movements, and what if felt like to be in the presence of greatness.

Ralph-Waldo-Emerson
I am not sure how other authors do this, but I feel like there has to be an easier way. I say this because it’s so labor intensive and there were many times I ran into dead ends and would end up changing a minor plot point. I was going to have two characters meet in a bank–well, what would a bank in 1856 Norfolk Virginia have been like? How many people would have been working? Men AND women? Were there bars? Would the vault have been visible? I took over an hour trying to find the answers to these questions when I had an epiphany–why did these characters need to meet in a bank in the first place?

 
If it would have been important I would have found the answers. I needed to know what it was like to take a ferry from Manhattan to Staten Island when Jack Riggs first found and recruited Charles Goodyear. I wrote a snail mail letter to the Staten Island Ferry Museum and emailed the New York City Department of Transportation they were gracious and extremely helpful. I received 20 pages of extremely detailed information–I used none of it, I cut it all in an edit.

 

SIM

 

 

Here are a couple of books that can help with researching a time period:

[[ASIN:0671882368 What Jane Austen Ate and Charles Dickens Knew: From Fox Hunting to Whist-the Facts of Daily Life in Nineteenth-Century England]]

austen

[[ASIN:0898798701 The Writer's Guide to Everyday Life in the Wild West: 1840 to 1900 (Writer's Guides to Everyday Life)]]. There are more in this series, but these are two that I own.51DVY9APEAL._SL500_AA300_Oh yeah, and one other place to search–the internet. Good luck phrasing those queries.

 

 

Feb 10

Using a Treadmill Desk To Save My Life

tmdesk

I am predisposed to feel guilty.  I never feel like I give enough attention to the important things in my life; work, health, family, and spirituality.  Sounds like a time management problem doesn’t it?

I do know this, if I want to spend the time it takes every day to be successful, it takes a lot of time sitting at a desk.  And I don’t see me spending any time less any time soon.  As my body of work expands, so does my butt.

I am actually pretty good about exercise, I play fairly hard tennis three or four times a week and on the off days I still try to get in 10,000 steps–try being the operative word.  There are many days I can put in five or six hours or more easily behind a desk.

Then a couple of studies came out linking prolonged bouts of sitting with obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, cancer, abnormal metabolism, and increased risk of early mortality.  Pretty scary stuff.  Plus while you sit you burn about one calorie per minute verses up to three when you’re walking.  Then many of us after work park our rears in a comfy chair and watch a couple of hours of TV (ok, so I read, but I sill sit).

Then I read about Dr. James Levine of the Mayo Clinic, one of the first people to popularize the idea of a treadmill desk.  You don’t go fast, you barely keep moving, but you aren’t sitting and you are moving, albeit slooowww.  I’m not sprinting, but I am working on doing it for the long haul.

Treadmill-Desk-DT

There are plans all over the internet on how to make a homemade version of the treadmill desk on the cheap, some as low as $35 if you already have the treadmill.

I opted to get a pre-made version, one they would last and handle the long hours a day I planned to log in.  I did quite a bit of research and here is the one I opted to get: Lifespan Fitness. (I am not endorsing them or tied to the company financially, but I do like mine very much.)

I’ve had the desk for three weeks now and I’ve done at least two hours a day.  I also use it as a standing desk and very rarely sit down at all.  I made a homemade treadmill desk chair for those times I can’t stand another minute.

P.S. I haven’t fallen off yet and I’ve lost about five pounds without changing my diet.

 

 

 

Feb 02

I Love When Reviews Look Like This!

Wow!  What a review for my new book “Time Change Book One the Jump” . . .

Time Change – Book One: The Jump, By Alex Myers – A Review

Posted: Saturday, February 02, 2013

Time Change - Book One - Alex Myers
by Rain Stickland

Time Change
Book One: The Jump
by Alex Myers
ASIN: B00B52SOU0

Official Author Bio

[Alex Myers is an on-air radio personality, using the name Alex O'Neal.] “Alex talks to about three-quarters of a million people every morning on one of the most popular radio stations in Austin, Texas. His true passion has always been reading and writing and research. He’s a bit obsessive. Alex is married and lives with two kids, four fish, a lizard and his dog named Max in supercool Austin, Texas.”

The Book

The story begins in a time that is undisclosed, where a meeting takes place between some mysterious figures. The reader is hooked in right from the beginning, needing to understand what is happening between the dark man and the many strange beings with their sinister demeanors.

However, before we can fully comprehend the situation, we find ourselves carried to the present day where Jack, the quasi-disreputable hero, is encountered in an interrogation room. Released after questioning, he gets a ride home with his girlfriend. During a bitter argument she loses control of the vehicle and the car heads inexorably toward the other vehicles on the road. Jack, on the passenger side, is heading toward the supercell gathering directly in the path of their vehicle.

Waking up, Jack is shocked to discover that he’s in completely unfamiliar surroundings. It isn’t until later that he realizes it’s not the surroundings that are unfamiliar, but the time. Somehow Jack has found himself in the past; a past that is about to experience the upheaval of the worst war in American history. The question is, what can he do about it?

The Review

First, let me say that the author’s claim to a love for research shows up very clearly in this book. There is such a vast array of knowledge and understanding packed into such a small space, that it’s a wonder it can hold it all in. Research for this book involved (but is not limited to) meteorology, geology, wormhole physics, marine biology, blacksmithing, toxicology, human experimentation, technology and invention, and of course, history. History in the extreme, I should say.

When I gave my first comments on this book, the only thing I could think to say was, “Right from the first page, it grabs you by the brain!” It’s still the most concise definition I can give it. There is a great deal of intelligence involved in the writing of this book. Not just from a research standpoint, but also from an understanding of what the reader is willing to absorb regarding that knowledge. You’re not left with a feeling of having been given too much information. Myers gives the reader only what they need to know for the sake of understanding the story, and to provide some intriguing tidbits of knowledge. It whets the appetite for more.

