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Spring Cleaning for the Mind

March 29, 2013 by Rosemary

By Tiffany Matthews

There will come a time when you find yourself unable to write, not just for hours at end, but days and weeks. The worst is when those weeks stretch into months. By then, the screen’s cursor constant blinking would become a taunting reminder that you have yet to type words, not even one word. If you’re suffering from a serious case of writer’s block, simple tips to beat blank page syndrome will no longer suffice. Badly burned out and drained of every last drop of creative juice? It’s time to call in the big guns.

The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron

When a writer friend suddenly announced on Facebook that she was going to unplug and go away for awhile, I was concerned. I wondered what she could possibly be going through. I had my answer when she resurfaced online three long months later. Apparently, she had been dutifully following a 12-week program based on Julia Cameron’s book, The Artist’s Way. Judging from her relaxed and happier mood, the long break has been helpful in restoring her creativity as well as productivity. The program also helped her get over her major case of writer’s block and gave her more insight on the artistic process.

Some people will not like everything about The Artist’s Way. The long period required to complete the program will not appeal to active writers–who are trying to survive daily life and–who can’t afford to break off from work just for the sake of creativity. There are a couple of things in this book, however, that they can can still do–morning pages and artist dates.

Morning Pages

Every day for the next 12 weeks, you have to pen three handwritten pages, all done first thing in the morning during a stream of consciousness, which means you can’t look back at the previous pages you have written. If you’re not a morning person, you might think twice about waking up early for this exercise. You’ll probably wonder how you can write when you’re still drowsy. Once you get started, however, you’ll be surprised to discover clarity and how easily you can fill up 3 pages. When you write, don’t think, just let the words flow. Ramble if you must. When you read the sheets, you’ll find out that your true thoughts–some repressed–and find a way to resolve some of the issues that have been in your mind for a long time. This practice of morning pages also helps transform writing into more of a daily habit and makes the words flow easier.

Artist Dates

“Artist Dates are assigned play.” Once a week, you must embark on an expedition alone in order to explore what is of interest to you. It doesn’t have to be overly artistic, but it should fire up your imagination. An artist date should be fun and whimsical, something that encourages play. Art is all about the play of ideas, so open yourself to fun things that you want to try. When we experience something new or something that we enjoy, it helps fuel our creativity and build up another reservoir of inspiration that we can draw from. Artist dates replenish our creative juices, adding new ideas and images that bring us closer to our inner artist and craft new masterpieces.

General Cleaning

Sometimes people dread spring, not because they are not looking forward to warmer weather but because it’s time for spring cleaning. Cleaning your house from top to bottom until you drop can be therapeutic for writers and artists, not to mention productive. Just remember to invest in a good vacuum cleaner. The no-handles type can help you get rid of every speck of dust, even in those hidden corners under beds and furniture that you can’t reach. Who knows, you just might get some great ideas while you’re cleaning. Having a sparkly clean house also feels very rewarding especially after all the hard work you’ve put in. The actual spring cleaning helps relax your mental state and makes you feel refreshed. The more relaxed you are, the more your ideas will flow so you can now get back to work.

Spring cleaning isn’t just for the house. Sometimes, we need to apply it to ourselves so we can recharge and welcome new changes that will help us grow as writers and artists.

Author’s Bio: Based in San Diego, California, Tiffany Matthews writes about travel, fashion and anything under sun at wordbaristas.com. You can find her on Twitter as
@TiffyCat87.

Filed Under: Blog Review, Content, Inside-Out Thinking, Successful Blog, Writing Tagged With: bc, creativity, writer's_block, Writing

How to Stop the Content Scrapers

March 14, 2013 by Rosemary

Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. Right?

Except when someone has done a wholesale ripoff of your creative idea or blog post.

For anyone who produces online content, it’s crucial to protect your assets.

Make Life Difficult for the Thieves

Alert the readers

It’s good practice to do spot checks on your best blog posts, to make sure they haven’t fallen victim to the “content scrapers” who ruthlessly roam the web looking for content to steal. Just go to Google’s Advanced Search and type the title (or a sentence) from your post in the “exact phrase match” box.

