The Versatile Blogger Award

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Thank you, K. J. Farnham, for nominating me for this awesome award! Here’s a little about Ms. Farnham:

“I was born and raised in West Allis, Wisconsin, home of the Wisconsin State Fair and the Pettit National Ice Center. In 1999, I graduated from UW-Milwaukee with a bachelor’s degree in elementary education. I went on to earn a master’s degree in curriculum and instruction while teaching full time. After teaching first grade and third grade for six years each, I am proud to say that I had the privilege of helping hundreds of children learn to read and write.

In 2011, my family of four relocated from Milwaukee to western Wisconsin. (We are now a family of five!) While I was sad to leave teaching, I was ready for a change and excited to explore my love for writing. I got caught up for two years writing and editing for various clients while the book that I’d started back in 2009 went untouched. I finally made it my New Year’s Resolution for 2014 to finish Click Date Repeat, and it was published on August 21, 2014 (my wedding anniversary).

Things I enjoy: travel (especially road trips), running, biking, nature walks, beach outings, coffee and tea.

Things I love: watching my children participate in various activities, reading, writing, Body Pump at the YMCA, The Walking Dead, peanut butter and coconut milk.”

For more about K.J. Farnham, visit her blog here.

 

Information about the award:

The Versatile Blogger Award is given in recognition for the great commitment, diverse talents and generosity shown by bloggers here in our community. There is so much creativity on display that it is difficult to reduce a list to only a few, but for those nominated, it is hoped that it will motivate them as well as celebrate their work to date.

Here are the rules:

  • Show the award on your blog
  • Thank the person who nominated you
  • Share seven facts about yourself
  • Nominate up to fifteen blogs
  • Link your nominees’ blogs, and let them know

Seven facts about me:

  1. I’m currently working on a series entitled “For the Love of Donuts”
  2. I absolutely love organization
  3. I severely broke my pinkie finger and it will never be straight again
  4. I like to eat tomatoes raw
  5. I read really fast
  6. I usually skim over sex scenes when I’m reading
  7. I like to geocache

And now for the bloggers I have chosen to nominate:

1. Sheri J. Kennedy – sherijkennedyriverside.wordpress.com

2. Ana is the Bookworm – anaisthebookworm.wordpress.com

3. Author Lee French – authorleefrench.com

4. Verbosity Book Reviews – verbositybookreviews.wordpress.com

Wrote a book and need reviews but don’t know how?

In case you missed her last week, the lovely and talented Kelly St. Clare was here on my blog as a guest poster and wrote all about how to get reviews for your book. She brought up some great points! 

I’ve had a few authors contact me through my blog/goodreads/facebook regarding doing reviews and if their book looked good (and I liked it when I started reading) I’ve added them to my tbr list, so this point Kelly St. Clare brought up works.

She brought up another point that I’ve not yet done that I notice quite a few of the authors I follow do: a newsletter. So stay tuned for an option to follow my blog AND receive a monthly newsletter as a tl;dr monthly catch up for my blog.

 

Thanks again Kelly St. Clare for telling all about getting reviews (especially as a debut indie author this is highly valuable real-time information).

 

For more about Kelly St. Clare:

Author Biography

When Kelly St Clare is not reading or writing, she is dreaming up a story in her head; the cause of many headaches for her friends and family, who have struggled to encourage her participation in normal activities – such as everyday life.

Books have always been magical and mysterious to her. One day she decided to start unravelling this mystery and began writing. Her aim: To write stories she would want to read.

A New Zealander in origin, Kelly currently resides in Australia with her soon-to-be husband.

Follow her via Newsletter at www.kellystclare.com, and find her on Facebook or Goodreads.

If you would like to read her coming-of-age epic fantasy novel, Fantasy of Frost, then you can view it here.