 

There is nothing superfluous in his writing, which is delivered in a concisely written narrative, and everything has a purpose. An author once said, “If you have a gun on the wall in the first chapter, it had better be used by the third. Conversely, if you use a gun in the third chapter, it had better be on the wall in the first.” Alex Myers must have read that bit of advice, or understood it intrinsically, because he follows it to the letter. Each character introduced has a part in the design woven by the author. Each scene has a purpose. The plot is thick with subtleties, and characters with seemingly small roles have a dramatic impact on how the story plays out.

I’d hate to give a perfect review, since there should be something about the book that strikes the wrong note, but there really isn’t. It’s a science-fiction tale that encompasses many other genres, giving the reader a taste for everything and of everything. A highly enjoyable read for almost anyone, even if you’re not interested in science-fiction

 

rainS

.

Rain Stickland is a Canadian writer with a passion for ferrets and a love for sentient creatures. She produces The Kovacs Perspective, hosted by Steve Kovacs. 

Her professional background includes freelance writing, consulting, technical writing, procedures manuals, payroll and HR, investment analysis, and accounting. She owns a company that develops and manufactures safe pet toys, and donates the proceeds to ferret shelters in Canada and the US. 

Rain’s writing background includes topics such as stem cell transplants and hearing loss, and position papers on charitable organization development. A crime-fiction series is in the works, as she continues to contribute to various online and print publications. 

Follow her on Twitter @RainStickland 

You can follow her blog at: http://rainstickland.blogspot.ca/

 

Jan 27

It Only Took Me 14 Years To Write This Book.

Time Change - Book One - Alex Myers

My new time travel book is out Time Change Book One: The Jump.

It started out as a way to woo my wife, then girlfriend, Renata.  There was nothing veiled about it.  The protagonist was me, my love interest was her, her father and brother were in it   We lived in Dallas at the time, so it was set in Dallas.  I wasn’t trying to sell books; I was trying to get this woman to fall in love with me.

After more than a year of hard work, perseverance and many a late night I finally had it—I finished the book and oh, yeah she married me.

Then she said, “You ought to publish our story.”  Oh my.

I tried to fix it, sent it to a few agents—nothing.  I put it on a shelf and wrote other things.  Years later I had this fabulous idea of a new story line and a really nasty antagonist so I pulled out “our story” and started changing it.  And then more and more changes and finally the protagonist was no longer me, my wife didn’t resemble the love interest (perhaps in looks) and it was set nowhere near Dallas.

Then I let my editor, Steven Bauer take a look at it and with his suggestions took the story to another level.  Now fourteen years and complete name changes, tighter pacing and lots of research, I have something that I really love and I hope you will too.  Time Change Book One: The Jump is available at Amazon.com.

Dec 02

14 Tips for Good Kindle Cover Design « humblenations

14 Tips for Good Kindle Cover Design «From humblenations.

 

14 Tips for Good Kindle Cover Design

I have been a professional graphic designer for more years than I can now remember and have designed more things than I care to name (but will): T-shirts, CD covers, packaging, Ebay listings, websites, flyers, posters, letterheads, signage … the list goes on. But strangely enough, until I decided to put some of my own stories on Amazon through KDP, no book covers.

Through my lurking on the KDP Forums, and checking out the competition in the last 4 month, I’ve seen hundreds of terrible, hideous,  trashy, horrid, nasty, vomit-inducing book covers that break every rule of good design.

Boy these people must really love losing potential readers, I thought to myself at first.

But then more kindly, thought: well they probably don’t know about design.

So rather than being a Mr-Know-It-All, I figure it’s about time I sat down and put some of my thoughts down to help out my fellow writers.

My tips are by no means exhaustive and like any art form, design can be a rather subjective subject. So please respectfully disagree – comments very welcome.

But before we begin, let us talk about what design should be, this is easily summed up in one word: functional. So what functions should a Kindle book cover fulfil?

  • In the traditional sense, it should stand-out on the book store’s shelf saying to the potential reader, “Take me down and have a look inside of me.”
  • It should set the mood for the story (the Vintage Murakami Covers a perfect example).
  • Establish a brand (if part of a series).
  • Show that there is a high-level of quality in the writing. If a cover is poor then the potential reader will not have high hopes for the writing.

1. Photos: Set The Mood and Don’t Be Literal

The worlds of the visual arts and the written word collide on a book cover, and this is the first real big problem we run in to. If we are talking about fiction, the reader dreams the world in their head from the words the writer has put down on the page. The moment you put something too literal on the cover you run into the problem of the reader having that image in their head.

It spoils the glorious affect reading gives us.

If you have selected an image that simply tells us what a character or a place looks like you have made a mistake. You might say to yourself – but the photo I have found looks exactly how I see the characters in my head – can I not use it?

Well, I’m sorry, no you can’t, that’s rude – you’re taking away the reader’s imagination from them.

Literal pictures should be avoided at all costs. So, you want to use a photo, but don’t want to be literal – what can you do? It’s simple use an image to set the mood. Make it abstract. Take a step sideways – as a writer you should already have these skills in your toolbox – the simile and the metaphor. Use these to come up with a good metaphoric or abstracted idea for your cover.

The above example is a Noir Pulp thriller I’ve made up called Kidnap! Avoid the obvious: if we have a victim on the cover, we’re seeing what she looks like before we’ve even discussed her in the book, we’ve given the game away; likewise, if we have a Private Detective on there, we’re saying, he looks exactly like that (it’s lazy, it’s as bad as Dan Brown saying the hero in The Da Vinci Code looks a bit like Indian Jones – before anyone tells me out there that yes he did say that in the novel – I know).