The silver lining for these automated scrapers is that they often take the whole post without a human reading it, so you can add a note to the end of the post that will notify readers of the original source (you’ll want to include a link to your actual site):

This post originally appeared on Rosemary’s Best Blog Site. If you’re not reading this via email or RSS feed from Rosemary’s Best Blog Site, it may have been stolen.

Check referring links

In your Google Analytics, look at your referred traffic periodically (you probably already do this). If you see anything suspicious, check the source.

Watermark

Any visual content you post, including photos and videos, should have your site name or logo watermarked on it. That way, even if it’s stolen, you’re getting credit. One option is an application like VisualWatermark.com.

Excerpts only

Try changing your RSS feed to excerpts only. The scrapers often like to use RSS feeds as a funnel for content; if you’re only sending excerpts, you’ve made their job much more difficult. The Advanced Excerpt plugin for WordPress is one way to do this.

How to Do a DMCA Takedown Request

Use a “whois” lookup to find out who the web host is for the site with your stolen content.

Most web hosts will have a DMCA form on their site for you to submit your claim. Click here to see Google’s copyright infringement form (if the content happens to be on a Google-hosted site like a Blogger blog).

Unfortunately, tracking down those who have stolen your content can be like a big game of “Whack-a-Mole.” But if you take precautions that make it harder for the scrapers to get your posts, maybe they’ll pass you by.

How have you dealt with the content thieves? Please share any special tips with us.

Author’s Bio: Rosemary O’Neill is an insightful spirit who works for social strata — a top ten company to work for on the Internet . Check out the Social Strata blog. You can find Rosemary on Google+ and on Twitter as @rhogroupee

Filed Under: Blog Basics, Content, Links, Successful Blog, Writing Tagged With: bc, copyright, DMCA, Plagiarism, scraping

Living Life on the Financial Edge

March 6, 2013 by Thomas

If you have a full-time job, one that pays good wages and is all but a sure thing, by all means enjoy it.

As I and millions of others discovered in recent years, a sure thing in the workplace is about as reliable as politicians in Washington, D.C. coming together for the good of the people.

Having been laid off twice in the last seven years, I can say that both experiences were different.

The first job loss in 2006 (after five-and-a-half years with the company) really came out of the blue. Even the manner in which I was informed, an email from a supervisor on a Friday morning, was a tad shocking.

After the reality of the situation set in, I did something down the road that no one should ever do, I began to panic.

How would I pay my rent? Could I still make my car payments? Would I not be able to afford health insurance now that I was on COBRA (the first layoff taught me to get my own health insurance policy, something I carry to this day)?

Despite the best parents in the world helping me out financially, I still was forced to pile up debt on credit cards, not to mention raid some of my retirement fund. I then made matters worse by temporarily moving to Arizona, taking a nearly $12,000 pay cut from the previous job I had been laid off at, and continued wallowing in debt.

After six months in Arizona, I knew that going back to California was not only something I wanted to do, I needed to do.

Was Another Layoff Possible?

So that I don’t make you change the channel, I will skip a few years from then until my second layoff last summer in marketing.

Although I was a top producer in my department (achieved three bonuses) when it came to turning out copy, I was let go after 14 months. Once the initial shock wore off, I came to realize that such a move was probably inevitable, especially given the mismanagement at the company by some of the executives.

With few full-time jobs calling my name, I went back to my old standby, freelancing.

Despite more than 20 years of writing experience, I get few if any phone calls for job interviews these days, knowing that many companies prefer paying someone just out college meager wages as opposed to what someone with decades of experience would command. I also know that many of these companies will face a revolving door of workers, those smart ones who do not take long to realize they are being underpaid, especially given today’s cost of living expenses.

While freelancing is for now keeping a roof over my head and food on the table, it is by no means job security.

Don’t get me wrong, I am extremely grateful for any work thrown my way these days, I just know that I’m living life on the financial edge.

Every time I drive by a homeless person or homeless encampment (they seem to grow by the day here in San Diego), I realize that that could be me in a month, two months, six months from now. On the other hand, I also know that there are people far worse off than I am right now.

