Thursday, January 10, 2008

Using Linkedin To Build a Referral Market

Today the WritersView Community is discussing networking. As writers, we live sometimes very solitary lives. I am at home alone right now speaking to a keyboard. You can become accustomed to this lifestyle. But to be prolific, to be about Kingdom Building your writing has to go beyond this keyboard. You will have to meet people. Wouldn't it be better to meet people who have the power to bring more people to your words? Here are my five tips. Please add more in comments.

5 Networking Tips for Writers

1. Join Civic Groups.
I joined the Atlanta Jaycees and the Junior League in my twenties. Those two organizations still help even now and I've been disabled/retired from architecture for seven years. I joined the Atlanta Press Club and the Association of Black Journalists a few years back. My suggestion is to find an organization within your community that shares some common threads and become active.

2. Write for a local publication.
The best networking tool I've used as a writer was becoming a local staff writer for a Christian newspaper(Rejoice Atlanta) and (Atlanta Christian Family) magazine. All of my first clients came from them contacting me after reading my columns. Now I run on referrals via those first clients.

3. Build a Yellow Market of Referrals via Social Networks.
My clients now are referral based. I obtain referrals after every writing gig. The best way to get them is to ask or have a letter printed with your invoice requesting a referral. A good social network that can help you catalog referrals as well as showcase them is LinkedIn.

4. Network Your Blog
If you have a blog, this year spend more time blogging quality content and commenting on other blogs, then blogging for the sake of blogging. Put value in your blogging time.

5. Host a Reading Event
I have hosted two summer event series in Atlanta, which combined authors, musicians, poets at new coffeehouses. It helps drive traffic to the coffeehouse, it helps your community realize that you're not just some salesperson, and its great free publicity.

Perry's latest enterprise: 'Trek' trainer

 
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Tyler Perry will head the Starfleet Academy in J.J. Abrams' "Star Trek" feature for Paramount.

Perry joins an ensemble that includes Chris Pine, Eric Bana, Winona Ryder and Leonard Nimoy in the film, which chronicles the early days of the Starship Enterprise crew.

it is going to be odd, but exciting to see Tyler Perry in something outside of his own works. I wanted to see this movie when Quinto and Pine were cast, then I heard Leonard Nimoy and Eric Bana. This cast is sick! And Wenona Ryder, perfect. I hope this movie is good. Can't you visualize it?

 
   
   
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Perry's latest enterprise: 'Trek' trainer*
     
 
 
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Lifting Wikipedia Kills a Romance

Publishers Weekly and the Associated Press question Signet Historical Romance author, Cassie Edwards practice of taking excerpts from online content and encyclopedia's to pad her novels with historical fodder. Smart B's Who Love Trashy Books Blog sparked the investigation when they fact checked content from one of Edwards's books on their blog via Google.

I don't know a thing about Mrs. Edwards, but her research methods do cause me to wonder. It is a known fact that pastors use each other sermons verbatim without referencing the other. However, as a Christian author does this back door plagiarism fly with your moral compass? More than that have you read a novel that sniffs of wikipedia pages?

Your thoughts...

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

CFBA: Happily Even After

We are great in 2008! So great that The Christian Fiction Blog Alliance, which I am a member, is featuring my good, good friend, Marilyn Griffin's new book, Happily Even After. Ain't that Great!

This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

<Happily Even After (Life, Faith & Getting It Right #22) (Steeple Hill Cafe)

(Steeple Hill January 1, 2008)

by

Marilynn Griffith



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Marilynn Griffith is mom to a tribe, wife to a deacon and proof that God gives second chances. While best known for her colorful novels about friendship, family and faith, Marilynn is also a speaker and nonfiction writer.

Her nonfiction has been included in CHICKEN SOUP FOR THE CHRISTIAN WOMAN'S SOUL and several other devotionals and magazines. Currently, Marilynn is editor of the SISTAHFAITH:BELIEVING BEYOND SHAME anthology. She is also the founder of Faithchick.com, a blog for faith fiction readers.

Marilynn is the author of six novels dealing with issues such as teen pregnancy, AIDS, abstinence, stress relief, single parenting and marriage. Her recent fiction titles include Tangerine (Shades of Style) and If The Shoe Fits (Life, Faith & Getting It Right #18) (Steeple Hill Cafe).

Marilynn has served as Vice President and Publicity Officer of American Christian Fiction Writers. She speaks to youth, women and writers about believing beyond boundaries and daring to reach dreams.

Marilynn lives in Florida with her husband and seven children whom she taught at home for seven years. When not chasing toddlers, helping with homework or trying to find her husband a clean shirt, she can be found scribbling furiously on her next novel.

To book Marilynn for media interviews, speaking engagements, Serious Fun fiction parties or book club call-ins, please contact her thru her WEBSITE.



ABOUT THE BOOK
Superwoman doesn't live here!

I marry a gorgeous executive, have a baby, lose all the weight (most of it), and move to a fine house in the suburbs with a welcoming new church. Wait...did I say welcoming?

