Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Facebook Page vs. Profile...What I Learned

For the last few years I have only used facebook to post pictures of the kids for Nana back east to see. A few weeks ago I finally launched a page for the company. I know, I'm behind, it's becoming more important than ever to switch to a Page from a Personal Profile so the public can see what you have to say, even if they aren't your friend or "like" you. 

I feel like I've let the public peek into the everyday conversations I have with my authors. We've shared a video with our gal in Japan so she could see her new ARCs the moment they arrived (amid updates about the disaster), had a book cover design critique, and I'm having a blast cross-promoting our author's books, kindles, ideas and offerings.

WHAT STARTED IT 
The way facebook creates "ghost pages" based on what you write as your "Work" was driving me crazy. When one of our authors mentioned she "liked" my business page I thought, "What page?" 


I decided I had to figure out how to get a real one set up. Here's a little of what I learned as a non-techie...


You will log in to your existing personal page and then be able to switch from one to the other.


By the way, I found interesting articles about automating the switch from a personal page to a business page with a warning:  http://tinyurl.com/FBprofileTOpage , http://tinyurl.com/FBprofileTOpageWARNING




2. I used a  square 200 pixel x 200 pixel jpg with lots of white space around the image, after many failed attempts at getting our logo to crop correctly. Here's a template. 

Wyatt-MacKenzie authors and imprints who'd like a custom 180 pixel wide x 540 pixel high branded image, just let me know! I'm so excited to add this to our branding packages. An old post with size and examples of largest image: http://tinyurl.com/sizeofprofilepicture

3. Facebook then has a list of steps that allow you to suggest your new page to existing friends; get a code to add a "Like" box to your website; etc. (you'll see). By clicking "Edit Page" these are listed under "Marketing." I removed the extra links I hadn't setup yet, and I used an "Edit FBML" to simply embed a youtube link (copy, paste).

4. I found a free app http://tinyurl.com/appforwelcomepage to create a basic Welcome Page - which essentially is two images, one for those who have not "liked" you yet, and one for those who have. Here's the one I was playing with to try it: http://tinyurl.com/LikeUsGetOurBook Here's a cool professional example: http://www.facebook.com/redbull

5. Once you have 25 "likes" you can create a custom username here:  http://www.Facebook.com/username It's surprising how many companies haven't switched from the longer code to a shorter custom name. I noticed this link just as Lisa Orrell @promotuguru mentioned this important distinction. Think about what you want - you can't change it.

6. Linking to twitter, so your facebook updates are automatically streamed there and vice-versa, can kill two birds with one stone... especially the little blue one!  Lisa Orrell advises against linking the two, and I have just turned mine off. My personal tip -- if you link them, keep the main text in the first 31 characters of your facebook post, so your tweets won't be incoherent (Guilty! A fb.me link takes the rest of the spaces). 

7.  Then be sure to relink your "Work" on your personal page to your new business page so the link is top and center.

8. More tips in this great video by Lisa Orrell "6 Ways to Improve Fan Page Posts" http://tinyurl.com/6waystoimprovefanpage

Friday, March 25, 2011

BLACKLISTED review copy giveaway

Enter to win a free advance review copy of BLACKLISTED FROM THE PTA, out this Summer!



Goodreads Book Giveaway





Blacklisted from the PTA (Paperback) by Lela Davidson



Blacklisted from the PTA


by Lela Davidson



Giveaway ends April 24, 2011.

See the giveaway details
at Goodreads.




Enter to win


Thursday, March 24, 2011

A Publishing Implosion


The big publishing world is imploding, while independent publishing is exploding.

Major-Publishing-House Authors are turning down $500,000 advances and deciding to self-publish while Big Publishers are scrambling to launch self-publishing divisions.

The Emperors’ New Imprints
A few weeks ago Berrett-Koehler got in line with Writer's Digest, Hay House, Harlequin, and Thomas Nelson and began using megalith pay-for-publishing service machine Author Solutions to start their own "Self-Publishing Imprint." The reality is, like with all of the other middleman companies, it's not true self-publishing, and not very transparent. Much on their "services" charts seems over-priced and preying on the false hopes of writers while padding their own pockets. I'm sure AS is a fine company (they also recently purchased AuthorHouse, iUniverse, Trafford, Xlibrius, and Wordclay) but I think this new hybrid of major-publisher-self-pub-division is giving writers one more confusing option.

True Transparent Self Publishing
Putting your company's name and logo on the spine, getting paid directly by the distributor, ordering books direct from the printer at cost, having your own eBook accounts with Kindle, Nook, and Smashwords -- that's transparent, going straight to the source.  

This week M.J.Rose wrote, "Self-publishing still entails many things many of us aren’t interested in. We would rather not run a business. Don’t want to be entrepreneurs. We want the best that a publisher offers."
I thought, Wow, that’s the Wyatt-MacKenzie Imprint Program...

