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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.

Posts Tagged ‘maralyn d hill’

Food Writers and Bloggers See Opportunity

Monday, April 23rd, 2012

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Call For Food Editors and Bloggers: Stonewall Kitchen Cooking School Announces Spring/Summer 2012 Class Schedule

York, Maine,

April 19, 2012 With classes beginning in May, the Stonewall Kitchen Cooking School will offer more than 150 courses during the four month schedule.

“We are very pleased with this season’s course offering,” said Jonathan King, President and Creative Director.  “We offer menus that tailor to each season and incorporate new ideas from various talent and current cooking trends.”

A variety of courses ranging from traditional Maine lobster to a week dedicated to Julia Child are available including brunches, cookbook signings, luncheons and dinners.

Notable chefs scheduled to appear for cookbook signings and instruction include:

Dana Moos, The Art of Breakfast May 27, July 8, August 12 Cathy Walthers, Raising the Salad BarJune 9 Kate Shaffer, Desserted: Recipes and Tales from an Island Chocolatier June 14 Mark Gaier & Clark Frasier, Maine Classics June 23 Linda Carucci, Cooking School Secrets for Real World CooksJune 29 and June 30 Sara Foster, Sara Foster’s Southern Kitchen July 20 and July 21 Betty Rosbottom, Sunday BrunchJuly 28 and July 29 Dave Martin, Flavor Quest, Volume 1 & Volume 2August 9 and August 10 Virginia Willis, Basic to Brilliant, Y’all: 150 Refined Southern Recipes and Ways to Dress Them Up for CompanyAugust 24 and August 25

To learn how to attend a complimentary class, please contact Sheri Tripp, Marketing Manager at sheri@stonewallkitchen.com or 1.207.351.2713.

To download the Spring/Summer Class Schedule, please visit www.stonewallkitchen.com/cookingschool.

About Stonewall Kitchen Cooking School Located at the Stonewall Kitchen Company Headquarters in York, Maine, the Stonewall Kitchen Cooking School offers great food and clear, concise instruction in a relaxed, comfortable and friendly atmosphere. With an incredibly talented and entertaining staff, the Stonewall Kitchen Cooking School also invites noted restaurant chefs, cookbook authors and cooking professionals from across the nation to come to Maine and demonstrate their talents in the school’s state-of-the-art classroom.

Press Contact:

Sheri Tripp
sheri@stonewallkitchen.com

207.351.2713

Maralyn D. Hill

Maralyn D. HillThe Epicurean Explorer

President, International Food Wine & Travel Writers Association

Editor-at-Large, CityRoom

Blogs: Where and What in the WorldSuccess with Writing

Journalism Training Workshop in Phoenix from SPJ and ONA

Wednesday, April 18th, 2012

SPJ and the Online News Association are pleased to invite you and your colleagues to JournCamp on Friday, May 18 at the Arizona State University Cronkite School of Journalism in downtown Phoenix.

The focus of the day will be skills-based training that you can use to help you be a better journalist. You’ll find topics on entrepreneurial journalism; social media as a reporting tool; visual storytelling; copyright law and fair use; using mobile tools; finding public data and posting it online; and more.

See more details and register at spj.org/spjona.asp.

DETAILS

When: Friday, May 18. 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Cost: $20 for SPJ or ONA members / $40 for non-members

(Registration fee includes breakfast and lunch.)

We’re still finalizing some details, so keep up with SPJ on Twitteror Facebook or at the website for updates. And please contact me if you have any questions: sleadingham@spj.org or 317-640-9304.

See you in Phoenix,

Scott Leadingham

SPJ Director of Education

Maralyn D. Hill

Maralyn D. HillThe Epicurean Explorer

President, International Food Wine & Travel Writers Association

Editor-at-Large, CityRoom

Blogs: Where and What in the WorldSuccess with Writing

Marketing Your Book or Anything is Up to You

Saturday, April 14th, 2012

Marketing, Marketing and More Marketing—and it ALL ties in with Book Marketing!

In tough economic times, many firms cut their marketing budget. This is usually a serious mistake. Products/books do not sell themselves unless their use is mandated by law. Even then, they need help to be successful.

You can be budget conscious about your marketing, and still do it in the smartest, most effective manner.

Essential components for these results include:

  • Know your potential audience:
  • Identify needs.
  • Identify your competition:
  • What is unique about your product or company?
  • Talk to others in the industry and discover what they want.
  • Understand where your product can be sold.
  • Know who they are.
  • Know where to find them.
  • Secure endorsements—customer recommendations.
  • Obtain radio, TV and print interviews whenever you can.
  • The media (this consists of press, newspapers, magazines, radio, TV, etc.) can publicize your product/company and help get it known.
  • Have a press kit available (reviews, synopsis, brochure, press releases, data/history on company/product). A CD is a good addition to the press kit.
  • Have a professional website designed. Unless you design websites as a hobby, leave this to a professional. There is a difference in the finished result.
  • Your site needs to be designed with search engine optimization in mind (Google needs to find your site easily).
  • Colors make a difference.
  • On a website, your eye flows in a Z pattern. So, the most important piece of information is in the top left corner and next important is in the top right, followed by bottom left, and then bottom right.
  • Be sure your headings are specific.
  • If you’re ready, start blogging. Even if you don’t like it, consistent blogging helps you build an online presence. You can comment on other people’s blogs in your industry. Many authors do not want to do this, believe me, it helps.
  • Learn to market on the internet. This medium is inexpensive, effective and necessary for moving forward. Internet marketing will be covered with more depth in January when you’ll get 12 tips for internet marketing that you can use for a New Year’s resolution.

I believe in advertising. However, print ads sometimes break one’s budget and do not give the highest return on investment. I am a strong believer that promotional advertising can get your name in front of customers and keep it there if you choose wisely. Plus, if you provide something tastefully done and customers use it, they are endorsing you to others.

Publicity should not be overlooked. Press releases are free and can have long lasting effects. Two years after the fact, people have told me about favorable articles they have read about me, my company or one of our books.

I find it interesting that when I had my advertising and marketing business, the steps necessary for an effective campaign for a manufacturer, insurance company, small business, hotel or almost any business were the same as what is necessary for marketing a book.  Since I’ve co-authored three books during the last seven years, much of my marketing effort has been on book marketing. Like any other segment of the business world, it has some unique avenues and opportunities, but still possesses overriding similarities to other segments.

You need to be willing to invest time and funds into promoting your product/business/book. The success is impacted by how much time you spend on marketing.

The above article originally appeared in my Success with Words column on The Big Blend Magazine.

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,”