It almost seems sad, here in the richest and most powerful country in the world, many people are not able to realize the American Dream.

What the future holds for me I can’t predict, something few if any of us can for that matter. I do know, however, that being a freelance writer is not the worse thing in the world.

That being said, I would not mind if I was not living so close to the financial edge.

Have you had ups and downs in your career over the years?

If so, what has it taught you about surviving in today’s world?

 

Photo credit: bubblews.com

About the Author: With 23 years’ writing experience, Dave Thomas covers a variety of small business topics, including finding the best invoice software.

Filed Under: Writing Tagged With: bc, finances, freelance writer, homeless, jobs

How Love Inspires Us to Write

February 21, 2013 by Rosemary

By Tiffany Matthews

I had come to write about truth, beauty, freedom and that which I believed above all things, love. But there was only one problem…..I’ve never been in love!

This opening monologue in the movie Moulin Rouge, follows young writer Christian, who is faced with a serious dilemma. How can he write about love without even experiencing what it feels like to fall in love?

Love Acts Like a Muse…

For writers and artists, love is a muse that inspires them in their craft, be it through literary works or through masterpieces in art. Have you ever noticed how the words seem to flow easier when you’re in love? Elizabeth Barrett Browning is a fine example of how love can inspire us to write. She immortalized her love for her husband, Robert Browning in How Do I Love Thee? Let Me Count the Ways, one of the most famous love sonnets of all time.

Lack of Love or Heartbreak…

Love, or lack of it, inspires us to write about our free flowing emotions that lift us up to cloud nine or bring us crashing down to reality when our illusions of love are shattered. Some writers thrive in loving relationships while others relish the angst of unrequited love. Yes, we need angst to write. Some writers, however, would choose not to fall in love because they don’t want to be brokenhearted. But even a broken heart can be a dark muse, as proven by some of musicians whose albums were inspired by their heartbreak.

After breaking up with her boyfriend, Adele penned her best selling album, 21, which earned her six Grammy Awards last year, including Album of the year. Taylor Swift is another example of how heartbreak can be transformed into words or in her case, songs.

Falling in Love…

Some writers may not be part of the talkative lot, but when they fall in love, expect pages or letters filled with sweet nothings and lovely verse–the only way they know how to articulate their feelings. When you are in a relationship with a writer, expect to be immortalized in poems, stories and songs.

David Levithan’s book, Every Day, has this quote that perfectly describes what love does to us writers, “This is what love does: It makes you want to rewrite the world.”

Stephen King contributes his own thoughts on love in his profession as an author. “Writing is a lonely job. Having someone who believes in you makes a lot of difference. They don’t have to makes speeches. Just believing is usually enough.” This line of course, speaks of his wife Tabitha, the loving constant throughout the ups and downs of his writing career.

Even with our increasingly digital and mobile world, writers will still take the time to write you a letter or dedicate a poem to you. Neil Gaiman is one of the more vocal authors, who is not ashamed to speak about his love for his wife, Amanda Palmer, on Twitter. The more bashful wordsmiths will send you notes coming from a supposed secret admirer. The more courageous ones will wear their hearts on their sleeve and declare their love on every social media around. In fact, writers can use online tools, to help them update their social networks and emails simultaneously in one place.

Love in any form–not just the romantic kind–will always inspire us to write. Open your heart and don’t be afraid to fall love. If you do get your heart broken, cry and let your written words speak for you. But don’t ever be afraid of finding love again. Just as Christian in Moulin Rouge learned, “The greatest thing you’ll ever learn is just to love and be loved in return.”

Author’s Bio: Based in San Diego, California, Tiffany Matthews writes about travel, fashion and anything under sun at wordbaristas.com. You can find her on Twitter as
@TiffyCat87.

Filed Under: Motivation, Successful Blog, Writing Tagged With: bc, inspiration, Writing

Who Is Your Marketing Content Written For?