Guest Post by Kelly St. Clare — Reviews: The How, What, Why

You may remember Kelly St. Clare from a book review I did on her fantastic debut fantasy novel: Fantasy of Frost (The Tainted Accords Book 1). She is a wonderfully talented writer with many tricks up her sleeves when it comes to promoting her book and getting those much sought after reviews… Just check out her book’s Amazon page here where you can see that she already has 67 reviews with an average rating of 4.7/5.0 stars, but don’t take my word for it that she knows what she’s doing, just stay tuned for:

 

Reviews: The How, What, Why

Kelly St Clare (Author of The Tainted Accords)

 

As a self-published author who once wondered how on earth the writing and publishing world worked, imparting the tips and tricks I pick up along the way is a continual goal of mine. I detail these “trade secrets” in my blog series, Dear Aspiring Author.

Obtaining reviews is one of the most difficult and most important parts of publishing – Whether you are self-published or traditionally published. In an online world where books are flooding the market, reviews are a proven way to set yourself apart. But how do you even get your first review? Let alone fifty, a hundred, or a thousand!

This post focuses on how to get reviews, not how to get good reviews. If you want to get five star reviews, make sure your work is quality by having your manuscript edited and critiqued by beta-readers before you send it out for review. You have one shot to stand out in a readers mind. Don’t rush the job. Make sure the word is polished and done to the best of your ability. Small things like a copy edit, or a final read through before publication can really up your professionalism (and help the indie author reputation).

Before undertaking the momentous job of review “fishing”, it is necessary to understand why getting feedback is paramount.

Reviews achieve three major goals

– They give credibility to your work

– They provide a source of honest feedback to help improve future works.

– They improve your amazon ranking, helping to generate more sales.

 

I published my first novel, Fantasy of Frost in January 2015. In three months the title has generated 67 reviews on Amazon.com, with many other reviews spread across other amazon branches.

The First Few Reviews

How to get the ball rolling? Several sources I came across in research before publication recommended twenty reviews to achieve regular sales. I don’t categorically agree with this for a couple of reasons. For starters, some people love discovering new authors (yay for us), and don’t mind less. Also, reviews are a continual process. If you get twenty in January and none in February then from what I have observed, your ranking will slip and sales will go down. I will agree that twenty is a great start.

For a first time author there is no other way than to start at the bottom and claw your way to the top. Unfortunately in self-publishing you do not have access to the same network of resources available to those in traditional publishing.

You start with what you have got. Identify your network. If you are lucky you may know some people in the writing industry, but for most debut authors their network is family and friends. So get that ball rolling by politely hassling your family and friends for honest reviews.

I know *rolls eyes* reviews are supposed to be unbiased, but it’s a tough world out there for debut indie authors and this will kick start your sales. On a side note, I always disregard the first ten or so reviews of a book for this reason, but most won’t give it a thought. Also, once you get more ‘true’ reviews your book will settle into a more realistic star rating – protecting the reader.

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Now you have a few reviews from your super helpful family, how do you get more?

This is where the hard work begins. Every new writer trials different platforms to help expand their network with authors, bloggers and readers, and to generate reviews – or they should. The platforms below are not the only ones I have tried, but they are where I have had the best results to date.

 

Facebook

I haven’t found facebook reviewer sites effective in generating many reviews. I guess this is because the majority of the people joining these groups are authors looking for reviews – instead of readers wanting to review.

So why am I mentioning good old Facebook? Because I have found my author page here to be a great means of connecting with readers and to advertise incentives for leaving reviews. It is also a way you can periodically ask for reviews.

Remember, many people who love your book will never review. People have good intentions, but busy lives. Facebook is a way to keep the request in front of them, then one day they may see your post and have a spare minute or two to leave feedback.

 

Goodreads

In one word, invaluable. There is potential to meet so many like-minded people through this site. It is an excellent interface for setting up review exchanges with other authors, and generating a following. Some of the members have blogs, and post their reviews on their websites. The more eyes the better, right?