One teeny waaah! and new mothers and their crying babies are exiled to a separate room. At least there's some enlightening conversation. Like about my husband and issues I didn't even know about!

And then there's my aptly named mother-in-law, Queen Elizabeth, who can't stand me.

I'm about to lose my mind! So it's high time for a visit to the Sassy Sistahood for some much-needed advice about men, marriage and motherhood!

The Sassy Sistahood: They get by with a little help from their friends.

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

Prepare for God to Change Your Writing Plan

Continuing with the 1Question Author Interview series. The question is:
What did you do for your spiritual life in '07 that improved your writing? Author of Steeple Hill Cafe's latest romantic comedy, Happily Even After, Marilynn Griffin responds.

I think the biggest thing I did last year was to accept that God's plans for my writing might be different from mine. Now if I can just wrestle that to the ground in 2008, I might be onto something! LOL


Brook's Biblical Fiction a Winner

Lauren Winner has a great book review of Geraldine Brooks 'new novel, The People of the Book, in the current issue of Books & Culture Magazine.

An excerpt...
Geraldine Brooks—author of two terrific novels, Year of Wonders and the Pulitzer Prize-winning March—has outdone herself. Her newest offering, People of the Book: A Novel, opens in 1996 with the arrival Hanna Heath, a 30-year-old book conservator, to Sarajevo. Hanna is there to work on an illuminated manuscript known as the Sarajevo haggadah. (A haggadah contains the liturgy for the Passover seder.) The manuscript's history, Hanna explains, is mysterious: it had come to the attention of scholars in 1894, when a man named Kohen offered it for sale, and a century later, academics knew little more than that it was created in medieval Spain. In 1992, at the start of the Sarajevo siege, the book vanished. People speculated that it had been fenced or destroyed, but in fact a Muslim librarian named Ozren Karaman had, at great risk to himself, secreted the codex away for safekeeping. Now, with the shelling of Sarajevo over, Karaman has revealed the book's whereabouts, and the UN, keen to make sure its binding is in tip-top shape so that the book can be displayed in a morale-building museum exhibit, has hired Hanna.

Hanna finds several unusual objects hiding in the haggadah's binding, including a scrap of insect wing and a white hair. Hanna is curious, and excited: occasionally, she explains, even the smallest breadcrumb found in a book's pages can help scholars recreate the social history of an individual book—where it was used, and by whom.

With that, we're off.

I am waiting for my copy of this book. My background and love for biblical iconography is calling me to read this book. But I'm also am curious about this time period, not so much its history, bu I could learn from it. In Atlanta three mosques have been built in the past five years. My ex's family are half Catholic and half Muslim. I'm curious for my daughter's sake. How do we coexist in America in peace? What do I teach my daughter about the importance of her faith when I have no personal experience to rely on?

Photo of Atlanta Masjid Abdullah courtesy of Adilyana

Monday, January 07, 2008

Write What You Cannot Not Write About

In the United States on Sundays most Christian families do not worship together, not because of denomination challenges, but because of race. When you drive along an American neighborhood one may see 2 Baptist and 2 Methodist churches, one black and one white, both on the same block, neither working together toward Kingdom Building. It is 2008. Almost 40 years after the death of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Yet very close to the realization of one of his dreams, an America that sees beyond color. Look at Senator Barack Obama's emergence as a democratic party presidential candidate front leader. Race is beginning not to matter. But why does it still matter in Christiandom and how has that blot affected Christian publishing?

Today CFB talks with Moody Publishers' author, Linda Harsgrove, who created a blog to address her personal journey in reconciling race and faith. The blog is called 17seeds.

Why 17seeds?

The title of my blog points back to a pivotal chapter in the Gospels: John 17. In the chapter Jesus is praying for the oneness of his future followers. I think the Lord has called me to be a hand that sows many kinds of seeds in the Kingdom.

One of those seeds deals with oneness in the Body. It's my prayer that the blog is a source of seeds of enlightenment, education, inspiration, and action in the Christian community around the topic of racial reconciliation. Maybe it's a lofty goal, but I've tried to ignore it for a while and God keeps bringing me back to it.

What's the story behind the blog and the project?

I don't know if I'd call what I'm doing a project really. It's more like the blog tagline says, "one author's reflections on biblical racial reconciliation, writing, and adoption." So I don't really like the idea that what I'm doing now with my blog and my writing is a project. It's what I feel called to write about.

We've all been called to the ministry of reconciliation (2 Cor. 5: 11-21). In my life that ministry has taken the form of volunteering in urban ministry for more than a decade, being a leader of racial reconciliation discussion groups for most of that time, speaking on topics of race in the church while being part of a large predominately white congregation, and writing novels and blogs about race. To what end? That our oneness be John 17 strong. So until our oneness as a church starts to draw people to Christ, I will continue to do all these 'projects.'

What are your expectations?

Let's see. My expectations? I really have to be honest here and come clean. The only explanation I have is that people will start talking about race in Christian circles. It is my belief that by talking, certain doors will open and certain walls will come down. Our race talk has got to be loving and honest. And it's got to be God-led and Spirit-filled. If God leads and fills something, no matter how simple (or difficult), it will not be in vain. It can change the world. It can draw men to Him like He prayed in John 17.

