Posts Tagged ‘Guest Blogs’

A week or so ago I did a twitter contest for a free signed copy of my book. And although I did have some participation (which I was very grateful for), the numbers of participants I was hoping for was nowhere near what I had envisioned. In fact, near the end of the contest I was scratching my head, wondering what I had done wrong.

I asked a twitter friend of mine (who I knew would have some good ideas), if he could give me some pointers. What I got from him was somewhat unexpected. Scott was very kind, but basically he told me that I had setup the contest improperly and had shot myself in the foot.

I want to thank Scott for opening my eyes in regard to doing online Facebook and Twitter contests. Let’s turn my lemons into lemonade. Perhaps by sharing Scott’s ideas I can help somebody else be successful with the next contest they do. I know that I’ll be doing things a little bit differently next time. Here’s Scott:

How to Gain Readership Using Book Contests (On Twitter and other Social Networks)

Readers, it seems, will do almost anything for a free book. Just last week, I wrote a lengthy blog post on one of my minor blogs about a topic I had no experience with, because that was the requirement for a chance at winning a never -heard-of-before book by a never-heard-of-before author. Books and contests can really make otherwise normal people behave really strangely! I know – that’s a pretty lofty assumption I’m making about people.

If you’re thinking of holding your own contest, whether it be a book contest or for something else, there are ways to succeed and ways to get less than ideal results. I’m going share some practical tips specifically on holding contests using Twitter, with the idea that you should be able to use a lot of the same concepts on other social media networks with similar results.

The best Twitter contests (like any contest) accomplish a few key things:

(a) offer something people really want,

(b) give the contest holder a real chance to gain a greater following,

(c) meet some defined business objective,

(d) don’t alienate or turn off potential entrants

Do they really want your book?

If you’re not a famous author (yet), there’s no instant recognition for your book. If you were to giveaway a book that people had heard of, you’d likely get a bigger response because there’s some established credibility there. Unfortunately, there’s usually a natural trade-off between what people want to win and what you want to give away. If you give away your own book, be prepared for less natural enthusiasm.

You can narrow the gap between what you’re giving and what people want by getting your content in front of them to experience. Consider adding a link on the contest page to some of your writing, so people can get a feel for your style and for what they might experience in your book. An entrant may not care for it ultimately, but at least you’ve given yourself a fighting chance by getting your writing in the spotlight.

Don’t defeat yourself with bad contest rules

The biggest drawback to Twitter contests is often the way the rules are set up. For example, if you require entrants to out-tweet eachother to win, you’ll get a mixed reaction. Half of the people will say “I’m not willing to do that for this book’ and the other half will say “I really want the book, and I know what it takes to win, but that means spamming everyone else’s Twitter feed with repeat tweets about this contest and my followers will get upset.” You’ll likely end up with people using spam accounts set on auto-tweet to win your contest (not what you had in mind). You need to make sure your rules are in line with your objectives for the contest.

Another way contests are often self-defeating is the opposite of the previous example in that they don’t require the entrant to do enough for the prize. If you’re using social media, you want people to gain interest in you, your book, your website, etc. while entering the contest. Too often, especially on Twitter, contest entrants aren’t even required to visit the host website or interact with the host. They may just have to retweet a message. If that’s the case, you’re just throwing your giveaway to the wind.

An “optimized” contest setup

If I were running a contest via Twitter, I would set it up this way:

1. Require people to follow you.

2. Set a limit to the number of tweets per person (either once per day or just once for the duration of the contest) so entrants don’t feel like winning is impossible, nor that their followers are going to be annoyed.

3. Set the end of the contest at least 2 weeks out. The big deal here is that you want these people to keep following you AFTER the contest is over, right? This is where most Twitter contests fail miserably. They get people to follow them, then don’t use that “window of opportunity” to engage the people in a way that they’ll stay followers once the contest is over. During your “window of opportunity” is when you put out your best content, best tweets, most one-on-one engagement, etc, because you have a captive audience that has to remain following you until the end in order to have a chance at winning. That’s where the setup of the contest helps you meet your business objective, which is to gain followers and get people interested in your book.