About half of my reviews are from GR (that’s what the cool kids call Goodreads). This is a combination of review exchanges, word of mouth, and readers offering to review in exchange for a free copy.

I’ve used the forums on here many times to advertise my free promo days, signed giveaways, $50 amazon vouchers, and requests for reviews. There are literally thousands of groups you can post on.

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Newsletter

It’s funny. Although generating subscribers was mentioned in every book I read on marketing an e-book I never really believed it. I’ve grown up in the facebook and twitter era. These are my “go to” social media sites. But email…that’s how old people stay in touch, right?

As someone who was recently young and naive in this matter, let me now banish your own naive thoughts. Newsletters work!

Similar to facebook, you are able to directly contact your reader with review requests, competitions, and updates of your upcoming releases. But newsletters are more reliable than facebook, who are starting to cut likes on public pages and limit the audience receiving your updates, unless you boost your posts.

Several marketing sources advise not to put all your eggs in one social media basket and I agree whole-heartedly. You are in this for the long run. What if facebook loses popularity in twenty years? Having an email list provides security for the long-term.

 

Netgallery

I haven’t used this myself as I cannot justify the cost at this stage, but it crops up a fair amount in reading so I thought it best to explain. Netgallery is a professional reviewing site where you pay an annual membership fee.  From speaking to other authors it seems like this source is largely utilised by traditional publishers. It does have the added benefit of providing a secure way to disperse MOBI, EPUB and PDF copies to reviewers.

 

Other platforms

– Contact bloggers through their website. Bear in mind bloggers sometimes get hundreds of requests per day. That means, despite their very best intentions to review the literary world, they physically cannot read everything sent their way. Out of around twenty reviewing blogs I approached, three got back to me, and one accepted. There is also usually a wait of months until you receive their feedback. One review is one review, I know, but the other avenues I’ve tried have been more fruitful and less taxful on my time.

– Book promotion sites. Many of these websites offer reviewing services. Some charge, some don’t. There is the same issue as with the review blogging websites. There are an overwhelming number of requests and the odds of getting your foot in the door is sub-zero low. I’ve applied to a few book promo sites, mostly out of interest, and have not heard back.

Amazon top reviewers. You can check out their profiles and see if these people are accepting submissions. Again, I assume these people are swamped with books, but it can’t hurt to try.

 

I’ve used this term a couple of times throughout this blog and I truly think this is the key to generating your first fifty reviews.

I.N.C.E.N.T.I.V.E.

The best advice I have found to date went along the lines of; the more you give, the more people want to give back. This applies to every facet of book marketing; the networking, the garnering of reviews, and in keeping your audience long-term.

Combine this scenario where readers want to give back with the fact everyone loves to win, and you have a near irresistable situation for your fan base.

How to do it.

Firstly, leave the reader in no doubt that the surest way to thank you is by leaving a review. Then. Don’t go on about it. You don’t want to badger your readers all the time or they’ll leave. I have found if you offer incentives and occassionally mention reviews, the reader will make this connection regardless. They are smart people – they read books.

For example, I recently ran a giveaway for a signed copy of my book. All you had to do was like my facebook page and tag two friends on the post pinned to the top. The post was a pre-order link for my second book, Fantasy of Flight. As a result there was a boost in my pre-orders and I raised awareness of my sequel release, as intended. During this giveaway six readers reviewed, even though this was not part of the draw. A couple of these may have been random reviews, but this number was above average and I can only explain it with the mantra; the move you give, the more people want to give back.

There is a lot of room for creativity with these incentives and they do not have to cost you money – just time. As writers we should be good at this! You could release character interviews, or author interviews, pieces of writing, small amazon vouchers or audiobooks. The possibilities are endless.

For the first fifty reviews I received across amazon, I mainly used snippets of book two in The Tainted Accords. I released the first snippet at twenty reviews, the second at fifty reviews. Now, I have released a third for reaching fifty pre-orders of Fantasy of Flight, and will release a fourth before the novel is released. You get the idea.

