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Open Mic Wrap-up: Inside Our Computers . . .

January 31, 2007 by Liz

Guess What We Discovered!

Along with the memory and hard drives, there are pages of email, novels, spam, dust-bunnies, stars, nebula, water, poetry and music made from words that all live inside our computers.

If you’re in the market to purchase, will it be HP, Dell or Toshiba and laptop or desktop? The price of monitors is low but do you want a 17″, 19″ or 22″ and is it better to build your own or unpack and go? Maybe go with what you want and need and don’t worry too much about the brand.

There might have been more talk about music, health, tap dancing, weather, dessert, SAHDs, trips, acronyms, karaoke, disco, coffee, movies, cleaning, company, MTV, Akismet, widgets, walking, and family than computers. And of course, we shared Klondike Bars and poetry.

Here’s some of the links we shared:

  • Kinks
  • Char’s Office
  • Casey Kasem
  • Herman’s Hermits
  • Barry Manilow
  • Bono
  • Service Untitled

Special thanks to Joe for holding the fort down when I couldn’t be here at the beginning. You’re my hero! And a special apology to Robert and Steven — I’m sorry I didn’t close down the announcement post. I hate it when I do that!

Thanks to everyone for the cool links and for being part of the conversation. Bring more links next week and we’ll post them again. I wish I could quote you all, but I know you have an idea of how much time it takes.

So, for 2007, we’ll just tell the story and share the links that you bring.

After all, how DO YOU explain Open Comment Night, if you’ve never experienced it?

See you next Tuesday? We sure hope so.
–ME “Liz” Strauss and Sandy Renshaw
Related article
What is Tuesday Open Comment Night?

Filed Under: Blog Comments, Community, Links, Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Outside the Box, SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog_promotion, discussion, letting_off_steam, living-social-media, Open_Comment_Night

What Kind of Blogger Are You?

January 31, 2007 by Liz

Variety is the Spice of Blogging

Oh Okay

We all know that

I’m the kind of blogger who wants a relationship not a one link stand.

I’m a relationship blogger.

What kind of blogger are you?

Liz's Signature

Filed Under: Bloggy Questions, Community, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Ive-been-thinking, relationship-blogging

Bookcraft 2.0: 12 Cold Truths about Publishing and The 2 Proofs Every Publisher Wants

January 31, 2007 by Liz

Write a Book, Then Build a House?

books

It’s a typical conversation. I’ve had it with many authors. They work really hard on a manuscript only to find out that it doesn’t work as a book. The conversation goes something like this:

AUTHOR: [confused, frustrated] I don’t understand why this doesn’t work. I’m an intelligent person. I should be able to do this. Why am I so stupid about this?

ME: First, stop the self-torture. I’m better at it than you are. Your intelligence shows everywhere. You’ve just never done this before.

AUTHOR: [disappointed] But I read. I’ve written two dissertations. I’ve managed policy documents for entire organizations.

ME: Yep. That experience helps, for sure. But think about this. I’ve lived in a house. I wear shoes, drive a car, and have 1.5 million miles on airplanes. I can’t build any of them.

AUTHOR: [cheerfully sardonic] And your point is?

That is the moment at which I get their attention.

12 Cold Truths about Publishing

I understand an author’s feelings of confusion, disappointment, and frustration. Something about using books all of our lives, gives us an intimate relationship with them. Well, we think the relationship is with the book, but really it’s with the content. That’s where the misconceptions start. Here are some cold truths publishers wish every author realized.

  1. “Great” content doesn’t mean much, if no one reads it. Great content has to be written and presented well. Then it has to sell.
  2. The value of a book is not in the idea. The value is in the execution.
  3. If an author doesn’t care enough to prepare a manuscript according to industry standards, a publisher has no reason to think the author would care more after work has really started.
  4. The content has to fit into a book-size container that can be efficiently manufactured. Manuscript that won’t do this doesn’t stand a chance of getting read.
  5. Published books are more rigorously organized and more literally consistent than most self-published documents produced for a small, homogenous group.
  6. Anyone who knows you has no credibility as a critic.
  7. Placing a book with a publisher is a business deal in which the book is the product/work.
  8. A book manuscript should be offered to a publisher that is already selling books to the manuscript’s target market.
  9. Design and editorial choices are made to serve a national or international market. Editors and designers are paid to make such choices.
  10. People do judge a book by its cover. A great cover and design will sell the first book faster than the most compelling content. Fine writing and solid content gets the repeat sales, evangelists, and loyal fans.
  11. Don’t leave messages for a publisher who doesn’t know you. Don’t send registered packages. Don’t think a FedEx will impress. All of these are 3-D world spam.
  12. Publishers dream about authors who do their homework, know the competition for their idea, and come to the process ready to join a working relationship.

Publishing is a business.

The 2 Proofs Every Publisher Wants

So what does it take to get published?
You can overcome these cold truths with two proofs.

  1. Prove that you can write a professional manuscript readers will want to buy.
  2. Prove that you’re an author, who is a pleasure to work with and brings value to the process.

Want to get published? Are you willing to prove it?

