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Unashamed optimist and a devourer of stories. Fueled by conjectures and caffeine.
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JF Dubeau liked this
@Amanda Orneck If it's helpful, I find people do too much at home (online) promotion. If someone wishes to emulate my success, they should be focusing on getting out the door and physically in front of the people they want to buy their book--then you have to actually pitch and sell it to these people. This, however, takes a very specific personality and type of presence. You also need to find the correct physical forum to promote/sell your book. 

Selling a book in person that does not physically exist yet is a VERY tricky business. Despite this, unless you already have a previously established online network which is receptive to a call to action, getting out there in a receptive location and pitching person to person seems to be the best way to get pre-orders.

I will be honest with you though, the personal effort required to do this is astronomical and I do not believe most people fully understand what it is takes to be successful with this method. If you have questions please PM or directly link me @Jamison Stone Good luck!!!
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    JF Dubeau liked this
    I'm really hungry for Deus Hex Machina to make it in the Sword & Laser contest. I know we have the JOHN'S LIST, but how about a little JOE'S LIST this time? Does anyone have an audience they can reach out to get more support on this book? I've sent some Twitter and Facebook posts, but I don't think they brought any returns.

    I feel like there is a richness to the world of Deus Hex Machina I'd like to explore and I feel like it should be something shared to a wider audience.

    @John Robin @A.C. Weston @JF Dubeau @G. Derek Adams 

    @Amanda Orneck 
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      JF Dubeau followed Unscalable
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      Unscalable uncovers Silicon Valley’s lesser-known backstories of failure and achievement. Interviews (GitHub, Zenefits, DoorDash and more) showcase eclectic strategies and experiments, revealing the long and unpredictable road to startup success.
      JF Dubeau liked this
      (I ended up deleting my joke answer and writing a real one. Sorry, @JF Dubeau!)

      Writing is one of the ways I interpret life. I need it to help me figure out how to exist in a world filled with horrible things and still feel hope. I had your garden-variety shitty childhood, and stories were always an escape - both reading and writing them helped me make it to adulthood.

      I'm not interested in convincing comfortable people how "dark and gritty" life can really be. Those kinds of stories are fine for whoever wants to read and write them, but a lot of us already know. We need to know whether or not the darkness and grit are worth it.

      Stories help me survive, and I like to think maybe someday something I write could help someone else survive, too.

      As for this book, I like adventure and angst and love and heroics, and I don't just want to consume these kinds of stories; I want to create them.

      In the most general sense, I'm working out my understanding of how justice and mercy might exist in tension in a world where everyone is flawed, and everyone wants forgiveness. My faith as a Christian informs my exploration of justice and mercy, but I'm not writing an allegory or trying to indoctrinate anyone. (Unless you count writing multiple complex, realistic women as feminist indoctrination, in which case... yeah.)

      I'm interested in exploring service, humility, and self-sacrifice as the foundations of leadership.

      I'm interested in exploring power and injustice, recovery from trauma, and the meaning of beauty.

      I'm interested in exploring community versus the individual, identity formation, and the definition of family.

      Also, I want to make spaceships explode!
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