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I’ll let you in on another little secret of mine.

With KDP (Kindle Direct Publishing) on amazon you get five free promtional days every 90 days. Firstly, use these. Secondly, time your giveaways for when you have a free promo day. I sold 2000 copies of Fantasy of Frost when I ran a free promotion parallel to a $50 amazon giftcard giveaway.

Are you thinking 2000 x $0 = $0?

Yes it does, but my daily sales afterward are now double, paying for the expense of the giftcard. Two weeks after the free promo I had gained nearly twenty reviews, and the novel was #3 in both two categories; epic fantasy and coming of age fantasy during the promotion – something I can now brag about to add credibility to the book.

None of my giveaways or promtions can be commended for as being THE reason for getting reviews. Rather, it is the accummulative effect of maintaining prominence in the minds of your readers, combining several review sources, and by giving as much as you can to your fan base. Reviews are crucial for sales and your continued ranking efforts. Do not sit back and wait for reviews, you have to seek them, offer incentive, and lobby the term on your social media platforms and newsletter periodically. Leave the reader with no doubt in their mind that the surest way to help you is to leave feedback. If you do this there may be overflow from various promos you run (as I detailed above).

 

Here are some other things I’ve found useful:

– Make it easy for people to review – have a link in your book, add links to your newsletters and posts on facebook.

– Leave a message in the back of your booking thanking the reader and asking for a review. I have also have a ‘How to leave a review’ page.

– Highlight bloggers who have reviewed you on your website or on facebook as thanks.

– Use free book promotion sites and other platforms to advertise your free promos and giveaways.

– Gift or give copies of your book to bloggers, authors and reviewers in exchange for an honest review.

– Exchange with other authors in a similar position to your own.

– Keep a list of the people who are reviewing your book and send a follow up email after a month. You are giving them your book, it’s not rude to prompt them for the expected time frame. This will also highlight those who you shouldn’t ask for review again (and those you should).

– If a person gave you a good review, ask if they are interested in reviewing your other works.

I’m learning more about writing, publishing and marketing every day and you can join me on this journey (and learn some tips and tricks in the process) by following my Dear Aspiring Author guest blog series on my website www.kellystclare.com.

You might also be interested in another of my blogs titled ‘On Writing Your Debut Book’.

 

I wish you all the best with your review seeking endeavours!

A massive thanks to Rachel at Rachel Author Barnard for having me,

 

 

Kelly St. Clare

 

 

Author Biography

When Kelly St Clare is not reading or writing, she is dreaming up a story in her head; the cause of many headaches for her friends and family, who have struggled to encourage her participation in normal activities – such as everyday life.

Books have always been magical and mysterious to her. One day she decided to start unravelling this mystery and began writing. Her aim: To write stories she would want to read.

A New Zealander in origin, Kelly currently resides in Australia with her soon-to-be husband.

Follow her via Newsletter at www.kellystclare.com, and find her on Facebook or Goodreads.

If you would like to read her coming-of-age epic fantasy novel, Fantasy of Frost, then you can view it here.

 

 

Other resources to keep up to date with marketing strategies:

Sell more Ebooks: How to increase sales, by Lucinda Crosby and Laura Dobbins (chapter three)

How to Get 63 Authentic Amazon Reviews in 3 Days or Less: How to Market Your Book, Sell More Books on Kindle, Become a Best Seller, by Bart Baggett

Self Publishing: How to Make Money Online by Selling Ebooks on Amazon, by Abraham Falls

 

 

 

 

 

 

Seattle Specific Saturdays: Tacoma Release Party for FAIREST by MARISSA MEYER

I believe that I’m a Lunartic (am I using that correctly?) I absolutely love Marissa Meyer and have read everything she has read that’s available. She is my newly won favorite YA author and she is brilliant and I met her this past Tuesday…

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It was the most fun I’ve ever had at a book-author event and it was a whopping big event! There were around 300 people who came and I made sure I was early (to charge my car and get parking and snag an early book signing ticket).

