It was a life-changing moment and a revelation to my writing life. In 2007, I was a literary agent with, the Whalin Literary Agency, a small Arizona-based agency. Mark Victor Hansen, co-author for Chicken Soup for the Soul, invited me to Mega-Book Marketing University in Los Angeles. About 400 people attended this event with well-known speakers over several days. At that point in my writing life, I had written over 50 books for traditional publishers. Two of my book proposals received six-figure advances and publishers made beautiful books and got them into bookstores. Yet my books were not selling and I had the negative royalty statements from my publishers to prove it.
Throughout the conference, I listened carefully and took notes. One of the speakers was Jack Canfield who had just published The Success Principles. For years he has studied what it takes to be successful and I certainly wanted to be successful as an author. The first of his 64 principles is: “Take 100% Responsibility for Your Life.”
I didn’t want to take 100% responsibility. I wanted to write the books and then have my publisher sell the books. Wasn’t marketing their responsibility? Didn’t they sell the books into the bookstore? I was writing excellent books and delivering them on deadline and working through each editorial process. But I was doing very little to market the books. I had a single website with my name but no email list, no social media, no blog or other type of writer’s platform.
At Mega-Book Marketing University, I learned publishers make books and distribute them to bookstores. Here’s what I was missing and I learned: the author drives readers into the bookstore (brick and mortar or online) to buy those books.
Ultimately, the author sells the books to the readers.
Like many writers that I meet, my expectations were unrealistic and I was not taking my responsibility as a writer. I made a decision to change. I started to blog and today my blog has over 1,600 searchable entries in it. In January, I found this article which says of the over 600 million blogs, I was one of The Top 27 Content Writers. I began an email list (which continues to be a unique way to reach my readers). Also I’m active on social media with over 180,000 Twitter followers and over 19,400 LinkedIn connections. For years, I post on these platforms 12-15 times a day.
If I’m honest, I don’t want 100% responsibility for my own success as a writer. Yet from my decades in publishing, I’ve watched many things go wrong in the publishing process. Good books don’t get marketed and go out of print. Editors change while you are working with a publisher. Those situations are just two of a myriad of things which can push your book off the rails in the wrong direction. I can’t control my publisher, my editor, my agent, my marketing person or ____. But I can control myself and my own efforts.
My acceptance of this responsibility means I have to continually grow and learn as a writer. It means I often take courses or read books and I’m always looking for new ways to build my audience and reach more people. Thankfully as writers we are not alone. Others have shown us how they have achieved success. This path may work for me or it may not.
There is no success formula used for every book to make it sell into the hands of readers. Instead there are basic principles others are using to build their audience and find readers. I have one certainty: it will not fly if you don’t try. I continue to take action—and encourage you to do the same. It’s the writer’s journey.
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6 comments:
Terry, thanks for sharing this. Authors do need to realize that taking responsibility for promoting their books is essential, and it's an on-going job. I'll have to see about posting to social media more - I only post 5X a day. And congratulations on being one of The Top 27 Content Writers!
Karen,
Thanks for this comment. Marketing is an on-going process for all of us. I'm still amazed to find my name with those other writers. I've been blogging consistently since 2008 and I guess the volume from that regular effort is finally getting attention.
Terry
Thank you Terry, for this article.
It is powerful, engaging, and OH so true. Writing is so Much More than writing! It means acceptance & taking responsibility to make marketing happen and "to continually grow and learn as a writer." Its our journey!
Deborah Lyn,
Thank you for this comment and the affirmation. It's not easy--or everyone would be successful doing it. Keep at it and I will as well.
Terry
Yep, Terry. This one is a constant uphill battle. It is one of the big reasons I started teaching (UCLA Extension Writers' Program) and wrote a book specifically targeted at writers who don't understand the process (or fight it even if they do!). Hooray for Jack and you!
Best,
Carolyn
https://bit.ly/CarolynsAmznProfile
Please follow for more while you are there! (-:
Carolyn,
It is an uphill process for all of us--yet the ones who succeed are the ones like us who perserevere and carry onward. Thank you for your comment and all you are doing to help others.
Terry
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