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Must-read for writers on how to self-publish

August 8, 2016 by JaneSutter Leave a Comment

typewriter_bookWriting and self-publishing a book has never been easier. I often get asked for advice from people writing a book or who aspire to do so.

Here’s a book on how to self-publish that I recommend: What Kind of Loser Indie Publishes? And How Can I Be One, Too? by Pamela Fagan Hutchins.

After I left my job as an editor at The Democrat and Chronicle to “rewire” (read about it here), I knew I wanted to write and publish a memoir about my family owning pharmacies for 90 years in Iowa. But although I’d written many articles, columns and editorials over my 33-year career, I didn’t know much about writing a book and self-publishing. So I read a slew of articles, blogs and books. This book by Hutchins was the most helpful. Here are five reasons why:

  1. Hutchins writes with humor and pathos. She takes you along her personal journey, having written and self published nine books at the time she wrote this one. As she says in the introduction: “I’m not a hybrid author who moves back and forth between the indi- and traditional-publishing worlds. I’m ground zero to 50,000 feet. If I can do this, and share what I’ve learned, maybe you really can do it, too. Don’t you think.”
  2. There’s no b.s. in this book. Her first chapter is titled: “Earn (no) money all by yourself (on the financial implications of traditional versus indie publishing.” This chapter is a great overview of what’s going on in the worlds of traditional publishing world and self publishing, with questions to ask yourself in deciding which route to go.  The bottom line is that it’s hard to make significant amounts of  money as an author so you better have other reasons for wanting to write a book.
  3.  Hutchins shares the aggravations she’s encountered, so you can anticipate and learn. In the section on “How to put yourself on the market,” she goes into great detail about the pros and cons of various e-book publishers. For example, she’s blunt about the challenges of working with Apple. It’s a lot easier to read her summaries before you go to each site to check out their terms.
  4. Throughout the book, she offers web links for everything she writes about. So if you read her book digitally, you can just click on the link and voila! you go to the site. The first time I read her book, I got a copy from the library. I liked it so well, I downloaded the Kindle version so I’d always have it as a reference.
  5. How you market your book will be just as important as producing a quality book. Hutchins’ advice about a marketing plan, giveaways, social media and more really helped me have a book signing event that was over-the-top in success. (Read about it here.) She provides a sample marketing plan, press release, etc. in the appendix.

If you’ve written a book, what advice do you have to share?

 

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Filed Under: Book writing, Publishing Tagged With: advice for authors, book writing, Democrat and Chronicle, Pamela Fagan Hutchins, self-publishing, What kind of loser indie publishes

5 reasons to write a mission statement for your blog

June 20, 2016 by JaneSutter Leave a Comment

I'll be teaching "Blogging 101" at Writers and Books on July 18. I love the old phone booth on the property!
I’ll be teaching “Blogging 101” at Writers and Books on July 18. I love the old phone booth on the property!

Do you blog or aspire to but have a hard time coming up with ideas to write about? Then I suggest you write a “mission statement” for your blog.

Here’s what having a mission statement will help you to do for your blog:

1. Determine the goal. Why do you want to blog? Bloggers have opinions or information or experiences that they want to share. They invite a two-way conversation with their readers. 

2. Determine the audience. Who is going to read your blog? Family, friends, people with similar interests or goals? Writing for a specific audience will help you focus on the content. 

3. Determine the type of content. Having a written goal and knowing your audience will make it much easier to come up with topics for your blog, and prevent you from writing about topics that the audience won’t care about.

4. Determine frequency. Blogging on a regular basis is by far the hardest part of being a blogger. So putting a time frame in your mission statement can hold you accountable. I recommend blogging a minimum of once a week. With the launch of my new blog here, I’m publicly stating that I’m determined to post once a week, and I may occasionally post more often. (And you readers can hold me accountable, please!)

5. Stay motivated. We have all abandoned various goals and New Year’s resolutions, right? Let your mission statement for your blog stand as a written commitment. Print it out, display it next to your computer, and read it out loud every day. 

Here’s my mission statement.

The Sutter Communications blog will share essential information to empower its readers when it comes to the written word including writing and editing, book writing and publishing, blogging, public relations, social media, and media trends. The blog will primarily act as a “Sherpa” to guide readers and occasionally act as a “Sage” to share expertise. The blog also will celebrate the written word and the joy of writing and reading, in keeping with the Sutter Communications mantra of “We’re Wild About Words.” The blog will be updated at least weekly.

I’ve been blogging since 2009 and I’ve found it to be great fun, so much so that when I “rewired” after working as an editor and blogger for the Democrat and Chronicle in Rochester, N.Y., I wanted to continue blogging. As a result, in 2015, I started a blog to promote my book Sutter’s Sodas Satisfy: A Memoir of 90 Years of Sutter Drug Co. I write to celebrate not only my family’s history in Burlington, Iowa but also the remarkable past (and sometimes the present) of that Mississippi River town.

Now with the launch of my business Sutter Communications, I’m going to share my love of words here. So what’s your mission statement? Please share it with us.

And if you’d like to learn more about blogging, check out my upcoming Blogging 101 class on July 18 at Writers and Books in Rochester. I’d love to see you there!

 

 

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Filed Under: Blogging Tagged With: blogging, Democrat and Chronicle, Sutter's Sodas Satisfy, Writers and Books

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New book focuses on magic, love, healing on Seneca Lake

The trilogy about the American-Giroux family is complete with the publication of “That Old Lake Magic: A Search for Love and Healing on Seneca Lake” by G.A. Brandt. Here’s the plot: “JOA Giroux has devoted nearly a decade to helping unwed mothers and children in Ottawa, Canada, at the Giroux family’s charitable foundation. She is near […]

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