Promote Your Work

Scribes! Kind of figured that this could probably be worth a value post. What do you think?

https://www.yourwriterplatform.com/book-marketing/

Hi-Ya Scribes, this just may be readable.

Book Marketing 101: The Crucial Basics of Promoting Your Book | YourWriterPlatform.com

Karen Ferreira’s creative agency specializes in providing high quality, affordable illustration services for authors. 

As a keynote speaker at her annual conference, Children’s Book Mastery, Karen interviewed me about the crucial basics of promoting your book.

We explored the following:

  • What mindset should authors adopt when promoting their book?
  • What are the most crucial elements of promoting your book?
  • What are some creative and unusual ways to promote your book?
  • How can authors come up with their own marketing ideas?
  • How can an author create a promo kit for themselves?

Because book promotion is such an important – but challenging – topic, Karen generously provided a transcribed copy of our discussion to use here on the blog.

We wrapped up our chat with Karen asking me what my top tip is to help authors succeed. (You’ll have to scroll all the way to the bottom of the post to find my answer. 👇😉)

Q1: What Mindset Should Authors Adopt When Promoting Their Book?

Karen: The first question I have for you is what mindset would you say that authors need to adopt about promoting their books?

Kimberley: Your mindset can have more to do with your progress and success as a writer than even your ideas, skills or talent. A fixed mindset comes from the belief that your qualities are carved in stone, ‘Who you are is who you are period and characteristics like intelligence, personality, creativity, are fixed traits rather than something that can be developed’. And a growth mindset, on the other hand, comes from the belief that your basic qualities are things you can cultivate through effort, right? 

Kimberley: So, yes, people will differ greatly in aptitude and talents, interests or temperaments, but I believe everyone can change and grow through application and experience. Having a growth mindset means relishing opportunities for self-improvement. You can ask yourself, ‘Okay, what do I currently view as challenges that may instead be viewed as an opportunity?’ In the context of marketing, I often hear writers say things like, ‘Well, I’m a writer, not a marketer’. ‘I don’t have time to write and promote my work’, or ‘It’s easier for author A because of XYZ’, or ‘This kind of opportunity, or strategy, won’t work for my particular situation’. 

Kimberley: Identifying this sort of negative internal dialogue can be tricky because you’ve been listening to it for so long. It’s gone from thought to belief, to fact. But in order to move forward, it’s vital that you throw out that negativity and take responsibility for your own actions and the present state of your writing career. So you’d focus on your strengths, but be open to marketing and promotion as just another way to stretch your creative muscles. 

Kimberley: Ways to start… you want to master your mindset by identifying your negative internal dialogue and cultivating an attitude that moves you closer to your dreams, instead of holding you back. 

Kimberley: So dig deeper to find your purpose or the reason for doing the work that you do and why it’s so important. What do you stand for? What do you really believe in? And when you boil it all down, what really matters to you both personally and professionally? And then you write down exactly why you wrote your book, what inspired you, who did you write it for? And why do you want people to read it? You want to be as clear as you can on that. 

Kimberley: And then you can outline your vision, your mission, your core values, so that it’s not only clear to you but crystal clear to others what you’re promising your readers and the world view that drives everything you do. Then once you clarify those goals, you can begin brainstorming the action steps you need to take to reach them.

Resource: Believe, Plan, Act: A Platform + Productivity Planner for Writers

Karen: That is such an amazingly good answer and I’m so, so happy you said that because it is so true and what you just said is so essential for authors to be able to succeed. We should listen to that a few times.

Kimberley: Yeah, and it is something that takes a little while to master and a lot of people tend to skip over this. I feel like a broken record, because I’m always talking about it, but it is something that, if you don’t nail that down, everything else is much harder later on.

Q2: What Are the Most Crucial Elements of Promoting Your Book?

Karen: Exactly, very, very true. Okay, and then what are a few of the crucial things to do to promote. The ones that you really should do?

Kimberley: Okay for this one, I’ll go into a bit of detail here, because just giving you a list of tactics isn’t all that helpful, and may or may not apply to everyone’s specific career objectives. So, when I consult with writers, I’m constantly reinforcing the idea that you have to lay a proper foundation first. Tips and tactics are the last things you incorporate because only after you’ve nailed down some basic business fundamentals can you successfully implement the tactics.