So in this instance I have abstracted the concept of the hard drinking PI – and thought something ominous and dark that fits – right, whisky moodily lit. That image took all of 5 minutes to find on iStock. It works, it’s simple strong and gives a flavour of the story.

Here are some more examples, I quickly knocked up, of imaginary covers that set the mood. Each gives a feeling for what the book will be like rather than telling you out-right.

2. Photos: Avoid Stocky Stock

I don’t know how I can explain this well to none-designers. But there are some images out there which just have the feeling of stock images. The top right example above might be one, something that everyone would think is cool and is used over and over again – because it’s so obvious.

As well as the written cliché, there is the visual cliché.

As a good example there’s a famous case of a stock image that has been used for so many different album covers it’s untrue – yes it’s a nice image – but when you find certain images you know they’re going to be re-used. I think we should leave the explanation of this particular no-no to another designer I admire – he’s very eloquent on the subject of avoiding stock clichés.

3. Photos: Pay For What Works

If you don’t have permission to use a photo or you don’t know who owns it, then chances are you can’t use it. Would you want someone stealing your writing? You need to show the same respect to your fellow artists; the photographers. Having said that, there are free places out there to get photos but you will end up getting what you pay for: poor images.

Fear not, there are some very cheap effective solutions – my favourite for commercial work is probably iStock because they have excellent quality control and a vast archive of images. Their pricing is also reasonable, you’re looking at $2-$10 or something of that order, depending on what size of image you want from them. Their “terms of use” allowed you to use any images on you cover upto selling 499,999 copies.

If you’re selling more – you’ve really designed yourself a good cover and written yourself a good book.

iStock

Alternatives: Shutterstock   Dreamstime

Free Site:   Stock.Exchange

Feeling flush:   Getty Images   Corbis

4. Photos: Don’t Create Composites

Unless you are master with Photoshop (or it’s free equivalent GIMP), then I would steer well clear of this technique. Photos are lit from different angles, have different colour saturations and styles.

Let me tell you what lots of images put together on a single cover will look like: like you have cut pictures from different magazines and glued them onto a piece of paper – and unless the theme of your book is Scrapbooking, it will look amateurish and denigrate the quality of the masterpiece you have written.

Is your novel a jumble of styles? Does it skip around in tense? Have you just thrown words down randomly? No, I thought not. So don’t do it on the cover because otherwise that’s the message you’re sending out.

Another thing you need to consider is the more complex your image is the harder it will be make out on the thumbnail.

One great image is more powerful than 5 different competing ones that you think encapsulates your book.

5. Avoid Home-made Drawings

There are very few people that are as talented at drawing as they are at writing but there is a temptation to want to write, act-in, direct and compose the music for your own film; and say to yourself – I can paint an amazing cover, sitting down with some water colours then scan your creation and use that. Or worse get your friend who is just “brilliant at drawing” to draw a picture of the main character or a scene.

This too is a no-no.

You might think it gives it a personal feel. But that’s just what it will feel like, some sort of craft-circle vibe. People are judgemental; they won’t even bother looking at your writing if they feel the cover is poorly drawn by an amateur.

So what if you do want a drawing rather than an photo, it’s not a problem, those stock sites I listed above have illustrations as well – all quality controlled. Pay a few dollars and get something professional that fits.

Here are some examples I quickly knocked up using stock drawings:

6. Layout: Colours

Here’s were we run into big problems. It’s very hard for me to teach you how to use colour well. It’s something that you feel, it’s something that you need to experiment with with over and over again to get colours to gel well together.

I’ve been designing for more than 20 years and I still only just feel I’m getting to grips with it.

My advice here would be to use a some software that allows you to change the colour on-the-fly as you’re designing your cover. I personally use Xara Xtreme Pro Version 4 – which is a vector application from years and years ago – to design. It’s just what I’m used to.

But the simplified advice I would give is this:

  • If you use something bold have something that contrasts.
  • Don’t use more than 3 colours.
  • Avoid primary colours you find on MS Paint (full blue, full red, full green).
  • Mix your own colours yourself – shades of strong colours.
  • Find out what colours work  by testing testing and testing again. Try different combinations next to each other to see what works.
  • Google ‘Beautiful Colour Palettes‘ ‘Colours That Work Well Together‘ or something similar.

I’ve been working on my own covers for my short stories and they’re from all around the world, so I have a starting point for my palettes because I am using a colour for the flags of each country. But then I want something bold and attractive that stands out. They might look simple but I can spend anything up to a hour fine tuning the colour on one cover, so it really looks good and works for me.

7. Layout: Don’t Be Afraid of Space

Like colour, when it comes to designing layout, it’s a lot of trial and error until something just looks right to you – looks balanced. But one of the main problems that I’ve seen a lot with covers I’ve come across is that people think because it’s going to be a thumbnail it must fill the whole of the canvas.

With design what happens is, the eye is naturally drawn around what it is seeing; all the elements compete for priority. The best way for a design to work is to give the elements lots of space to breath.

It’s no different to writing – if you put in too many complicated words or adjectives in the same sentence, or too many elements into a metaphor or simile it becomes confusing. Good writing is balanced by space. So is design.

On the design below, the right design is the final design design, but a designer worried about using all the space might do something similar to the left or middle. I’ll let you make up you mind which has the most style and sets the best mood for a short story.

