At the moment I've hundreds of words and ideas swirling around my head. My notebook is being furiously written into. I'm watching Youtube videos on who is the best newsletter provider and creating a project management schedule - of sorts - in Asana (a new to me tool that I'm using to get organised). My head feels like it's going to pop. Every time I think I've learnt something new and that'll be it for the time being, I realise I need to learn something else. Google Drive, Asana, Mailchimp/Convertkit, Squarespace, an accounting spreadsheet - even scheduling posts for my Facebook page - is all taking up headspace.
Five Things I've Learned from Launching a Mentoring Business
It was just over a year ago when I had the idea that I'd like to help other writers market themselves using social media. At the time I had just created this blog, my Instagram presence was less than one thousand followers, I had a love/hate relationship with Twitter and Facebook and had very little experience with other platforms. So what on earth made me think I could do it?
Well, my background is in marketing, so that knowledge I had. And I could see the potential of this online world. I was looking around the internet and there were people, often millennials, leading the way in communicating to different audiences.
There was Zoella with her vlog that captivated thousands and thousands of fans. Or Instagrammers that had tens of thousands of followers, who were now transferring into blogs and video. Some were earning good money from advertising. Others were writing articles in online magazines. Or speaking at conferences. Or getting book deals.
The internet was driving change.
How One-to-One Mentoring Gave Me Confidence to Achieve My Ambitions
I think, without the help of two mentors, I'd probably still be writing blog posts then hiding under the table, hoping no-one would read them. Chatting my ideas and goals with two people helped me enormously. They gave me confidence to acknowledge that yes, I wanted to write about my lifestyle, to try new things and to grow an online business.
Without these mentors I would have kept those unspoken ideas and ambitions in my head; meaning they were susceptible to the 'erosion process'. You know, that internal chat which constantly talks you out of achieving what you want.
You're not good enough, what makes you think you could do that, there are better people than you out there.
Or that internal monologue might shift in shape. It could put the frighteners on me. Scared of failure is one thing. Scared of success is even bigger.
Having a mentor made me answerable to someone else. It forced me to do what I said I was going to do.
Instead of worrying about who would see my work I concentrated on what I was writing about, the quality of my photographs, learning new skills. It distracted the self-doubt and muted it long enough for me to work through various projects.
Two of my long-term goals that I mentioned to my mentor a year ago was to gain a platform of 10,000 followers on instagram and write a mini ebook. In the past month I've achieved both of these ambitions.
My third ambition was to help writers and other creatives achieve a bigger audience through social media. And now this ambition is about to be realised, too.
In a few weeks I'll be opening up a limited number of slots for one-to-one mentoring sessions.
I'll assess your current social media presence, then, in one-hour slots, we can discuss your audience, your own skills and all the background marketing stuff.
Or I can help on a practical level. Setting up a blog, identifying the social media channels to concentrate on, growing your audience on Instagram, taking photographs with your iPhone, developing a theme, creating email lists or using Pinterest.
To book go to my new Bookish Marketing website.
Why I've Written an E-Guide about Marketing for Writers
I’ve been blogging for well over ten years in various forms: chatting about my word count, connecting with other writers, hopingsomeone somewhere wouldsomehowdiscover me. It wasn’t until the beginning of 2016 that I decided this was incredibly naive and that I needed to change my strategy (and become my own super hero).
(Yes, I know, what took me so long? But I was also battling imposter syndrome and had no self-belief when it came to my writing.)
It has been fascinating to see the changes, over the last decade, as the internet evolved. There’s been the massive growth in blogs, changing from online diaries to professional brands, the huge rise in the visual and the different apps available to share content with social media. All being done from the comfort of your smart phone.
But what has amazed me more than anything is the the way many, many people are giving up regular, traditional jobs, to become online entrepreneurs.
At the end of 2015 I asked myself: what can I, as a writer, learn from them?
I had an agent. I had a recipe book proposal written and looking good. But, because I had no platform such as a TV programme, publishers were unwilling to take the leap with me.
So, since early spring of 2016, instead of wailing into my (copious cups of) coffee, I decided to go about creating an author platform. Not on TV but by using the apps available to me on the internet. I adopted many of the strategies and tactics that these successful online entrepreneurs were using. I purchased courses and e-books (more on the latter in a future post).
I’ve scratched my head long and hard whilst figuring out what I wanted to say. How I wanted to be seen. I’ve experimented with many forms of social media to grow my audience. Instagram being the main platform where I have a highly engaged audience of nearly 10k. But I’m also on Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest, Steller and YouTube. Then there’s this blog, abookishbaker.co.uk, too.
It has taken me some time but my followers are up. They’re engaged. My blog stats are very healthy. I’ve learned SO MUCH about the practical aspects of online working (creating videos, learning how Pinterest works, how to take and edit photographs with my iPhone, Steller, how to encourage people to follow me on Instagram, how to set up a Facebook page, how to send emails via Mailchimp) as well as marketing in the past year.
A positive side effect of this strategy that I hadn’t anticipated is I’ve shrugged off imposter syndrome (most of the time). I’ve begun putting my writing, my non-fiction stories, online. I’ve incorporated my writing into my Instagram photographs and my YouTube videos.I’m experimenting with my creativity and I’ve found different subjects to write about. It is taking me into exciting new directions.
PLUS - I’m connecting with a fast growing audience.
I would hear from other writers, from those not yet published, to self-published, and the traditionally published, worrying about marketing their books. Thinking they were bothering their followers. Feeling anxious and a bit sick about the idea of selling their book, their product. A book they’d poured everything into but, because they didn’t know how to promote, it may never get read by a large audience.
Because no-one knows about it.
And it occurred to me that the way I was doing it: creating my online platform, adopting the tactics of these online entrepreneurs, adapting them from a writer's perspective - the way I had actively gone out there and sought an audience, could work for other writers, too.
Which is why I have written this ebook. To share my knowledge with others.
For more tips about social media marketing for authors you can:
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Why You Need to be Your Own Super Hero
One year ago I decided enough was enough. No longer was I going to hide under the table every time I posted something online. No longer was I going to hide my writing from the world. If I wanted to make a respectable living as a writer then I needed to push myself. I needed to do something differently to what I'd been doing for the last decade. It is one thing writing. It is another getting people, an audience, to read this writing. And isn't that what we, as writers, want? People to read our work? (And maybe a five figure advance on a book deal...)