–ME “Liz” Strauss
If you’d like Liz to help you make a plan to meet your goals, click on the Work with Liz!! page in the sidebar.

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10 Ways to Start a Blog Post — 01-29-07
Bookcraft 2.0: Find a Book in Your Archives the Way a Publisher Would
Bookcraft 2.0 Why Read the Date Archives Not the Categories?
Bookcraft 2.0: How Many Words Does It Take to Make a Book?

Filed Under: Business Book, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Bookcraft 2.0, business-of-publishing, get-published

The Mic Is On: We’re Inside Our Computers!!!!

January 30, 2007 by Liz

It’s Like Open Mic Only Different

The Mic Is On

Here’s how it works.

It’s like any rambling conversation. Don’t try to read it all. Jump in whenever you get here. Just go to the end and start talking. EVERYONE is WELCOME
The rules are simple — be nice.

There are always first timers and new things to talk about. It’s sort of half “Cheers” part “Friends” and part video game. You don’t know how much fun it is until you try it.

We’re inside our computers!!!

Inside Computer

We might also talk about

  • files
  • music
  • photos
  • poetry
  • novels
  • thoughts
  • stories
  • dreams
  • resumes, and
  • whatever else comes up,

including THE EVER POPULAR,
Basil the code-writing donkey.

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related article
What is Tuesday Open Comment Night?

Filed Under: Blog Comments, Community, Links, Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Outside the Box, SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog_promotion, discussion, letting_off_steam, living-social-media, Open_Comment_Night

Open Mic 7pm Chgo Time: Inside Our Computers . . .

January 30, 2007 by Liz

Yes the Mic Will Be on Tonight

Join Us Tonight for Tues. Open Comments

The Topic is: Our Computers . . .

We might talk about parts, pieces and chips. But it’s not all about hardware and software. What about music, photos, poetry, novels, thoughts, stories, and dreams? There’s magic inside our computers. You know there is

The rules are simple — be nice.

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related article
What is Tuesday Open Comment Night?

Filed Under: Blog Comments, Community, Links, Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Outside the Box, SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog_promotion, discussion, letting_off_steam, living-social-media, Open_Comment_Night

Writer’s Block: Unblanking the Blank Screen

January 30, 2007 by Liz

Why the Blank Screen Is Scary

Power Writing Series Logo

Ah, the blank screen.

The blank screen. It’s an invitation to look foolish, to be boring, to write something that we’ll regret. Some of us can use the blank screen to scare the proverbial pants off ourselves imagining how badly we might screw things up.

The blank screen reminds us that our thoughts will be there for the world to see.

A famous Guindon Cartoon said it better.

Writing is nature’s way of letting you know how sloppy your thinking is.

Fear of a blank screen, writer’s block, really is — a subtle fear of exposure — fear that people will see things in our thoughts.

Combine that fear with the idea of marring a pure and perfect white screen, and a writer can get totally ‘whelmed. (Who needs to be overwhelmed? Feeling ‘whelmed is quite big enough for me, thank you.)

It helps to know what we’re up against.

Unblanking the Blank Screen

The key to unblanking the scary blank screen is getting something on it we want to say. Some writers can type until they know what that is. I’m not one of them.

I find freewriting visually stressful. When I do that, all I see is a blank screen getting messier and messier. All I feel is me getting more and more distracted by the problem that I don’t know what I want to write.

What I do instead is look away from the menace of the vast white space. I get up and hunt down one sentence — only one — one sentence that says something I want to say. I use questions like these to help me.

  1. What something have I learned or learned about lately?
  2. What news have I heard that I’d enjoy adding my point of view to?
  3. What have I read that I might want to recommend?
  4. What pithy comment was left on my blog this week? How might I respond?
  5. What pattern, behavior, trend have I noticed?
  6. What question do I have that I want answered?
  7. What skill or a technique might I teach?
  8. What argument might I give the pro/con to?
  9. What lesson have I learned this week? What funny story can I share?
  10. What pet peeve or problem have I got a solution to?

The possible questions are unlimited, of course. I start with these, and look through books, cabinets and drawers, and the refrigerator while I’m thinking. The moving around and looking helps my brain unfreeze.

It’s not long before a sentence warms up to me.

I go back to my computer, and I write that sentence across the screen.

The screen is not blank anymore. I’m no longer distracted by its emptiness.

Now I can get to writing.

That sentence? It often becomes my headline. When it’s not, it’s usually my last line. Can you tell which one it is this time?

What questions would you ask to help folks unblank the blank screen?

UPDATE: IF you don’t read Joe’s post Liz Had My Idea Before Me, you’ll be missing a clever and entertaining blogger’s post.

–ME “Liz” Strauss
If you think Liz can help with a problem you’re having with your writing, check out the Work with Liz!! page in the sidebar.

Related
Why Dave Barry and Liz Don’t Get Writer’s Block
Don’t Hunt IDEAS — Be an Idea Magnet
10 Ways to Start a Blog Post — 01-29-07

Filed Under: Successful Blog, Writing Tagged With: bc, blank-screen, Guindon-Cartoon, Power-Writing-for-Everyone, writers-block

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