8. Type: Use Commercial Fonts

There is a temptation to use a font that “looks cool” downloaded from somewhere like Da Font, like a nice horror style font for your vampire book. As well as fitting into the “no-no” of being too literal, the greater consideration is the quality of the tools you’re using: free home-made fonts are usually designed very badly themselves – not weighted properly, illegible at small sizes (think about the thumbnail), not kerned or spaced properly. I would avoid them at all costs.

Always go for something classical, clean and easy to read. It makes all the difference. You might think the two first options, in this speedily put together example below, look cool! But if you can’t read the title straight away they’re not functional – as design they don’t work: design should always be functional as well as aesthetically pleasing.

But I don’t want to pay for fonts – I hear you cry. No problem, there are some commercial fonts that foundries will give away for free – modern, clean, well designed. And Free. The Posts on Smashing are fantastic – some really excellent stuff there:

My Fonts   40 Fonts   Other Smashing Posts   Squirrel Fonts

9. Type: Don’t Be Afraid of Typesetting Only

“Do I have to have a picture on your cover?” This is a questions none of your have probably thought of asking. That would just be boring wouldn’t it. What no picture?! Think again. If something is typeset nicely it can just be effective as good design. And can be powerful and arresting.

For book covers, a little voice in my head says, “CL this is the best option because it says – this book is about words.” How more conceptually correct can you get? It all comes down to selecting the right colours, using the right fonts, and spacing them nicely (my top tip is learn about kerning).

The examples below are typeset covers I found on the Book Cover Archive that I liked:

10. Type: Using 3D Effects & Drop Shadows

If you look on the above examples, you’ll see that none of them have 3D Effects, Drop Shadows or any other special effects on them to make them look “cool”. There’s a very good reason for this, you might think 3D Effects and Drop Shadows make your text stand out – but this isn’t the case, it actually makes the design more complex – harder for the eye to understand.

If you want your text to jump off the page then pick the right colours and a nice clear font. If you are using gimmicks to try and make your design sing because it’s not standing out then it’s more likely a problem with your colours or font. Go back to the drawing board and pick new ones. Experiment. Experiment. Experiment.

11. Type: Size & Placement

There are no hard and fast rules about where you should put your text and what should be given more prominence. But I would say this, to make a memorable or engaging cover – your name, the name of the author doesn’t have to be in massive letters on the front covers, as I see a lot.

You might say – yes, but I want people to remember my name.

People will remember your name from becoming famous for your writing, not for your name itself. In a way, the bigger the name, if you’re not well established, the more egotistical and desperate to be famous, it makes your look. It might work for James Patterson or Dan Brown or Ben Elton when they’re all vying for attention in an airport book store.

Likewise, is the novel title that important? Not necessarily so. It’s all about what you want to say with your cover. And I would take it back to that simple mantra – the most important thing is to set the mood – so someone gets a feeling for the writing and entices them to ‘Look Inside’ or click ‘Buy’. Does your name massive on the cover do this if you’re not famous? I think not.

12. Take Inspiration From The Past

Like all good artists – whether they are graphics designer, painter, musicians or writers – we will steal a little inspiration from elsewhere. We are affected by other people’s work we enjoy. To this end there’s nothing wrong with finding a style you like and coming up with something similar.

The only thing you need to make sure of is that you’re not just lifting their images and taking their design wholesale. So people confuse the two covers and your run into copyright issues.

The links below are a great starting points to see some of the best cover out there. The really “amazing site” has links at the bottom of the page to yet more great sites with covers on them.

13. Remember: Keep It Simple

As a finally point here, I would say this, the strongest point I can make is this – good design is simple, or based on a simple concept – it’s more relevant than on Amazon because you have small images in the thumbnails, lots of products vying for attention and lots of messy, badly designed covers – so keep it simple and clean and your cover will shine like a diamond in the junk yard of mess. But only if you follow the points covered above.

And if all else fails … 14. Get a Professional In

You can have all the tools at your disposal: good fonts, the time to mess about with colours and spacing, bought the perfect mood-setting image but still come up short on your design and it might not look right.

This is because you’re not a designer.

You’re a writer. You’ve perfected your own craft – maybe over years and years.

It’s no different with graphic designers – they’ve worked long and hard to get to the point where they’re at: collected ideas in their head, always thinking visually; paid thousands for fonts over the years; developed a perfect eye for what looks right.

There are plenty of good designers out there. Picking the right one could be difficult. But I would proffer this as a piece of advice: If you are going to shell out for a nice cover for your little baby make sure they ask you the right questions.

What a good designer should be asking:

  • What feeling are you trying to get across in the book (name three emotions you’d describe your books as)?
  • Is there an item or concept that is thematic in the piece?
  • What sort of colours do you see the book as?
  • Are their any great covers from books you have seen that you like?
  • If you book was a famous film what would it be?
  • Etc.

A good designer will always confidently ask the right questions before starting work because otherwise they’re wasting their time and yours.

Is it worth paying $100 or $500 for good cover design?

Well that’s all down to you. If you think your book is good enough and it would double your sales because it’s eye-catching and makes your look professional – you have to ask yourself if you’re going to sell more than a hundred or a thousand copies of your book – if not, it’s just vanity to pay someone to design a cover.

But on the other hand, if you are selling lots of books with a bad cover, then chances are the right cover will allow lost potential readers, who have been put off before, to judge a book by it’s cover and make a purchase because they see quality from the get go.

 

Dec 02

Best Book Editors on Twitter – GalleyCat

Here is a list of Book editors on Twitter it’s from GalleyCat The First Word on the Book Publishing Industry

They also have lists:

If you are looking for more people to follow, check out our Best Literary Agents on Twitter directory, our Best Book Editors on Twitter list, our Best Book Publicity and Marketing Twitter Feeds directory, our Best eBook News on Twitter list, our Best Library People on Twitter directory, and our Women in Publishing Twitter List.

