Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
443.6K views | +10 today
Follow
Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Rescooped by Jeff Domansky from Writing Rightly
Scoop.it!

3 Visual Thinking Tips to Make You a Brilliant Writer

3 Visual Thinking Tips to Make You a Brilliant Writer | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
When writers apply visual thinking to their writing magic happens. This tutorial teaches you how to make your content clearer, vivid, and more persuasive.

Via Penelope
Jeff Domansky's insight:

Useful writing tips.

Penelope's curator insight, August 17, 2017 10:07 PM
I love these creative writing tips from Henneke. She not only gives us brilliant advice, but she draws some mighty cute cartoons. An excellent read.

***This review was written by Penelope Silvers for her curated content on "Writing Rightly"***
Hairwitsindia's comment, August 18, 2017 5:04 AM
Yes
Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

Maverick women writers are upending the book industry and selling millions in the process

Maverick women writers are upending the book industry and selling millions in the process | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

“I just wanted a story with a nice guy.”In late 2012, author H. M. Ward had an experimental manuscript collecting proverbial dust on her computer. It starred a woman named Sidney and a man named Peter—an impossible nice-guy combo of handsome, strong, smart, patient, and, oh, super wealthy.


Ward had been writing since 2010 and had been down the traditional publishing route before, finding an agent and shopping her work around. Her instinct told her that publishers would have no interest in Peter. “If you take a nice-guy book to a traditional publisher,” she says, “They’re like, ‘That’s weird. Nice guys are boring.’”


So in April 2013, she published her manuscript online on her own. “I just put it up out of curiosity to see what would happen,” she says.


Despite reports that e-books are dying, Ward’s chance paid off, and continues to pay out today. According to the author, Damaged shot to No. 6 in Amazon’s Kindle store within a few days and held the No. 1 spot for several weeks. It spent a month on the New York Times bestsellers list for combined print and ebook. It was the first in two series of nice-guy books that would go on to sell 12 million copies in three years.


Publishers took note. In the year after Ward published Damaged, she was offered a series of deals from various publishers totaling $1.5 million, by her estimate. She turned them all down, and by the time she said no to her last contract, she was making eight figures as a self-published author. “It would have been a colossal mistake to sign with them at that point, financially,” she says....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Fascinating story on the new wave or romance writers making big bucks in self publishing. Be e-mboldened.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

How Successful Authors Use Social Media: 23 Content Ideas

How Successful Authors Use Social Media: 23 Content Ideas | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

How do successful authors engage their fans on social media? And what can authors post on social media besides links to their own books?

Below you’ll find 23 ideas, along with examples from successful authors. Many of these tactics can help promote a book, but in more creative and engaging ways than simply posting a link to a book’s retailer page.

Publishers and agents, this post is written for authors. We encourage you to share it with your authors to help them build more engaging profiles.

Authors, we hope hope you find the list useful — and please share your great ideas in the comments!...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Valuable and easy to implement social and content marketing ideas for authors. Recommended reading for authors and. 9/10

donhornsby's curator insight, June 8, 2016 10:30 AM
(From the article): To drive exposure for a book, create an image of a notable, inspiring, or funny quote from the book. You can use tools like Canva or Designfeed to easily turn quotes into eye-catching images.
rodrick rajive lal's curator insight, June 9, 2016 9:02 AM
I am an author with three published titles, and the fourth one coming up soon. All I can say is that Social Media has been a big help to me in promoting my books. The article gives authors some valuable tips on how to use social media to help promote one's books! Happy reading!
Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

Algorithms Could Save Book Publishing—But Ruin Novels

Algorithms Could Save Book Publishing—But Ruin Novels | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

JODIE ARCHER HAD always been puzzled by the success ofThe Da Vinci Code. She’d worked for Penguin UK in the mid-2000s, when Dan Brown’s thriller had become a massive hit, and knew there was no way marketing alone would have led to 80 million copies sold. So what was it, then? Something magical about the words that Brown had strung together? Dumb luck? The questions stuck with her even after she left Penguin in 2007 to get a PhD in English at Stanford. There she met Matthew L. Jockers, a cofounder of the Stanford Literary Lab, whose work in text analysis had convinced him that computers could peer into books in a way that people never could.

 

Soon the two of them went to work on the “bestseller” problem: How could you know which books would be blockbusters and which would flop, and why? Over four years, Archer and Jockers fed 5,000 fiction titles published over the last 30 years into computers and trained them to “read”—to determine where sentences begin and end, to identify parts of speech, to map out plots. They then used so-called machine classification algorithms to isolate the features most common in bestsellers.

 

The result of their work—detailed in The Bestseller Code, out this month—is an algorithm built to predict, with 80 percent accuracy, which novels will become mega-bestsellers. What does it like? Young, strong heroines who are also misfits (the type found in The Girl on the Train, Gone Girl, and The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo). No sex, just “human closeness.” Frequent use of the verb “need.” Lots of contractions. Not a lot of exclamation marks. Dogs, yes; cats, meh. In all, the “bestseller-ometer” has identified 2,799 features strongly associated with bestsellers....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

From analyzing a book's prospects to figuring out what subjects people are clamoring for, data is bigger in publishing than ever. But how much is too much? Fascinating, yet frightening.

Monica S Mcfeeters's curator insight, September 21, 2016 6:01 AM

From analyzing a book's prospects to figuring out what subjects people are clamoring for, data is bigger in publishing than ever. But how much is too much? Fascinating, yet frightening.

Monica S Mcfeeters's curator insight, September 21, 2016 6:02 AM

From analyzing a book's prospects to figuring out what subjects people are clamoring for, data is bigger in publishing than ever. But how much is too much? Fascinating, yet frightening.

Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

The Real Costs of Self-Publishing a Book - MediaShift

The Real Costs of Self-Publishing a Book - MediaShift | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

At every writers conference or self-publishing panel the question that almost always inevitably comes up is: “How much will self-publishing really cost me?”


Because the book publishing industry is one of the last industries to go digital, it’s going through a quick transition. As a result of this shift, authors no longer need to go through the traditional gatekeepers to publish high-quality books and are instead moving toward self-publishing. Launching a book is like launching a startup.


Putting together a quality book involves not just writing it, but getting it edited, then formatted, designing a cover, and having a marketing strategy around it.


"Not having an editor is like not QA’ing a software product or not testing a drug before it goes out into the marketplace." 


Below, I break down the costs of how much professional services will cost you for a high-quality book.


(For the purposes of calculation we’ll assume you have a manuscript that is 70,000 words.)...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Good checklist for authors and self-publishers.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

Basic Components of an Author Website

Basic Components of an Author Website | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

What exactly goes on your author website—especially if you're unpublished?I strongly advocate all authors start and maintain a website as part of their long-term marketing efforts and ongoing platform development. But one of the first questions raised when you get started is:

What exactly goes on your author site—especially if you’re so far unpublished?Before I answer that question in detail, I’ll set a few ground rules....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Great tips for author websites from Jane Friedman.

No comment yet.