Turning Jealousy into Success
Or What You Can Do To Be the Featured Expert
By Carolyn Howard-Johnson
Someone Beat You To It, Huh?
Maybe we all have a tendency to feel disgruntled when our local newspaper quotes an expert who isn’t (really, he isn't!) as expert as we are!
Maybe we all have a tendency to feel disgruntled when our local newspaper quotes an expert who isn’t (really, he isn't!) as expert as we are!
We feel even worse when when
CNN features a talking head on the subject of their book and they disagree with us!
Seems we have some choices. We can grumble to ourselves and lose sleep. We can write to
whoever was remiss and complain. Or we can take positive action.
Here are your dos and don'ts:
· Whatever
you do, do not complain on a social
network or to the producer/talk show host or other media person about their
lack of foresight (and appreciation of your brilliance).
· Use
your Googling skills to contact whoever was in charge (or to blame!) for this
lack of foresight. Give yourself enough time to cool off and put your tactful
hat on. Then, and only then, do you approach them. And you use a tactful approach: Something like, "Perhaps next time [subject x] comes up, you would like a different perspective on the topic. I also can offer expertise on related topics like xx and xx."
· Now it's time to use your query letter skills. Introduce
yourself. Be very clear about your credentials. Unless you are famous, use your credential upfront--before your name per the advice of master PR Person Raleigh Pinsky. She gave me permission to use her script/template for how to approach reporters and others responsible for stories to put in the Appendix of The Frugal Book Promoter, second edition. She explains that name-after-credentials plan.
· Send a
product sample or a copy of your book with your media kit along with your query letter.
·
Repeat the process again when something similar
hits the news. Your goal is to be remembered--or, better yet, be there when your editor or contact needs you. Expand your campaign to include
others who might cover the same kind of story.
Here's the number one biggest mistake you can make:
Don’t
assume that because you write fiction, you can’t be an expert. Or because you are self-published, your expertise doesn't count.
Of course your voice counts! I am an expert on tolerance, polygamy, and a host of related subjects
based on the theme and setting of my novel This
Is the Place (www.bit.ly/ThisIsthePlace). And yes, an author's expertise may rely at least in part on her profession outside the publishing industry. All you have to do is examine the subjects of your fiction and see
how it relates to what’s in the news. And be ready next time that subject come up in the news.
Not all missed opportunities are missed forever. They can inspire us to do better next time around.
-----
Carolyn
Howard-Johnson is the author of the multi award-winning series of #HowToDoItFrugally books for writers including USA Book News’ winner for The
Frugal Book Promoter. An instructor for UCLA Extension's renowned
Writers Program for nearly a decade, she believes in entering (and winning!)
contests and anthologies as an excellent way to separate our writing from the
hundreds of thousands of books that get published each year. Two of her
favorite awards are Woman of the Year in Arts and Entertainment given by
members of the California Legislature and Women Who Make Life Happen, given by
the Pasadena Weekly newspaper. She is
also an award-winning poet and novelist and she loves passing along the tricks
of the trade she learned from marketing those so-called hard-to-promote genres.