 Andrea Altenburg More Specifically was founded to help you make your words more specific. Make your writing voice the best it can be with my services. Give me a project, and I will give you results.

Aiah: “Writer. Editor. Knitter. Cellist. Cynic. Cook. Mets fan.”

Catherine M. Albano: I edit, proofread, and write–not necessarily in that order.

Reagan Arthur: “Bio Book editor, music fan, east coast transplant, banana-hater, defender of the em-dash.”

Charleen Barila: “Cookbook & gardening (asst) editor at Wiley, voracious pop culture/knowledge consumer. my true love: good food shared with good friends. all opinions are my own.”

Tara Barnes: “Freelance copy editor fighting the good fight. Support your local copy editor and save the world. Don’t let my unenlightened musings dissuade you.”

Tim Bartlett: “Random House Editor”

Pete Beatty: (Bloomsbury Press) “140+char serious nonfiction brought to you by publisher Peter Ginna (#pg) and editor Pete Beatty (#ptb)”

Paula Berinstein: “Producer and host of The Writing Show, writer, writing consultant, freelance editor”

Faith Black: Editor at The Berkley Publishing Group (Penguin Group USA). Book lover, basketball player, gin imbiber, Anglophile, resident tall girl and amateur chef-ess

Jason Black: “I’m a freelance book editor who blogs about character development in fiction.”

Holly Blanck: “Assistant Editor at St. Martin’s press, book lover, Met’s fan, eternal optimist.”

Iris Blasi: “Associate editor tweeting about books past, present, and future.”

Jevon Bolden: Editor, singer, songwriter, wife, mom. Developmental editor for Strang Book Group

Stacy Boyd: Harlequin’s senior editor of Desire, watching publishing respond to digital media, living HEA in NYC w/ a 4yo, missing my family in GA, wanting time to be lazy

Brooke Carey: At Portfolio.

Carolynn Carey: “a former academic editor, now writes romantic fiction.”

Rebecca Carter: Random House UK editor

Julia Cheiffetz: Book editor

Kelli Collins: “Editor-in-Chief @ Ellora’s Cave. Got subs? We want your sex.”

Brenda Copeland: “Bio editor, teacher, reader, friend, cheese lover.”

Julie Crisp: Editorial Director at Tor UK. Publishes SFF/crime incl. Peter F Hamilton, China Miéville, Mark Charan Newton, Neal Asher & Ann Cleeves. All views are my own.

Sarah Cypher: “Freelance editor and writer tweeting about writing, the Middle East, and cultural miscellany. Author of The Editor’s Lexicon: Essential Terms for Novelists.”

Kathy Dalle-Molle: Writer and editorial consultant by day …. blogger at KDM @11:30 by night. Because if you want to write, then why not write and show your words to somebody.

MA Dobson: Manuscript editor; aerobat; wordy-pants; semicolon devotee; ambivalence chaser.

Pamela Dorman: “Pamela Dorman Books/Viking publishes upmarket fiction, much aimed at women, as well as selected non-fiction.”

Emma D. Dryden: Children’s Book Editor & Consultant, Poet, Writer; Founder & Principal of drydenbks llc, a children’s book editorial and consulting firm

Barbara Dycus: “Acquires and edits books.”

Daniel Ehrenhaft: Acquisitions editor for Sourcebooks Fire, YA author/fan, Guitarist of Tiger Beat, Proud Papa”

Kelley Eskridge: I write fiction, essays and screenplays. I help other writers as an editor, mentor and coach at Sterling Editing

Lindsey Faber: “Managing Editor of Samhain Publishing”

Rose Foltz: “Freelance textbook and magazine editor specializing in nursing and health professions”

Melissa Frain: “Editor at Tor/Macmillan / skeeball MVP / lover of hot chocolate, high fives, and the Phillies.”

Jay Franco: “An independent editor and lover of SF, fantasy, comics & military history.”

GCP Editor Gal: The secret life of a Manhattan book editor.

Diana Gill: “Executive editor. Runs Eos Books. Needs: caffeine. Wants: plane tickets.”

Peter Ginna: (Bloomsbury Press) “140+char serious nonfiction brought to you by publisher Peter Ginna (#pg) and editor Pete Beatty (#ptb)”

Jeff Golick: Music blogger [@destinationout]; audiobook publisher [@AudioGO]; husband [@ktrsbklyn]; tired [longingtobe@rest].

Claire S. Gould: Aspiring academic book editor. Conn College YAT. Lover of caffeine, photography, classic films, fashion, feminist activism, and green architecture.

Jillian Gray: “Renegade of publishing, Panhellenic, philanthropic and entrepreneurial world. And boarding school/ Ivy University Survivor.”

Nicola Griffith: English novelist and editor and website builder in Seattle. Life is good, beer is great, people vary.

Vicki Gundrum: “Freelance book editor [who] tweets about publishing, amusements, little surprises. My obsessions: books, writing, publishing, amusements, little surprises, basenjis. Stretching to 5 feet, I rely on love & understanding not intimidation & fear.”

Jess Haberman: “Editor at FalconGuides / GPP, freelance editor, writer, and floral assistant.”

Marty Halpern: “Wielder of Red Ink”

Lori Cates Hand: “Nonfiction book editor with 19 years of experience specializing in career information.”

Kate Victory Hannisian: Writer and editor who loves to help individuals and businesses tell their stories elegantly and effectively.

Lee Harris: Editor at Angry Robot Books and publisher of Hub Magazine.

Joanne Haskins: Editor, writer, designer

Mitch Hoffman: I’m an editor @GrandCentralPub and tweet about book publishing, with occasional forays into politics and pop culture.

