Authors, Writers, Publishers, and Book Readers
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Geoff - Great idea about going on Facebook and having a separate sign in for the book! I shall look into that!
Thanks!
Cool,
To have a unique username on Facebook you apparently need 25 people to like your page. This means you can then have your own Facebook email which is geared to the book you want to tell people about and the pages are thus searchable via internet search engines. It is supposed to be a tool to further the interest in your book.
have fun,
Geoff
Yeah — as far as 'getting known' online, as Geoff says, the more genuine presence(s) you have the more you'll show up in search results. While I publish books (such as Geoff's) by night, I'm a general online web dude by day, so I inevitably have learned a lot about how the web works over the years.
As Geoff says, if you're an author looking to 'get out there' more, there are some obvious places to start, in order of most impact online to least (but not little):
If there's anything obvious I missed out, please reply and let me know! This was written very quickly!
If you want to see how I'm doing things as a publisher, check out Upptäcka Press. If you want to see how Geoff is setup as an author (online), here are a few of his relevant links:
As you can see, Geoff's got his fingers in a lot of pies. But who hasn't nowadays? We're living in an age of multitasking, and everyone's doing it! Above all, have fun, be yourself and don't be afraid to get your hands dirty—popular technology is never as hard as it looks.
See! I told you he was a genius!
It's good to have a soulmate as a publisher!
Best Wishes,
Geoff
Genius is these books publishing themselves ;-)
Always happy to help!
Oh, is that what they mean by self-publishing?!
That would be a good thing for all of us on authors.com to have! Wow, our books publishing themselves. Cool.
Good night everyone!
Geoff
One important thing I forgot—think of your online presence like a tree. There are roots, the trunk holding everything up, and loads of branches.
Your roots are your literal amount of time being present and active on the internet. They grow longer and stronger the more you post on various sites on the web. The 'older' your online presence is, the more search engines (like Google, Yahoo and Bing) will trust you (assuming you've spent that time posting content and being involved). When the search engines trust you, they send people to your site. You want the search engines to trust you and your content.
The trunk is your main website. This is the site that, at the end of the day, your digital house is burning down and you've got time to grab one thing— you grab this site. Probably it's your main, dedicated central author site, but doesn't have to be. This is where you want people to go, and if you only have time to maintain one thing, it should be this.
Then there's the branches & leaves — these are the places you're actively maintaining online such as your social networking profiles, your profiles on blogs and forums etc. These should always point back to your 'trunk'— your main website (that's the whole point of having them). These branches and leaves (essentially links from other websites to yours) are like receptors that pull in nutrients to feed your online profile, but the main goal of these sites is not just to show you're active (though that's one of their key functions), it's to get people into a sphere that you control— your trunk, where you can then give them the experience and information they should have about you.
Of course, getting people to your trunk isn't the hard part, really. The hard part is what to do with them when they get there, and this is why it's important to anticipate what they'll be looking for and then make it easy for them to find it. In a nutshell, if you do that well, your online presence will be nipping at David Mitchell's heels in no time ;-)
Linda, you can find help on how to create a Facebook Fan Page here: http://www.authors.com/group/socialmedia/forum/topics/how-to-create...
The Social Media Group is quite new and has tips on getting the best out of Facebook, Twitter, etc. You can add your own Facebook and Twitter information there too.
Linda Page Wickens said:
Geoff - Great idea about going on Facebook and having a separate sign in for the book! I shall look into that!
Thanks!
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