4. Don’t shy away from promotion! This may not come naturally for you, but it’s a big key to getting results from your contest. Promote the contest at least every day across several platforms (Facebook, Twitter, etc.). Promote the contest at different times of day with different messages depending on how close you’re getting to the end and how good the response has been.

If you have some clear goals for your contest, you have a better chance of running a contest in a way that meets those goals. You can learn by trial and error, but why not just get it right the first time?

Scott Cowley is an SEO Manager at SEO.com, an SEO company, where he trains clients on using social media for better business results. He also blogs about 21st century marketing at Scottergories.com. You can follow him on Twitter @scottcowley.

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Do you like Harry Potter? What about The Hunger Games? The Maze Runner? The Chronicles of Narnia? Twilight? Classical authors like Dickens, Shakespeare, Bronte, Austin, Hemingway?

Perhaps non-fiction is your preference.

No matter what type of book you like, I am convinced that reading good books is healthy. Today I am over at “Day Dreamer”, the blog of one of my writer friends, Christine Bryant. Come by and find out what I have to say about reading.

http://christinebryant.blogspot.com

Don’t forget to leave a comment so we know you dropped by!

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Just a note or two before I pass the baton to Marion . . .

As I have been haunting the internet in the last two years I have come across some very fascinating people who are talented authors. One in particular is also a media guru. Not the self-proclaimed type on twitter who thinks they are going to help you conquer the world if you emulate their superior online marketing skillz (you know, the ones who follow thousands of people but themselves only have fifty followers), but the REAL kind of media guru.The kind who people listen to.

In addition to being a very talented author, Marion Jensen is a media advocate. He is a techie. He is someone who understands things like Creative Commons, the rise of e-books, and the ways in which the internet is changing at the most basic levels. I invited him to share his thoughts about media today. Since he won’t give a plug for his own books, I will do so for him. Marion writes under the pen name Matthew Buckley, and has two published middle-grade humor novels out: “Chickens In The Headlights”, and “Bullies In The Headlights”. I have read both and laughed all the way through them. If you get a chance, go check them out. Here is a link at Amazon: http://bit.ly/5YIEmS

Thanks for joining me here today Marion!

*****

So, you want to get social?

Hey, everybody is getting on Twitter! I should get on Twitter so I can market my book!

Hello, my name is Marion Jensen. And I’m a recovering author. Daron asked me to talk a little about social media and what writers should be doing with it.

First, a little about me; I’m a doctoral student at USU, and I’ve studied social media for about four years (motto: I’m not the quickest student you’ll ever meet, but I am thorough). I also happen to be an author.  So, given those two facts, Daron asked me to chime in on this whole ‘wacky web thing’.

First, a bit of boring but necessary history. We’ve all heard of ‘Web 2.0’, but do we really know what it means?  To understand it, it helps if you understand Web 1.0. In general, Web 1.0 was the creation of a ton of really cool stuff. Web 1.0 also generated some really boring stuff, but hey, it’s the internet, there is plenty of room.

People created all this stuff, and search engines tried to organize it all. The problem was that it became really hard to find what you were looking for. The internet wasn’t an organized venture, remember; it happened organically. Then Google arrived on a white horse and changed everything. What made them special? What made their teeth glisten in the sun? Well, they used people to help improve their search engine. If a lot of people were pointing to a single site, that site must be cool, right? So Google would push it to the top of their search results. While Web 1.0 focused on the content, Web 2.0 focuses on relationships between individuals. How do we make sense of all this new content on the internet?

By using our friends to help.

So the Internet moved away from just finding content, and moved toward social things: Facebook, Twitter, Digg, Wikipedia, Blogs, MySpace, and on and on. I found cool things through my friends. Web 2.0, at its heart, is a new way to communicate and share.

“Aha!” You say, “I see your point! Marketing is all about getting out your message, so we now leverage this new-fangled Web 2.0 to market to the world!”

Uh…no. I mean, you can do that, but you’re going to end up shooting yourself in the foot.