Lorraine Hopping: Author (Bone Detective, 40+ others), multimedia writer, game designer (Mars 2020, others), science geek. Tweeting about transmedia, publishing, game design.

Kemari Howell: Freelance book editor. Self-dubbed Literary Seamstress. Fiction writer. Mommy blogger. Typography fanatic. Seeking new editing clients and lotto winnings.

Erika Imranyi: Editor and yarn crafts enthusiast.

Travers J.: “A small town boy from TX, living & thriving in NYC. I’m an Editorial Assistant at Penguin.”

Angela James: “Executive Editor for Carina Press, Harlequin’s digital-first imprint. Dragging the world to the digital dark side, one reader at a time.”

Alison Janssen: “Run Away With Us,” Tyrus Books editors.

Sara Kase: “Assistant Editor at Sourcebooks, acquire and develop everything from historical fiction to gift to trade.”

T.J. Kelleher: “Hopping the pons asinorum. Science book editor. Likely overconfident.”

Caitlin Kenney: Assistant editor at ABRAMS, book blogger, experimental home cook, among other things

Cheryl Klein: “I’m an editor at Scholastic, a reader and writer at home, and lots of other things in lots of other places. All opinions expressed here are solely my own.”

Angela Klinske: “writer/editor/going local/public speaking/corp comm.”

Vicki Lame: “She would edit books; she would create constellations.”

Hana Landes: editor, reader, general book nerd

Terra Layton: Book editor at a NYC publishing house. Newly-wed adventurer. Extraordinarian.

Alvina Ling: “Senior Editor at Little, Brown Books for Young Readers. Editor of picture books, middle grade, and young adult. And lover of bloomabilities.”

A.E. Locker: Writer, Editor, government worker (please don’t hate me), anxiety sufferer, expert listener, cat lover, English Literature buff and yes, wanna be 80s pop star.

Ben Loehnen: Book Editor (Simon & Schuster), Birder

James Long: Editorial Assistant at Orbit (human male, level 5, chaotic good). Wielder of BookBane (Longsword, +1 vs slushpile submissions).

Megan Lynch: “Senior Editor at Riverhead Books”

Dick Margulis: “Producer of top-quality books for discerning publishers and authors.”

Marianliz: “Book editor, beginner standup comic, curator of questionable crafts at kraftomatic.”

Debbie Marrie: “I acquire and edit health books and Christian fiction for Strang Communications.”

Cassandra A Marshall: Freelance editor, YA writer, literary agent intern, and tea drinker. Also obsessed with my dog, Mollie.

Laurel Marshfield: “I help authors (nonfiction, fiction, memoir) prepare their book ms for publication + write book proposals. Offer ms evals, editing, ghosting, coaching + more”

Pam McClanahan: Publisher, MHS Press & Borealis Books / In life and work: listening, learning to see, finding a voice

Ken McFarland: Internet Marketer, Father and Grandfather, Writer, Author, Editor, 12-Year Cancer Survivor, Natural Health Researcher

Martha Mihalick: “Children’s book editrix, Greenwillow Books, An Imprint of HarperCollins Publishers.”

Victoria Mixon: Independent editor, co-author of Children & the Internet, and author of The Art & Craft of Fiction: A Practitioner’s Manual.

David Moldawer: “I’m a trade nonfiction editor at Amazon’s NYC-based publishing imprint. I live in Manhattan with my wife and son.”

Jackeline Montalvo
: “Book editor at Random House, pop culture enthusiast, dog person, boricua at heart.”

Amanda Moon: Senior Editor at Scientific American/Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Moonrat: “Book editor. rabid reader. love to eat. yumm.”

David Moore: Writer, Editor, Geek. Which applies to about ten thousand people on Twitter. Sincerely believes Jesus Christ was an Autobot.

Calvert Morgan: Harper editor.

Deborah Moss: “A very happy copyeditor.”

Joan Murray: “Exploring the Microsoft developer world-at-large in search of immensely talented people to publish with Addison-Wesley and Pearson Technology Group.”

Kelly Nickell: “Digital Copywriter & Freelance Writer/Editor”

Ethan Nosowsky: Graywolf Press Editor-at-Large, Creative Capital’s Consultant for Innovative Literature, adjunct at Columbia–utility infielder of the lit world.

Maureen O’Brien: Bestsellermaker, ghostwriter and journalista. (Former Executive Editor @ HarperCollins & Hyperion + NY Post, Publishers Weekly & Los Angeles Times staffer.)

Carrie Obry: Book broker, food writer, flaneuse.

Jonathan Oliver: Jonathan Oliver is the Editor-in-Chief of Abaddon Books and Solaris. This is his personal blog and doesn’t necessarily reflect the views of Rebellion.

K. O’Moore-Klopf: “Your favorite copyeditor since 1984.”

Heather Osborn
: “Editor at Tor Books. Pop culture fan. RPG gamer. Romance junkie. Ninja Warrior addict. Yup, I’m a nerd.”

Molly O’Neill: “Children’s & YA book editor. Collector of words and art and stories.”

Denise Oswald: “!t Girl. Lit Chick. Hasty typist. Atrocious speller. Unrepentant potty mouth.”

Bella Pagan: Commissioning editor, Orbit – working on out-of-this world SF and fantasy fiction for the Little, Brown Book Group

Page One Editing: We word wrangle, in fiction and nonfiction, for government, business, the community and authors. Qualified in editing, passionate about writing!

Stephen Parolini: I am an editor, writer, dreamer, former dragonslayer, ironist and mildly malcontented colloquialist. Also, I like cookies.

Lori Perkins: “Editorial Director of Ravenous Romance and Agent Extraordinaire. A Writers Fairy Godmother.”

Allyson E. Peltier: “An editor/writer helping you put your best word forward.”

