Last week I addressed what I think is the
biggest cause of insecurity in writers: a lack of knowledge. This week, I am
going to talk about marketing yourself, when you feel like you don't deserve
people's attention.
Again, this is an area where I am talking
about a problem I don't really have. So while I strongly advise you at least
try my methods, take this blog post with a grain of salt.
It can be very hard to promote yourself and
your writing. I am super confident when it comes to talking about myself, but I
am not the sort of person who pushes sales or hounds people to read my work.
However, I am happy to talk about it and I do love it when people read my work.
That is, after all, the goal. A lot of people seem to really struggle with this
though. They feel if they talk about their own work, they are being
narcissistic and will risk boring people. However so much of being an author
these days is about promoting yourself. There is a lot of competition in the
market and you're crazy if you just leave discoverability to chance. So without
further ado:
Promote
Yourself As If You Are Your Favourite Author.
How many times have you encouraged friends to
read a book you love? Hopefully a lot, since word of mouth is the most powerful
success tool for books. If you want your favourite author to keep writing,
recommend them to people, so they can quit their day job and write for you full
time.
Remember the passion and excitement you
expressed? You're not sharing a book you love for selfish reasons, you're
sharing it because you are hoping it will bring your friend the same joy it
brought you. You are recommending it, because you think they will like it.
And how awesome is it when a friend
recommends a book to you and it's AMAZING? And you love it. And you recommend
it to everyone else?
When you are promoting your book, I want you
to pretend you are promoting a book by someone else. It's an author you love, a
story you love. And if you use the same sort of language in promoting your own
book as you do promoting other people's books, you'll have more success.
How do you usually recommend a book to
someone? Usually with one or two lines that summarise the key appeal (or key
sparkly, but more on that in another blog post). I'll give you some examples of
me pitching novels I love to my friends:
'Three
words. Gay slave prince. Its trashy, and angsty and fantastic. Its every guilty
pleasure you ever wanted in one super gay fantasy trilogy.' (Captive Prince – C.S Pacat)
'It's
grimdark, subversive, really intelligent political fantasy and one of the
characters is a disabled asshole and I love him.' (The Blade Itself – Joe Abercrombie)
'It's world
war one, but the Germans have mecha and the British have genetically modified
animals and there is a girl dressed as a boy who runs away to join the air
force and it is everything I ever wanted.'
(Leviathan – Scott Westerfeld)
How would you describe your book in one to
two enthusiastic sentences? What are the key elements that would appeal to
readers? Work it out, memorise it, and next time someone asks what you book is
about, that's all you need to say. Pitch your book as you would your favourite
book. Even pretend it was written by someone else if that helps. It will make a
difference.
Be Aware Of
What You Are Offering.
Obviously if you are going to pitch your
story to people the same way you would your favourite book, you must be aware
of what you are offering. If you have no idea, go back to stuff you love and
write down why you love it. Just the basic, simple things. It's entertaining,
you like the characters, you're hooked on the romance—whatever it is. Be
honest. You don't have to be ashamed of what you like. You don't have to like
things for high-brow reasons.
Now, it's more than likely, you write similar
things to what you like. You're going to have similar elements in your books to
the elements you love in other books. This is where you might get caught up
thinking 'but I don't do it as well as my favourite author'.
If you ask 10 people what their favourite
book is, you'll probably get ten different answers. If you ask ten people who
their favourite character is, you'll get ten different answers. Opinions vary. A
lot of my friends do not like one of my favourite authors. They find him
elitist and inaccessible. And boring. They prefer my style of writing to his.
He is inarguably richer and more famous, but if they had to choose between one
of my books and one of his, mine would win every time. But I IDOLISE this guy.
I think preferring my books over his is crazy. I think he writes like he was
touched by God.
You can't really compare your tastes to
everyone else's tastes. There are people out there who think your favourite
author is crap dusted on a crap sandwich. So don't think just because you think
you are terrible when comparing yourself to your idols, that everyone else does
too.
It's egotistical to think your opinion on
what is good and what is bad is more valid than everyone else's. Tell people
what you love about your writing and then let them make up their own minds.
Some people will like it and some people won't, just like they do with your
favourite author. Which brings me to:
Love What
You Have Written.
A friend of mine was looking for people to
review his work on amazon. I said sure, and to toss me a copy. He didn't. I
messaged him, a little confused, to ask why not. You can never have enough
reviews, after all. Had he reached a quota? No. He confessed he didn't want me
to read his book because he 'cared about my opinion'.
I was baffled. Completely stunned. I would
PAY to have people I respect read my books. Nothing in the world would make me
happier than having someone I respect ask for a copy of one of my books. I
would deliver it to them on a unicorn with banners and a marching band.
Why? Because I love my books. I am proud of
my books. What I want, more than money and fame and a harem of gorgeous
polymaths is for people to read my books.
Want to impress me? Want to get on my good side? Want me to ADORE you? Read my
books. Tell other people to read my books. Talk to me about my books.
I don't want to be an asshole, but why would
you spend hundreds of hours writing and editing a manuscript if you didn't want
anyone to read it? Isn't that a huge waste of time? Or do you just want stupid,
boring people to read it and praise you? It's good enough for the people you
don't give a shit about, but not the ones you respect? That sounds pretty dicky
to me.
Don't let anyone tell you you're not allowed
to be proud of the things you create. Imagine if someone said: "Oh, you're
proud of your daughter? I don't think you should be. She's not that
great."
Would you let someone talk to you like that
about your child? About your partner? About your parents? I wouldn't. I'd punch
someone in the fucking mouth if they said that to me. Try me. Tell me I
shouldn't be proud of my friends. I will fight you.
Your creative work is the same. You are the
same. You are allowed to be proud of yourself and your creations. Just like you
are your children. You created them too.
No more bullshit. I am giving you all
permission to be proud and talk about your books with enthusiasm. Be excited to
share them.
And if you still can't bring yourself to do
it, be excited to share mine. They're awesome.
For more updates on how awesome I am, follow me on twitter.
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