I was also in costume… as guess who! Of course the Queen.

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I won the VIP swag bag and got three books signed and the new copy of Fairest. Thanks Marissa and Macmillan PR team! I love my swag!

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I had my face airbrush painted and wore my spooky black colored contacts.

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My birthday party and Marissa’s release party made for an epic January for me!

Miscellaneous Mondays: My Favorite Indie Authors 5/5 – M. Weidenbenner

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I found Michelle Weidenbenner when I was researching for my original nano novel the Geacache Killer, which utilizes the premise of Geocaching. I tried to find all the books that featured geocaching and was rewarded with a lot of duds, some boring reads, and a few gems. Cache a Predator was one of those treasures. I was very sad to see that Michelle Weidnebenner had only published one other book that was not a children’s book (she currently has two of those as well). I read Scattered Links and fell further in love with Weidenbener.

M. Weidenbenner is on my list of Indie stars to watch out for because she has written two out of this world engaging novels that are so professional and readable and wonderfully heart wrenching that I wonder why they are not on more national reading lists. Scattered Links has won some of its own accalim, topping Kindle Book Promos as a first place winner, a Gold Metal Winner int he 2014 Reader’s Favorite International Awards and Bronze Medal winner in Dan Poytner’s Global eBook Awards. Cache a Predator won Gold Medal in the 2014 Reader’s Favorite International Awards. Both these books were so engaging and thought provoking that they should be on every book clubs’ to read lists. Weidenbenner writes characters that are compelling and complex. Each character is given true motivation and backstory to match. Weidenbenner writes in a sophisticated manner that pulls you in and keeps you captive until the last word drops on the last page. Weidenbenner has created these larger than life characters with stories that will make you want to cry for them and their hardships. The author doesn’t stop there though, she creates conflicted characters as well. Weidenbenner’s ability to show relationships and the interaction of people is phenomenal. Each character has personality and motivation. Each character shows development and growth. Wow. If I could give a book 6/5 stars, I would do it for both these books, and for anything Michelle Weidenbenner writes.

 

Check back next Monday for the addition to my blog of my rising Indie author page! Also stay tuned for my reviews of any new books by these wonderful authors.

Author Goals and Accomplishments from 2014 and Future Goals for 2015

2013 Writing Goals:

2014 Writing Goals:

  1. Publish At One’s Beast
  2. FreeValley Publishing anthology published with Ataxia promo short story Ataxia and the Girl of Lost Dreams
  3. Review all current FreeValley Publishing author’s books

*I have accomplished all my author goals for 2014!

2014 Accomplishments:

2015 Writing Goals:

  1. Create audiobook version of poetry book, Wandering Imagination
  2. Write manuscript for book 1 of Fantasy trilogy
  3. Send Children’s Book to Publishers
  4. Write manuscript of The Geocache Killer
  5. Get At One’s Beast 15 reviews (Currently have: Goodreads -13, Amazon -11)
  6. Get Ataxia and the Ravine of Lost Dreams 20 reviews (Currently have: Goodreads -9, Amazon -9)
  7. Finished and Published audiobook copy of At One’s Beast
  8. Submit some short stories to contests/publications
  9. Finish YA manuscript Donuts in an Empty Field

Miscellaneous Mondays: My Favorite Indie Authors 4/5 – T.B. Markinson

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I found T.B. Markinson from a Goodreads Review group. The book was Marionette and I fell in love. I was so excited to see that Markinson had other books I could read and was going to release Claudia Must Die in December. I was hooked, but I didn’t read all her books immediately. I wanted to save them, savor them, cherish the reading time I spent with them. I have since read all but A Woman Lost and I’m super psyched that Markinson is working on the sequel!