David Pomerico: “[Editor at] Del Rey and Spectra are two of the biggest SF, fantasy, urban fantasy, and paranormal romance imprints in–and out of–the world.”

Jennifer Pooley: “Book editor @ William Morrow & Perennial most often found buying all I can carry at the Webster Library book sale & reading old Domino Magazines.”

Ranty Editor: Anonymous fiction editor.

Fred Ramey: Publishing commercial literature independently and being noisy about it.

Megan Records: Associate Editor at Kensington Books

Chris Reese: Editor for Moody Publishers. International Outreach Coordinator for the Evangelical Philosophical Society.

Ruta Rimas: “Kids Books Editor at Balzer + Bray (HarperCollins)”

Amy Rost: Professional trade nonfiction editor for 15 years (in house & freelance); compulsive, eclectic reader; dominatrix linguistique.

Nellie Sabin: “Freelance nonfiction editor and writer – health, medical, psychology, mind/body/spirit, etc. Formerly an acquisitions editor in NYC, now living and working in beautiful Cape Cod.”

Victoria Sandbrook: “Associate Editor (acquiring non-fiction) at Adams Media. Writer, Reader, Blogger. Of course, my opinions do not reflect those of my employer.”

Maria Schneider: “Freelance writer, editor, blogger, forum hostess, book reviewer, former editor of a writing magazine you’ve probably heard of. Wants to eradicate the semicolon.”

Adrienne Schultz: “I’m an editor at Portfolio, the biz book imprint at Penguin Group.”

Esi Sogah: “Romance editor at Avon; theater, pop culture junkie.”

Anne Sowards: “Science fiction & fantasy editor (vampires & wizards & spaceships, oh my)”

Alyssa Smith: “Editor at a NY publishing house, reviewer, convention organizer, avid costumer, and owner of several demanding parrots”

Shana Smith: I’m an Assistant Editor at Harlequin (Desire and Romantic Suspense) and a lover of books, movies and TV.

Dawn McIlvain Stahl: Professional freelance copy editor w/ many interests. Exceptions: calculus, catheters, and cake. And sometimes even cake is awesome.

Jonathan Strahan: “An editor, anthologist, and SF critic doing his best to keep up.”

Nan A. Talese: Nan A. Talese/Doubleday is a literary imprint committed to quality publishing.

Carol Terry: Freelance editing, bicycle riding, journalism loving, English football watching, chocolate eating, reference librarian.

Allison Trzop: “Editing nonfiction books–sports, law, comics–for independent-minded Beacon Press.”

Erika Tsang: “I’m a romance editor and proud of it.”

Juliet Ulman: freelance editor at large extraordinaire.”

Adriana Van Leeuwen: Novice copyeditor. Likes surrealist art, folklore, chocolate, and stomping on manuscripts with leather boots.

Lourdes Venard: “Editor, writer, professor. In my little spare time, I review crime fiction and blog about YA books”

Marisa Vigilante: RH Book Editor; Selected interests and twitter topics: books, reading, writing, politics, public health, baking birthday cakes

Johanna Vondeling: “VP, Editorial and Digital at Berrett-Koehler Publishers”

Claire Wachtel: wife, mother, book-editor and knee-jerk liberal democrat

Jessica Wade: “An editor and a gentlelady. Well. An editor.”

Dinah Wallace: “Copyeditor and Reprints Manager for Strang Communications Book Group.”

Meghan Ward: “Writer and book editor.”

Jennifer Way: Worrying my pretty little head about it since 1975.

Kristen Weber: I am a freelance book editor living in Los Angeles.

Christy Webster: “Editor of children’s books, from Maine. I also like: TV, art, comics, food, blogs, video games, feminism, my cat, my couch, my handsome guy.”

Michele Wells: “Editor w/experience in adult nonfiction, children’s, and YA.”

Ian Whates: Author of science fiction and fantasy, editor of books and stories and independent publisher

Stacy Whitman: Editorial director of Tu Books, an imprint of Lee & Low Books

Ivy Wigmore: “I’m content editor and grammar blogger @whatis.com. Got a grammar/writing question or comment? Pet peeve? Tweet me!”

Adam Wilson: Associate Editor @ Harlequin Teen, MIRA, LUNA. Freelance copywriter. I like drawering too.

Ken Wissoker: Editorial Director, Duke University Press

Michelle Witte: “Opening @firepetalbooks, a children’s bookstore in Utah. YA fiction writer. Formerly a book editor with Gibbs Smith.”

Tessa Woodward: “Romance Editor and huge book nerd.”

Courtney Young: “Book editor for Penguin’s Portfolio imprint. And I do other stuff, too.”

Abby Zidle: Gallery/Pocket senior editor, horsewoman, reality TV addict, misanthrope.

Jun 24

Granny’s 50 Tips on Social Media via The Marketing Nut

50 Tips From Granny’s Social Heart to Yours!

1. If ya’ ain’t got nothin nice, useful or relevant to say then shut yer dang yapper.

2. Is social media really as hard as you make it? Be a friend to get a friend. Speak when spoken to otherwise sit there, smile, be kind and don’t fart while on video!

3. First off, what happened with the Facebook IPO? I could have told ya’ that from the start. We don’t need no financial guru to tell us it’s over valued. Uncle Charlie called that one a year ago. He’s a smart chicken.

4. I’m not sayin’ Zuckerbird isn’t smart. I’m just sayin’ there are a few smarter chickens.

5. Yes, I sometimes call him Zuckerbird. It’s not a typo.

6. How are all them purchased followers workin’ out for ya’? Ya’ can’t buy real friends. They can only be earned via the heart.

To read the rest of the 50 and other great stuff visit Pam Moore | The Marketing Nut.

