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Your Path to a Successful Book

Our $uccess blog will feature writing, marketing, and publishing tips we continue to learn since writing our 2009 INDIE Finalist workbook $uccess, Your Path to a Successful Book keeping our readers abreast of the everchanging skills required to write, publish and sell a successful book. We will also have guest commentators. Achieving your goals as a writer is what matters. Anything we can do to help you get there is our goal. We welcome your comments and hope you will sign up for our bi-monthly (or whenever we have enough material) newsletter.

Archive for August, 2011

Top 10 Tips to Win a Caples Award

Sunday, August 28th, 2011

Don’t wait to submit your entries for the 34th John Caples International Awards.
Entry deadline: September 26, 2011

To help you prepare, we’ve included a few tips.

Top 10 Tips to Win a Caples Award

10. Don’t display the name of your agency anywhere on the piece. (unless it’s the Agency self-promotion category).
In order to eliminate any prejudice or preconceived notions about any particular agency, the judges should have no clue as to the origination of the entry.

9. Make sure your entry is in the right category.
Seems obvious, sure. But if you’re unsure, just ask us.

8. Ensure you provide an English translation.
Though we have a panel of international judges, English is still the primary language. If you really want to increase your chances of winning, cut out the translations and attach them to your entry in their correlating copy positions.

7. You must have a call-to-action.
If the entry doesn’t clearly have a call-to-action and a specific offer, it should not be entered. A URL at the bottom of the page does not constitute a call-to-action. Please note this does not apply to retention/loyalty, non-mail.

6. State the target audience.
If your target was left-handed calligraphers from Tuscany, it probably has some bearing on your execution.

5. State your insights about the target and how it relates to your creative solution.
This sets up the case for evaluating just how innovative your solution really is.

4. Make your concept understandable.
This is probably one of the most important points on this list. Before you submit, have someone read it who knows nothing about the promotion. If they understand the reasoning behind the creative, so will the judges.

3. Be specific about the role and sequence of each communication for mulitimedia entries.
Let us know what messages were seen, when and by whom in order to achieve your marketing objective.

2. It’s all in the write-up.
The judges need the visuals to fully understand your entry. If you don’t have the actual pieces, send a photo board that accurately represents your entry.

1. Support materials are a must.
Spend time writing up the problem and presenting your creative solution. It’s about creative problem solving. Sell the concept to the judges the way you would to a client. Enlist the help of your partners in strategic planning and account service in crafting the entry write-up.

Once you’ve prepared, visit caples.org to submit your entries.

For more information, contact Eva Chan at +1 646-638-6059 or eva.chan@dmnews.com.

CityRoom, JustLuxe, Big Blend, Spa Review Magazine, Global Writes

Finalist in the Writing and Publishing category of the 2009 Next Generation Indie Book Awards, “$uccess, Your Path to a Successful Book,”

New York Times Blog Post Points Out the Cost of Spelling Mistakes

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

This article was a New York Times Blog Post. People frequently do not feel that have to be as careful with email as other documents. I have to admit, when I don’t take the time to read my communication before hitting “send,” I have made an error or two. It is always best to read your document first. This article shows how costly typos have become.

Quote from NYT:

Rushing to publish and overlooking glaring typos may have become part of the new economics of traditional publishing. But on the Web, typos sometimes come with a price. “Spelling mistakes ‘cost millions’ in lost online sales,” said a BBC headline last week. The article cited an analysis of British Web figures that suggested that a single spelling mistake on a e-commerce site can hurt credibility so much that online revenues fall by half.

http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/07/17/the-price-of-typos/

CityRoom, JustLuxe, Big Blend, Spa Review Magazine, Global Writes

Finalist in the Writing and Publishing category of the 2009 Next Generation Indie Book Awards, “$uccess, Your Path to a Successful Book,”

Writing Contests from Writer’s Digest

Saturday, August 20th, 2011

Brenda and I have read Writer’s Digest for years and highly recommend their competition. Since this email came through with a list of their upcoming contests, we wanted to share it.

WRITER’S DIGEST
COMPETITIONS
Writer's Digest Competitions:
1

You enter. You win. You brag. And you earned it…but what does it really GET you?

Science Fiction/Fantasy | Thriller | Crime | Young Adult | Romance | Horror

Win one of our genre competitions and get a professional critique of your work. Get a pro’s take on what works, what doesn’t and how to fix it. Get a high-level review of the strengths and weaknesses of your writing. Get an impressive addition to your resume. And, of course, get the money and the bragging rights.

When you win, you’re good.

When you win with Writer’s Digest, you get even better.

Writer's Digest Crime Competition A bank robbery. A theft. A murder. We’ll start you off with this clue: The deadline is October 22, 2011!

Enter Now

Romance Please…we ache for your entries. Don’t be cold-hearted. Enter by October 15, 2011!

Enter Now

Thriller/Suspense Whodunnit? Don’t keep us in suspense! YOU do it…by September 15, 2011.

Enter Now

SCIENCE FICTION/FANTASY Young Adult Horror
What does the future hold? Colonized planets, maybe. Apocalypse? Perhaps time travel. You decide.
Enter by September 15, 2011.
Harry Potter. Twilight. The Hunger Games. The popularity of Young Adult fiction has everlasting life! Sink your teeth into it!
Enter by October 1, 2011!
Just like the barely-audible shuffles of a zombie, the deadline’s far-off … but it’s coming.
The UnDeadline: October 31, 2011
Enter Now Enter Now Enter Now

CityRoom, JustLuxe, Big Blend, Spa Review Magazine, Global Writes

Finalist in the Writing and Publishing category of the 2009 Next Generation Indie Book Awards, “$uccess, Your Path to a Successful Book,”