February 19, 2013 by Guest Author

By James Ellis

Content marketers love to talk about the power of content. It slices, it dices, it makes unsightly blemishes disappear. Mix some with water to make a paste and it will polish the silver. Content is the cheat code of marketing

But when they talk about content, they usually focus on content that increases lead generation. That’s not a bad thing. We all love new leads. But content can do a number of different things. Content that excites and interests isn’t the same as content that convinces and assures.

So if content works at every level of the sales funnel (and I’m convinced that it can), you need some intentionality.

What do you want this content to do?

Break your sales cycle into stages. Everyone’s funnel is different depending on what book they’re reading at the time, but list every stage. What kind of content will speak to people at each and every single stage?

You might be concerned that your targets won’t know how to find the content for their stage, consider that people in each stage will be looking for different content and will use different terms depending on if they don’t know who you are and if they are trying to validate that you are the correct solution provider. At the awareness stage, their search terms will be about “how to fix…” while their validation stage might be “product name reviews.”

Having killer content at each stage in the sales funnel isn’t an accident. You need to be intentional and build for each stage.

Author’s Bio: James Ellis is a digital strategist, mad scientist, lover, fighter, drummer and blogger living in Chicago. You can reach out to him or just argue with his premise at saltlab.com.

Filed Under: Blog Basics, Content, Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog, Writing Tagged With: bc, content marketing, lead generation, sales cycle, Writing

5 Myths About Writing an E-Book

January 28, 2013 by Rosemary

By Ovetta Sampson

“Yes, of course I can do that!”

The words of affirmation flew out of my mouth faster than the reality that I had no idea how to do it hit my brain. I was close to sealing the deal to write a book for a client. She’d provide the brilliance; I’d wrap it up in lovely words. We’d sell books. But she also wanted to publish an e-book. I had never done that before. But I said yes anyway. I mean, it couldn’t be that difficult to publish an e-book? I mean you just send your Microsoft Word document to the ether and it comes out whispering on your Kindle right?

Yeah. Not right. It took me longer to find a credible answer on e-book publishing than it did to write the book. I asked on LinkedIn, I asked people I knew in the business, I even asked established publishing houses, everyone had a different answer and no one convinced me they had it down. The reason is they don’t. But you will. Read on.

Myth #1: I Need to Write a Book to Make Money

Do you know how many books you’d have to sell to get on the coveted New York Times’ Bestseller List? Industry insider estimate 20,000. Think about it. At $26.55, the average price for a hardcover nonfiction book sold in 2011, you’d gross $531,000. But you’d have to give at least a 1/3 of that to your distributor or publisher, take another 15 percent or your agent or publicist, maybe another 10 percent for marketing, and you’re down to less than half your sales at $221,220. That’s nothing to sneeze at but nothing to retire on either. No wonder people are self-publishing. But do you really think you can sell 20,000 copies of your book? If you think so here are some sobering facts from Steven Piersanti, president of Berrett-Koehler Publisher:

  • The average U.S. nonfiction book sells less than 250 copies per year
  • The average U.S. nonfiction book sells less than 3,000 copies over a lifetime
  • Competition is increasing—in 2003 the U.S. published 300,000 books. In 2011 that number was THREE MILLION!

So making money should not be your motivation to publish a book. Spreading brand awareness, though, is a good return on your investment.

Myth #2: All You Need is a Word Document

By far this is the No.1 fallacy I heard when investigating e-book publishing. Everyone said, “All you need is a Word document.” While it’s true that the publishing world is firmly ensconced in Microsoft Word and e-book distributors such as Amazon and Barnes & Noble accept Word docs to create digital books, a Word doc is by far the beginning step not the end. But why?

To put it simply: a print book is created by imagery. An e-book is created by code. In printing you take an image of your written text as designed and reproduce it. In a digital book, you take your text and use code to manipulate it so that it flows and changes to fit the e-reader. A printed book is static. An e-book is flexible.

Read this if you want to know what exactly what happens during the conversion, but otherwise take my word for it. Publishing an e-book is not even remotely the same as sending your Word doc to a printer and having your book typeset at a printing house.