What have you discovered about CBA while during this project?

Since I started blogging again in October, I don't think I've discovered anything new about the Christian Booksellers Association.

You see, I sold my first book (with all its racial themes) to Moody Publishers in 2006. In the decade before that I'd learned a lot about many CBA publishers by reading market guides, blogs, magazines, and by attending conferences. I had a sense for the style of writing published and the CBA crowd, so to speak.

The crowd, as I quickly found out, was mostly white and middle class. Not many darker-hued southern gals like myself. But that didn't bother me. I'd learned to navigate that scene for most of my decade at college getting two degrees in engineering while rubbing shoulders with what many would call 'good ole boys.' I'd also been an active member of a 3,000 plus member mostly-white congregation for more than seven years. For many years my husband and I were the only 'colored people' in roles of service and lay leadership in that church.

By the time I did the survey and the blog series on race, I'd been around the block and seen some racial issues in Christendom already so I can't really say that my blogging has shown me anything new in or about the CBA. What does seem odd is that this discussion about race in CBA publishing hasn't been discussed publicly before.

What advice would you give to new authors wanting to enter CBA?

You're asking me for advice. Good gracious. I think I need some. Okay, let me serious. I think something many would-be authors rush past is the reading part. Or rather, the reading widely part.

Get wild and eclectic with what you read. Read old stuff and new experimental stuff. Read westerns and romances and even horror (if you can stomach it). Read or re-read all that stuff your high school English teacher made you read. If you can only make it through a couple chapters that's okay. You'll read more next time. Take notes about what you read. What made that other person's novel work? What didn't?

Don't listen to people who say, 'write what you want.' I say, 'write what you can't not write about.' Write your passion and write it well. In other words, learn the craft. One way to do that is by reading widely. Another way is by taking classes. And then write out of the heart and soul that God gave you.
  1. Which post has gotten the most response? And why? The most popular one so far is Dave Long's interview. Even before I posted his interview I knew the responses were coming; I was just surprised that it took so long.

    I think part of the reason that one got so much attention is because of the strong reaction from the first two comments. But strong is okay as long as it moves us closer to a solution and healing.
  2. Why the survey? I did the survey to get answers to some questions. You see, maybe I'm just too stupid to know any better but where I come from when you have a question or see something that is broke, you raise your hand and ask a question or you put your hand to it. Not to sound rude or anything but I saw something that raised a question in my mind. And although I'm not the type to go looking for trouble or bossing folks around, I felt the need to get my questions answered and to see some positive action. Not a whole lot of whispering in the vestibule.

    I have to admit that some of my curiosity was because I had some issues that I needed to resolve before I wrote my second novel (an inter-racial love story that has a racial reconciliation theme, incidentally). For instance, I wanted to know why folks, especially black folks, bought books. Was it the cover that drew them in? Was it the presence of characters that looked like them? Or just characters they could relate to? Would an interracial romance scare them off? Would strong black-white friendships turn their stomachs?

    I needed to get a little closer to answers before I started pushing the racial envelope some more. I'm not out to shock folks. Or make people mad or alienated. Like I said I just want Christian folks to start talking about race. For too long it's been the pile of poop in the middle of the proverbial sanctuary.

    The survey is only one part of my focus on race in CBA publishing. I also conducted interviews with two black CBA authors (Sharon Ewell Foster and Cecelia Dowdy) and two interviews with two CBA acquisitions' editors (Cynthia Ballenger and Dave Long).

    The responses to the survey and the interviews have helped me get closer to answers and I pray the entire process has helped this little corner of the church start talking constructively about the poop.
How will this survey be used in the future?

I will discontinue the current survey on December 31. I'm really surprised that people are still sending in their responses. It may reappear at some other time. Or another survey (revamped, of course) may appear in February.

What's next for you?

Well, I do have another novel to hammer out. And a bunch of revisions on the second manuscript. And a couple short how-to children's books. But as far as the blog is concerned, I will continue it.

I plan to do a prayer series in January. I'm calling it 'Writing Great in '08' and I'm inviting writers and would-be writers to send in their prayers for their writing in 2008. And then in February I'm doing a series on interracial romances in Christian fiction. I'll be interviewing two CBA authors who have written books with bwwm storylines. bwwm: black woman/white man

What would you like to say to Christian Fiction Blog readers that I haven't asked?

I am so grateful to you Dee for extending this invitation to me and for your feedback on some of my interview questions. I'm so happy to have had to chance to share about 17seeds and my writing.

I want to end by encouraging your readers to push past their race weariness and read more about biblical racial reconciliation. There are several wonderful ministries and authors that have been information on the topic. Google biblical racial reconciliation and you'll come up with some excellent Web sites. A nonfiction book called More Than Equals by Spencer Perkins and Chris Rice is a great start.

Thanks, once again, Dee for inviting me to be here today. Blessings of grace and peace.

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