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A young author, musician, christian, and student who writes all sorts of fiction. Check out my West...
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A young author, musician, christian, and student who writes all sorts of fiction. Check out my West...
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A young author, musician, christian, and student who writes all sorts of fiction. Check out my West...
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A young author, musician, christian, and student who writes all sorts of fiction. Check out my West...
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Luke Fellner followed Earth In The Year 10,000
Earth In The Year 10,000
The Inkshares Authors Anthology - submit a poem, essay or short story loosely related to our futuristic fiction, Journey. Email entries to myklwalsh@yahoo.com. Entry deadline is [open]. $100 advance to winning entries and an ongoing royalty share.
Luke Fellner liked the forum thread, Con Lessons Blog Series
Hi @Luke Fellner, I’m hoping to touch on that in the upcoming posts where I interview others. For me, the most effective item I had to attract people to the table in the first place was the slideshow I had running. However, I think we’ll get a range of suggestions.
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    Luke Fellner liked the forum thread, Con Lessons Blog Series
    Hi All,

    I’ve writing a series of blog posts on attending conventions to promote your books. The first post is up and is my personal experience from attending my first con earlier this year. I have a set of future posts planned which will be interviews with other authors about their experiences and tips. I’ll also be producing a consolidated tips list incorporating suggestions from all the posts.

    You can read the first post here: https://robertbatten.net/2017/04/23/con-lessons-part-1/

    As the new posts go up I’ll add to this thread. Happy to discuss any points if you have thoughts. Also — if you’ve attended a convention to promote one of your books and would like to answer some questions for the series, let me know!
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      Luke Fellner liked the forum thread, Signed Copies

      Dear Authors,


      We are no longer offering signed copies as part of the incentive package for pre-ordering a book. As our author base has expanded globally, it has become logistically impractical to offer this option.  In many cases, it makes it much more difficult to get books to backers prior to the publication date.  


      What does this mean for books currently in production? For both Inkshares and Quill, we are going to work with the author to find a solution that works best for them and their backers. In some cases, a signed book option will still be practical; in other cases, it might make more sense to have a signed insert like a bookmark or print. Of course, where backers don’t wish to have an unsigned book, we will refund their order.   

      We value our authors and readers dearly and regret any frustration that this may have caused.  


      Best,


      Thad
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        Luke Fellner liked the forum thread, Quill Global Process tracking
        I made an unofficial one, DM me. 
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          Luke Fellner liked the forum thread, How I reached 750 in 7 weeks - my advice
          Dear all,


          It has been a very interesting 7 weeks journey that took me from 0 orders to 750. I have learned a lot and here are my honest suggestions to people, who try to make it on Inkshares.

          Inkshares community has been very helpful and supportive and I wanted to share a small piece of learning and advice.

          Preparation stage: 

          ·      Though Inkshares allows you to write and post bits and pieces of your book as you write it, I would not recommend doing it. Inkshares is a platform to get published. Full stop. Your trial and error on the platform will just bring fatigue and lack of momentum and low expectation of success. Do not drag. Instead  -  shoot.

          ·      Write 100% of the book to the level that you are totally happy with. Show it to people whom you trust, collect feedback and make changes. I highly recommend that you hire an editor, who could help you to make your book slick.

          ·      Design an attractive cover. If you can spend some money, hire professional cover designer. (My cover was self-made and horribly boring. I should have hired a professional. But now it is too late :-( )

          ·      Write a short and attractive synopsis. Make sure it is perfect. This is the most important piece of writing you need. 

          ·      Have your real picture posted in which you are really likeable. People like to support nice-looking people.

          ·      Make a relevant book video. There are so many off-putting videos on Inkshares.  People do watch them (I had over 1300 views). I used iMovies to make it, it is very simple.

          ·      Only after all of this is done, go onto Inkshares platform with a bang.


          Getting orders in:

          ·      Build the marketing of your book on people, whom know you personally.  If you are a lonely individual with no friends and no Facebook, I don’t think you should try to get published on Inkshares. Your pre-existing network is an absolute must. (I have 650 Facebook friends/followers, 850 LinkedIn connections and 870 Twitter followers. It was just about enough to get to where I wanted to get.)

          ·      Realize that getting people to support you is called marketing. Treat the journey as a marketing project split into a number of marketing campaigns. (i.e. Campaign 1 – my Facebook friends; Campaign 2 – my wife’s work colleagues; Campaign 3 – my bookclub members, Campaign 4 – "Those who can order 10 books" etc)

          ·      Develop Marketing plan: what campaigns starts when and in which order

          ·      Mass emails to all contacts in your contact list or posts to all Facebook friends DO NOT WORK. (Well, they work, but very poorly.) Conversion rate is 4-7%. In other words, if you send an email with BCC to 100 people, you will get 4-7 of them support you.

          ·      I do not suggest to post any messages "to all" at all. Instead, send people personalized messages. Not just changing the name after "Dear XXX", but really personalized ones. Yes, it takes time, but conversion rates are much higher – 20-25%. (I was spending 3-5 hours per day on it during the most active periods of my campaign)

          ·      Make a list and work on a 1-2-1 basis with people who can order 10 books – those are usually your relatives or close wealthy friends. These champions will drive your momentum.

          ·      Do not be shy to ask for help.

          ·      Be prepared that many people whom you expect to help you will not help you at all. It is emotionally challenging. Ignore it.

          ·      Be prepared that some random and unexpected people will become champions of your project and will help you and will make referrals.

          ·      Do not be surprised that many people will tell you that they will place orders and then they will not. Some people will lie that they have already placed the order when actually they haven’t done so. Try to accept that people are different. For some it is embarrassing to admit that USD 20 or 10 is a lot or money.

          ·      Ask people for suggestions how to increase your audience. Many people are happy to share with their friends. Again, sharing on Facebook or Twitter does not generate results, but personal 1-2-1 suggestion works well. So just sharing a post is useless (unless you can ask Beyoncé or Paris Hilton do it for you). Campions of your project need to write personal messages to their friends.

          ·      I’ve written a few articles about the topic of the book and got them published in proper digital magazines. It brought some orders, but very few. The return on the effort was small.

          ·      Book reviewers is another promotional avenue. Get a list of freelance reviewers, who can review your book and recommend it to their audience if they like it. I got 5 bloggers review the book. That brought a few (not many) orders. (Particularly, one reviewer in India, who liked the book and promoted it got some of his followers ordering it.)

          ·      Facebook advertising worked a bit, but not too well. I spent about USD 160 on targeted Facebook advertising. It gave me 6 - 8 orders. Not a great conversion.

          So be prepared to work hard for 2-3 months.  I think, 4 hours per day is minimum.

          Very good luck on your journey !!

          Regards

          Sergey

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