You see, the reason people like this new social web is because it’s social. You get to hang out with your friends, talk about cool stuff, and you can do it in your underwear in the basement. It’s a dream come true. In a way, it’s kind of like the water cooler at work used to be. Except that if you show up to the watercooler in your underwear, you’re likely either going to be fired, or promoted.

Imagine you are at work; you’re not thirsty, but you see a group at the water cooler, and they are talking and laughing. You go to join the conversation. At the same time, Herman, the guy from accounting, shows up.

“Hey,” says Herman. “I just wrote a book. It’s going to be on sale next Tuesday.”

“That’s great,” says Jim, the guy from sales, “…anyway, so the bartender says—”

“I’m doing a signing,” says Herman.

“Fine, Herman. But like I was saying—”

“Martha said she liked my book. She said that my characters were deep. She wrote a memo.”

This is the point when Jim punches Herman in the belly, and nobody really feels sorry for the guy.

I have seen this kind of ‘marketing’ happen over and over again on Facebook and on blogs, and now on Twitter. And do you know what? That is not the way to get followers. If you look at Twitter, Facebook, and blogs as a way to sell your book, you’re going to have a rough go at it. If I’m flipping through TV channels, I’m not going to stop at the channel that runs all commercials all the time. I want something interesting.

THAT is what you have to do. You have to be interesting. If you can be interesting, you will get friends/followers. If you get friends/followers, the rest takes care of itself.

If you’d like to see a master of Web 2.0, you should follow @robisonwells on Twitter. Rob is an author, and is adept at using new media. You see, Rob doesn’t pimp his books. He rarely even mentions them. What he does is write articles that make you laugh, and tweets that make you chuckle. He is a good writer, and he shows it every time he posts something. He talks about being an author, or being a dad, or being a shoplifter (ok, I made that last one up). And if you’re scrolling through your twitter feed, filled with random people you don’t even know, you ALWAYS stop and read his tweets.

But how does he sell books if he doesn’t run commercials? Well, unlike Herman, he just talks. His books may come up in the course of the conversation, but it’s not a sell. For example, this fall Rob wrote a book. He did it in a few weeks. I followed the whole thing on Twitter, but not once did I feel like I was being sold to. He has since found an agent, and I’m rooting for him. Guess what I’m going to do when his book is published? That’s right; I’ll buy a copy, and maybe one for my friend. I’ve seen what Rob can do with a blog post, or with a tweet, and I sure as heck want to see what kind of novel comes out of a head as warped as his.

THAT is how you use social media.

OK, I had a nice outline of social media dos and don’ts that I wanted to cover, but I’ve already gone on WAY too long. I’ll have to save those for another day. In the meantime, if you’re interested in learning more about new media (can you sense an impending plug?), or you want to learn from Rob ‘The Man’ Wells himself (now you can see the plug is imminent), you really should come to next year’s LDStorymaker conference: http://www.ldstorymakers.com/conference_2010.php

Rob, I, and Howard Taylor ( http://www.schlockmercenary.com; I could write an even longer post on the way Mr. Taylor uses new media correctly) are doing a presentation on new media, and Rob has promised that he will take off his shirt and flex his pecs.

I, for one, am not going to miss that. You shouldn’t either.

See you there.

Marion tweets at @marionjensen and blogs at http://chickenarmpits.blogspot.com

*****
One more thing I might add…

If you would like to follow the antics of Marion, Rob, and more than 900 other authors, writers, bloggers, editors, publishers, book reviewers, and literary-agents, I have twitter lists for each of these. You can find them under my own twitter profile, @DaronFraley.  I look forward to seeing you around!

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18
Jul

Letter H

   Posted by: DaronFraley    in Uncategorized

Today is a good day. I have looked forward to this posting every day since Kerry Blair asked me to guest blog on the “Six LDS Writers and Frog” blogsite. Here is the link:

http://sixldswriters.blogspot.com/2008/07/companionship-in-books-guest-blogger.html

Thank you for asking me, Kerry, it was quite an honor!

For those of you who may not know who Kerry is, here is her website:

http://www.kerryblair.com/

I have only read two of her books, but I highly recommend them. Both novels are excellent.

I listed them in my “Books I Have Read Recently” section. Enjoy them!

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