Ok Guys in this tutorial you will learn how to make a banner on Paint once you have finished you can do alot of things with it.If you need to place that banner in myspace or somthing like that upload it to photobucket.If you need it on a freewebs site or wetpaint wiki you can upload it directly while you are editing your site.I will make tutorials on how and where to put these banners.
Programs Used:MS Paint & HyperCam WMM
Song:A Place For My Head
Artist:Linkin Park
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Friday, July 29, 2011
Monday, July 25, 2011
The social media effect
Social media is a key ingredient of our everyday life from Facebook and Twitter to Groupon, Living Social, blogging, and more. This infographic examines the social media effect and flows through some common social media paths.
How are you using social media to promote your writing career?
How are you using social media to promote your writing career?
Friday, July 22, 2011
Video: Creating a simple website logo in Windows Paint
Many authors come up with the silliest reason for not creating a website for their writing, like the lack of artwork. You don't need professional artwork for your website, and it won't help if you get some. Example forming athttp://www.fonerbooks.com/lessons
Monday, July 18, 2011
Friday, July 15, 2011
Video: Book Promotion- The Path to Success
http://www.infinitypublishing.com This video on book marketing and promotion describes the differences between advertising and marketing as well an analysis of many of the tools an author can use to market his or her book.
Friday, July 8, 2011
Video: Time Management- Three Strategies to Master Your Day
Video by award winning author and Executive Sales Coach Keith Rosen.
Labels:
advice for writers,
Keith Rosen,
Time Management,
video
Monday, July 4, 2011
Guest post: It Takes a Village to Promote a Book
It Takes a Village to Promote a Book
By Fauzia Burke
Today's marketing is truly about conversations and social media allows you to have those conversations. So if you are going to spend the time and money marketing your brand, you should think "Will this start, maintain, or enhance the conversation?" Will this get people talking, will they take it to their twitter feeds and Facebook pages? Will they forward, post, or retweet this?
I have found that it is seldom that one big hit that results in conversations. You need a lot of attention, some big, some small, all moving the conversation forward. If you compare hits to the old formula that big is best, then the smaller blogs have little impact. But if your goal is to truly broaden the scope of the discussion, you need lots of people talking on lots of different Web sites and blogs.
Even a feature on Web sites like CNN.com or Oprah.com does not guarantee instant increases to your Web site traffic or book sales. In fact, these days even a Today Show appearance is no guarantee. However, I believe a sustained effort to keep people talking results in speaking engagements, paid blog posts (yes there is such a thing), interview opportunities, more fans on your Facebook page, more traffic on your site, increased sales, and a recognition and expansion of "brand YOU."
Selling books is almost always the first goal of every author, however if you chat with them a bit they'll say things like, "I want to help people," "I know my book will make a difference," "I want to make sure people know what is really going on," "I want to make people laugh," "I want to entertain my readers" or "I envision a world where people love what they do and if they read my book they would." I often take on projects based on these secondary goals, the goals that speak to the truth of the person and the importance of the book. These are the goals that are worth talking about.
As a marketer, I can't ever get people to talk about the author's first goal. Not once has a reviewer said, "Please buy this book because the author would like to have a bestseller." However, those secondary goals have always started conversations and sparked interests and led to interviews and discussions.
Many of the bloggers we work with post their reviews on multiple blogs and Web sites like Twitter, Amazon, B&N, Goodreads, Ning, Library Thing, Facebook, and more, all of which increase the search visibility of the book and author. In that way, those reviews or features are all fluid and viral. They do not stay where they are created. They often take flight and have a much broader life than just the traffic on their own blogs.
Search results, conversations and virality are most important in today's connected market place, and they are achieved by a broad spectrum of coverage, not just the sites that get the most hits.
So as of today, think about the real reason you wrote the book, the reason why only you could have written it, think about those secondary goals, and then get on with the business of starting conversations.
Friday, July 1, 2011
Video: My Virtual Book Tour is Over, Now What?
http://virtualblogtour.com Just finish a virtual blog tour? Here's how to keep seeing results on Google, Facebook, Twitter, and You Tube. Continue to build relationships with your readers.
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