Myth #3: I Can Do It All Myself

If you want a crappy e-book you can upload a Word doc and be done with it. But if you want an e-book that looks professional and can gain respect, you need to have your text doc converted to a major digital publishing language namely: MOBI, for Amazon or E-PUB for everyone else. You can get all the dirty details of conversion in Guy Kawasaki’s new book APE: Author, Publisher, Entrepreneur—How to Publish Your Book. It is by far one of the most comprehensive books on self-publishing I’ve ever read. He also gives step-by-step instructions on how he took his book digital as it was designed with InDesign.

But here’s what you need to know: If you want all the bells and whistles found on e-readers such as navigation, searchable text, clear graphics and tables, hyperlinks, you need special code or formatting, much like HTML for a website. Author service providers can offer you this service. There are several including:

  • Smashwords (free but takes a cut of royalties)
  • BookBaby, charges an up-front fee but offers you 100% of the royalties
  • CreateSpace, owned by Amazon, very aggressive in marketing but print-on-demand is great if you want a real-live book as well as a digital one.

There are tons more. Prices for these companies range from as little as $100 to north of $4,000. For my project I paid $100 for e-book conversion to both MOBI and E-PUB and formatting from the Indian-based SunTec Digital, (Hi Rahul!) and had my client sign up for Amazon’s Kindle Direct Publishing program to distribute the book. The book, It Takes Work to Be Happy, came out fantastic and looks fabulous on my iPad.

Myth #4: I Don’t Need an Editor I’m a DIYer

While there are plenty of tasks you can complete when you self-publish, I mean it is called self-publishing; editing is not one of them. No matter how great of a writer you are, if you want your book to be taken seriously by your audience, the media, clients and even your mother, you need a good copyeditor. I’m not just saying that because I am one.

What’s the first thing you think about when you get an e-mail with a misspelling? Nigerian fraud right? Ever read a Facebook post with someone using “there” for “their?” Makes you cringe doesn’t it? I was contemplating dating a guy but his Facebook posts were so riddled with misspelling and errors I just stayed away.

Communication replete with incorrect spelling, bad grammar, and faulty sentence structure signals carelessness. Correcting those mistakes is about more than pleasing English teachers. It’s about putting your best foot forward. And at just $35 an hour (the average copyediting cost) isn’t your first book worth that kind of attention? Hire a copyeditor this is non-negotiable. Then you won’t be like the losing Mitt Romney whose campaign asked supporters to “Stand with Mitt,” for “A Better Amerca!”

Myth #5: I’ll Write It Then Market It

Nope! Market it as you create it! It’s the only way to rise above the din. In the past authors went to big publishing houses for marketing chops. But thanks to social media and the ‘Net you don’t have to. Still, you’ve got to be Barnum and Bailey to get rich in the Obama era.

Guy in his book APE, notice I keep mentioning it, yeah, you need to read it, gives a crash course on marketing and self-promotion. You can also check out his practical advice reading this Q&A I did with him about marketing for startups. Guy likens publishing an e-book to beginning a startup.

Because even he, an established author, Penguin is one of his publishers, with millions of social media followers, even he spent more than a year promoting his self-published book before it was even written.

When I sat down with business guru and CNBC star Carol Roth and asked how she promoted her New York Times best-selling book The Entrepreneur Equation the answer was simple—she did a yearlong marketing plan. That’s before she wrote a word. Yeah, you can buy her doll here!

Bottom line: When you think of writing a book is when you should create a social media profile for it, tell everyone you know, start soliciting pre-sale e-mails, and bug your local book seller and plant seeds on book-centered websites and groups. Don’t wait until it’s done, besides opening your mouth will give you a reason to actually write it.

Look, publishing is pigeonholed into a paradox. Book sales are dropping just as technology is allowing more people to publish. It’s not enough to have a good book; you need to have a well-designed, well-edited, well-marketed book to rise above the din. So Write. Revise. Format. Market. and Sell!

Author’s Bio: Ovetta Sampson is a freelance digital writer for BlueSodaPromo, a promotional marketing company based in the Chicago area. BSP offers an amazing selection of eco-friendly tote bags and thousands of stress relievers. An avid triathlete, she still finds time to run her own content marketing firm and blog.

Filed Under: Business Book, Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog, Writing Tagged With: bc

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