An Imprint of Your OWN
I agree completely with Ms. Rose, she succinctly gave the reason for launching my Imprint Program four years ago. After consulting with authors for a decade, and traditionally publishing authors myself -- my Imprint Program was the perfect synthesis of the two and embodied transparency.  

No, we don't have a fancy chart comparing our "packages" (which I seem to be asked a lot about lately, "Where's your chart?"). We include it all and more. We're we'll-do-it-for-you consultants, not middlemen. We love helping writers make beautiful books, and we use our hard-won experience as an independent publisher to teach them the best way to do...everything.

Our Program helps you establish an imprint of your very own. You are only under our umbrella, but still have complete control, forever. We help you launch your own independent press without all the "hassles" of the "publishing stuff."

Barry Eisler: (recently turned down a half-million dollar publishing deal to self-publish) "And that the question -- “Should I self-publish?” -- was going to be asked by more and more authors going forward. And that, over time, more and more of them were going to be answering the question, “Yes.

YES! You can publish yourself... 

But, here are 12 important items (in my worn-out-publisher opinion) you should have (even if you go straight to eBook!):

1. Your Own Account with DistributorsLightningSource for on-demand international distribution of printed books to all online retailers and special-order through brick-and-mortar bookstores. (This empowers you to get paid 100% of sales directly, check sales anytime, and order books at cost.) Kindle, Nook and even Smashwords for eBooks. (And understand what is required for formatting and selling eBooks, including Apple iBooks, as well as audiobooks through Audible.com). 

2. YOUR publishing company name and logo on the spine and title page not a paid-service company or division.

3. Professional Editing, Copy-Editing and Proofreading (at whatever level is needed).

4. Professional Cover Design -- that can compete in the market and builds your author brand, including a savvy back cover and compelling spine.

5. Professional Interior Layout -- with brand positioning in mind, and assistance with all necessary registrations and copyright page inclusions (ISBN, LCCN, BIP, CIP) plus organization of frontmatter, backmatter, and indexing.  

6. A Marketing Plan that starts with setting the publication date (and knowing what considerations that entails) and includes advance review copies for endorsements, industry reviews (know which can be paid for, and the actual cost), and to fulfill the media schedule month to month. Including the creation and distribution of a press release to a massive audience through PRWeb at cost, and listings in catalogs at cost.

7. Book Industry Cliff-Notes -- an understanding of how the book industry works, distribution, what it means to be on a bookstore shelf, how to interact with booksellers, and a general knowledge of purchase orders and the ease of personal order fulfillment using LightningSource.

8. A Publicity Education -- how to pitch, what to pitch, when to pitch, why to pitch, and how to find who to pitch -- to get yourself in the media. (Before wasting thousands of dollars on a publicist or a conference, know how to get it for free, the way publicity is meant to be.)

9. A Media Kit -- to back-up pitches (both online and print), complete with a press release, sell sheet, author Q and A, speaking points, author bio and photo, book cover and back cover art, excerpts, and video.

10. A Social Media Presence -- with consistent visuals, and a comprehensive strategy for using twitter, creating a facebook author page, use of blogging, a video youtube channel, and book-community sites. This should extend to a dynamic Amazon listing with an author central page and killer Amazon reviews and a "Search Inside" option if you so choose.

11. Marketing Items -- all custom to match everything else you are doing: bookmarks, business cards and/or postcards emblazon with your social media links; (the printing of which can be done for $15-$30 for 1000 items, don’t let those author services charts fool you.); posters and big banners for events and visibility; plus creative s.w.a.g. (t-shirts, hats, mugs) and strategies to use effectively; as well as beautifully designed print and banner ads along with where to successfully run them.

12. Alternative Editions -- understanding the options and opportunities, including eBooks and audiobooks, alternative formats, licensing, private-labeling, large quantity sales, catalogs, book clubs, foreign rights, translations.

* * *
All of the above is included, with special care and attention to our authors, in our Imprint Program with the exception of editing and indexing (our team members will provide direct quotes), or the cost of paid reviews, ads, or printing of marketing items (but we'll get you all set up directly, and save you hundreds of dollars.)

There are many publishing options facing writers -- some will feel more comfortable with a large corporation acting as a middleman forever, while others will want to take control with true self-publishing and position themselves safely for the future of this publishing explosion.  




I'll leave you with two webinars I listened to this month:
  1. DigitalBookWorld.com presented "The Evolution of Self-Publishing
  2. Writer's Digest presented "The Borders Dilemma, What the New World Order of Bookselling Means for Writers" [click to download]
I personally liked this comment I heard from Publisher's Weekly
“[In the past] we drew lines in the sand of the hierarchy of publishing. The lines have blurred. Self-published books are getting better-looking, it's hard to tell. How do we deal with self-published authors? We adapt.” 
Then the new PW Select was plugged --- where independent and self-publishing authors can pay to list their title, and then 25 out of the list are chosen for review. (Like one of our Imprints!) Very cool.