T.B. Markinson is on my list of Indie stars to watch out for because she writes such good books. I’ve read all her books and in each of her four books (thus far, but I’m hoping for more) she has hooked me from the very first sentence to the first paragraph to the first page and on throughout the entire novel to the very end. I’ve never read such a great opener as the one in Marionette. Markinson had me hooked and I couldn’t put it, or any of her other books, down. And now I want more. Markinson delivers a smooth writing style that is descriptive without giving away too much. Her characters are alive and have a depth and personality that rivals anyone you might meet in real life. But the characters were so much more than alive, they were larger than life and I wanted to stay in their lives indefinitely, but they were still very relatable. The situations Markinson writes about are intriguing and the dialogue is realistic and, at many times, quite witty. One of the reasons I really like Markinson as an author is that she always (so far) uses female characters as her protagonists and many of her other characters as well.

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Check back next Monday for the week’s Indie Author Rising Star 5/5

Miscellaneous Mondays: My Favorite Indie Authors 3/5 – Tyan Wyss

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I found out about Tyan Wyss on Facebook and have not met her in person. She writes under two names, Tyan Wyss and Loren Lockner. She has written a number of books under each name, but I will focus on the Tyan Wyss books as those are the ones I have read and love and I can vouch for them.

Tyan Wyss is on my list of Indie stars to watch out for because her writing style is concise and fully formed. She doesn’t fall into common mistakes like rookie authors. She knows what she’s doing and her books are immensely fun to read. The stories are fully fledged and immerse you in their intrigue. The author layers her plot and her motives like an expert, giving her books a higher degree of elegance than other authors. Wyss has a smooth and charming personable writing style.

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Check back next Monday for the week’s Indie Author Rising Star 4/5

Miscellaneous Mondays: My Favorite Indie Authors 2/5 – Ksenia Anske

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Here’s the story of how I met Ksenia Anske….

Remember last week when I told you how I met Hugh Howey? The story of how I met Ksenia starts out the same way because… I met her at the Hugh Howey meetup! Part of the reason I love Ksenia so much as an author is because I love her as a person. If you met her in real life you would instantly fall in love with her too. She is dynamic and charming and loud. She gives out hugs and tells you that you can kiss her hand. She is playful and doesn’t take herself too seriously. She has the easy manner you might associate with a movie star and not a writer. She is the writer that writers wish to be and boy can she promote herself! I was charmed when I met her and I’m still charmed today because I follow her on Facebook and her blog. She has a way with talking to her readers and her fans and she’s so entertaining.

Not only is she a great personality and writer in person, but also in her books. Not all of her novels are glitter and roses (one of them has roses) because she has lived a life. She brings so much to the table as a writer through her books and the sometimes hard lessons learned through them. Irkadura and Siren Suicides deal with real issues and when I read them I took away something ddifferent a perspective on suicide and hard times I don’t always get from the normal YA and fantasy that I usually read. Life is not always fun and games, but it can be described beautifully by authors like Ksenia Anske.

Ksenia Anske is on my list of Indie stars to watch out for because she is a wonderful writer with an easy to read and compelling writing style, is so charming, brings up the real issues in her books, and has a great relationship with her readers through both her social media and in person presence.

I’ve read every novel of Ksenia’s and am ready and waiting for her new works, especially the manuscript she’s currently editing/working on: Corners.

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Here’s what Ksenia says and another reason I love her as an author: “I believe that art is not about protecting it from being stolen, it’s about giving it away and inspiring others to create more art. All of my books (and drafts) you can download for FREE on my site indefinitely. You can also buy signed paperbacks or digital/paper copies on sites like Amazon. If you think my writing is worth your money and you want to support me, please buy my books or donate. It’s a pay-what-you-want idea. Any amount spells to me your love. It will enable me to give you more love in return, to write more books for you to read and share. XOXO.”

I’m so glad Ksenia is local and I’m able to see her now and then at events like her book reading and the Gifts for Geeks at the AFK Tavern.

Check back next Monday for the week’s Indie Author Rising Star 3/5