Jun 23

Famous Self-Publishers | How To Self Publish and Sell Your Books

Though it took technology to spread it to the masses, self-publishing has a long in 1797 Austen tried to self publishand distinguished history, as this anecdote from Alison Baverstock’s book The Naked Author: A Guide To Self Publishing, illustrates:

“In 1797, a manuscript was submitted to a London publisher by the proud father of an unknown author. First Impressions, a three-volume novel. was offered for private publication; the writer’s family would pay… to mitigate the publisher’s financial risk. The publishing house turned it down.

Revised and renamed, it was finally published fourteen years later to good reviews… [and is] today… a cornerstone of English literature.”

She is talking, of course, of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice

Here are some more famous authors who chose to self-publish at some point in their writing life — and not always at the beginning of their careers:

Lord Byron

Pat Conroy

Stephen Crane

e.e. cummings

Charles Dickens

Alexander Dumas

T.S. Eliot

Benjamin Franklin

Zane Grey

Thomas Hardy

Nathaniel Hawthorne

Ernest Hemingway

See full article @ Famous Self-Publishers | How To Self Publish and Sell Your Books.

Jun 11

It’s time to get pinning: 5 benefits of a marketing campaign that includes Pinterest | Novel Publicity

By Sarah Tharp

Pinterest is a social networking site with a twist. After launching a beta version in March of 2010, it is now the third largest social networking site and continues to grow. Users create their own collections to which they can post photos related to different themes. Other users can re-pin photos they like, making it easy to share and create a unique pinboard.

Interest in this hot new social networking site is growing rapidly. Pinterest is visually appealing and easy to use, making it a rich resource for Internet marketing.

Every website can benefit from signing up and participating in the community at Pinterest.

1. Connect With Customers

Customers are the basis of any business. Pinterest can be used to connect with those customers and engage in interactions with them. Making a website or business personable drives up sales and encourages repeat customers. Create a board of photos highlighting customers, reply to comments and socialize with them to build trust and respect.

2. Share Products and Content

Pinterest is the perfect marketing tool for websites that contain lots of graphics. Although directly selling products or services is not allowed, website owners can share information about their site and any products they may offer. Pinterest is essentially virtual window-shopping for customers. Other users can choose to re-pin and highlight photos they like, circulating and exposing your content to an unlimited number of prospective visitors.

Read the full article here It’s time to get pinning: 5 benefits of a marketing campaign that includes Pinterest | Novel Publicity.

Jun 11

Frustrated? Why You’re Wasting Your Time With Facebook & Twitter

Frustrated? Why You’re Wasting Your Time With Facebook & Twitter

By Jim Kukral

It totally amazes me how many people focus only on Facebook and Twitter for their marketing. You know what? There’s a social media network that I use that gives me a 1000 times better results than those. You know what the network is; you just don’t realize what it can do for you.

Duh… It’s. I’m not kidding.

I’ve been using LinkedIn forever to generate leads for my businesses (watch the video to find out how). And frankly, I’ve gotten way more ROI from it than the other social networks. Why? Because I know how to use it. In fact, I’ve been teaching my tricks on using it to my students at The University of San Francisco for years now. It works.

Let me tell you this story about how I learned about the power of LinkedIn.

So years ago I met this guy named Lewis Howes. Lewis contacted me out of the blue one day, I had never heard of him, and he asked me to come to his networking event he put together in Cleveland. He informed me that he put the entire event together by utilizing the power of LinkedIn. He offered me a sponsor table at the event for free to get me there, and promised there would be at least 150 people there. Since it was close to my office and I was curious, I went.

Read the full article here Frustrated? Why You’re Wasting Your Time With Facebook & Twitter | Internet Marketing for Business – Jim Kukral – Small Business Web Consultant.

Jun 10

From the Website “Makes Me Think” Some thinks to make you think . . ..

Today in downtown San Diego, I watched a blue collar Mexican man get harassed for being Mexican. It was a blatant act of discrimination. And the man actually began crying. As he left the office building, he took off his jacket. His t-shirt underneath read, “I love the USA!” MMT

Today, I interviewed a woman who is terminally ill. “So,” I tried to delicately ask, “What is it like to wake up every morning and know that you are dying?” “Well,” she responded, “What is it like to wake up every morning and pretend that you are not?” MMT

Today, I was working in a coffee shop when 2 gay men walked in holding hands. As you might expect, heads started turning. Then a young girl at the table next to me asked her mom why 2 men were holding hands. Her mom replied, “Because they love each other.” MMT

Today, I was traveling in Kenya and I met a refugee from Zimbabwe. He said he hadn’t eaten anything in over 3 days and looked extremely skinny and unhealthy. Then my friend offered him the rest of the sandwich he was eating. The first thing the man said was, “We can share it.” MMT

Today, I was looking through the Facebook remembrance groups of two people that died from my high school. The girl was sweet, smart, quiet and unpopular. She was killed by a drunk driver. The guy was inconsiderate, rude and popular. He was the drunk driver. His group has 602 members. Hers has 48. MMT

Today, one of my best friends, Charlie, shot himself in the head at approximately 2PM. And I just noticed that I have a missed call from him on my cell phone with a timestamp of 1:56PM. MMT

Today, after I watched my dog get run over by a car, I sat on the side of the road holding him and crying. And just before he died, he licked the tears off my face. MMT

Today, I was driving to a job interview when I saw a businesswoman standing next to her BMW on the side of the road. She had a flat tire. I pulled over and helped her put on the spare. When I arrived to the interview, the woman who I helped ended up being the CEO of the company. I got the job. MMT

Read the more here Makes Me Think – Top Stories – Today’s Thought-Provoking Life Stories.

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