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Twenty Months of Get Known Before the Book Deal

Today, I feel like celebrating my second book, Get Known Before the Book Deal from Writer’s Digest Books.

Thank you to everyone who has already recommended Get Known as a resource to writers who are ready to build a marketing platform. You know who you are. I cannot thank you enough for your support and for waving the book around and including it on your resource lists.

There are a whole lot of conversations out there about platform development going on. I feel proud that Get Known played a small role in getting the conversation rolling.

Maybe I feel like celebrating because the most frequent comment I hear about Get Known lately is that writing conferences are not stocking enough copies for attendees. So attendees are coming to me with their disappointment.

Ack! I wish there was something I could do about this!

I’d noticed that sales of Get Known have been shooting up on Amazon lately. No doubt because this is a big time of year for writing conferences and none of them are carrying enough copies. I’ve already been to four writing conferences this year but unfortunately I can’t attend them all. (Although I have contemplated cloning myself–don’t think I haven’t!)

The best idea I can come up with is asking you, fans of the book, to request ample copies of Get Known at your upcoming literary events and conferences. (Just submit ISBN # 978-1582975542 to the conference bookseller.) If your conference did not stock the book or ran out (and this happens both at conferences where I have been a long-time member and even when I am a speaker), you can purchase my books absolutely everywhere. Here’s the complete list, so you can choose.

As for the book sellers/providers. I can’t promise you that you’ll sell out every copy you bring, but I can let you know that this is the case at the conferences I’ve been attending and what folks are reporting back to me. I think I can probably go out on a limb and predict that if you are hosting an event for writers, about 90% of them are interested in learning the fundamentals of platform development—precisely what’s covered in Get Known.

Not convinced? Well…

Joe Wikert of O’Reilly Media dubbed Get Known, “The Author Platform Bible.”

Agents recommend Get Known to their potential clients. Several have been in touch with me to say how grateful they are to have the book as a resource they can recommend.

Get Known has 50 reviews of Amazon. The reviews are predominantly positive. And no, all of these people are not my friends. (At least they weren’t before they posted their reviews. As for the three who panned it, yet sound suspiciously like they didn’t even crack the book, who knows what their deal is.)

Last year, seven contributors created ten issues of The Get Known Groove, which I posted to the Get Known blog (here’s a link to my Get Known Now column). If you are new to platform development, I hope you will partake of all of the archives including columns on social networking, book promotion, podcasting, and more.

Also in 2009, I wrote a feature for Writer’s Digest Magazine called, “How to Build a Marketing Platform” that you might enjoy reading.

You might also enjoy reading this excerpt from Get Known over at WritersDigest.com.

This post contains my definition of platform and a bit of tough love on the topic.

Another post, you probably don’t want to miss is my suggested online tools for authors.

You know, there is no magic platform formula, folks. Building a platform is as much of an individual creative process as writing. My hope is that writers will embrace the creative aspects of platform building as much as they embrace the creative aspects of writing.

And on that note, here’s my book trailer for Get Known, followed by a few quotes from the book:

Page 252: I am the conductor of my writing career, and you are the conductor of yours.

Page 253: The steps you need to traverse to go from totally unknown writer to successful author are:

  1. Produce quality writing
  2. Build a platform
  3. Grow your platform
  4. Write your book proposal
  5. Write your book
  6. Promote your book
  7. Repeat

p. 255 If you don’t have your specific, targeted platform concept developed, all the technology in the world is not going to do you much good.

To paraphrase the final quote in my book from Seth Godin. Building a platform is a tremendous experience. It pays off…clarifies your thinking…builds credibility…and is a living engine of marketing and idea spreading…you should build one.

I hope you will. Good luck!

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