1 // Take Inventory

Kimberley: So, the first step, you would take inventory of your current assets—your skills, people, or any other resources—and determine what else you may need in your corner to accomplish your mission and the vision you set out for your writing career. 

2 // Do a Brain Dump

Kimberley: Then, you do a brain dump to catch and organize your goals and projects. So, determine your business, marketing, personal, creative, and financial goals in terms of priority for, say, the next 6 to 12 months. Then brainstorm the tasks, the resources and any key dates for each goal. What you’re trying to define here is exactly what requires your focus and what you can let go of, at least for now. 

3 // Create Your Marketing Summary + Business Plan

Kimberley: Once you’ve worked through all that, then you can create your marketing summary and business plan. This will help you to clarify your target audience, your author brand, your market research, your content strategy – including your promotions and launches. Determine a publishing schedule, your pricing models, and so on, all those things. And the more detailed and thorough you can be, the better. 

Resource: The Book Launch Toolkit

Kimberley: It’s very important to keep demographics in mind when you’re drafting a promotion plan because it’ll help you decide what strategies to use in order to reach your target audience. And another example would be defining your author brand because it’s difficult to articulate to others who you are and what you have to offer if you haven’t clearly defined it for yourself first, right?

Karen: Yeah.

4 // Create Your Author Website

Kimberley: The next thing would be creating a website that acts as your home base. So it’s organized with sections on your books or other creative products, reviews of those books, an author bio, teaching or workshop activities, and any other services that you would offer.

Kimberley: Some tactics and some of the tips that you’ll hear about, although they might be successful for some authors, they may not actually fit with your author brand and your core values.

Kimberley: But for almost every online business, building a targeted and invested email list of subscribers is hands down one of the most important things you can do to ensure the long term growth of your writing career. 

Karen: Yeah.

5 // Start Networking

Kimberley: And the last thing I’ll mention, as it’s critical for promotion, is networking. Being mindful that most authors, and I understand this too, being an introvert, you don’t really want to network. But we all know how important networking can be. It allows you to extend your influence and receive valuable feedback. You gain more exposure for your writing. 

Kimberley: Some ways you can put this to work is to build a street team or a launch team, they are sometimes called, or a VIP list. You could get your illustrator involved. So, perhaps they’ll share the book with their own network of professionals and friends and followers. You want to maybe partner with other authors, or consider other kinds of collaborations. 

Kimberley: Basically, be ready for any opportunity. Really just be prepared to represent yourself, your book, and your author business, in any situation. So that’s the list of the big primary points of how to promote and how each one builds on the other, and they all work together. You can’t really leave out any of those things. 

Q3: What Are Some Creative + Unusual Ways to Promote Your Book?

Karen: Okay, brilliant. I hope people were making notes there for sure. And then, can you give us a few creative, unusual ways that you can promote your book?

Email List + Opt-In Incentives

Kimberley: Okay, some unusual ones. So, an email—I guess it’s not that unusual, but it’s definitely one of those critical ones that you have to have in there—is an email signup and opt-in incentive. You can offer resources and downloads. Or really any other book-themed content can work very well for that. How you entice people to join your community is where your creativity comes into play.

Leverage Themes and Local Tie-ins

Kimberley: Another idea might be to leverage your book’s themes and local tie-ins, and reach out to places like—depending on your book—zoos, museums, airports, travel and adventure shops, maybe professional offices like doctors, dentists, or optometrist offices, that kind of thing. You can look for local educational or visitor centers, children’s farms, souvenir shops, or other venues that attract families with young children. As long as it has some connection with your book’s theme. And they may be open to stocking your book in the shop, or they might even let you run an event.  So that’s something to consider.

Take Pictures and Videos

Kimberley: And also remember to make sure to get pictures, and even videos, to post on your website and social media. Every time you’re doing these kinds of things, it’s always good to have. Either you take it or someone else is taking them. 

Add a Link to Additional Resources

Kimberley: Let’s see… another one would be, consider adding a link to resources and extra goodies for readers at the back of your book.

Create Box Sets, Bundles or Other Collaborations

Kimberley: You could consider creating box sets, depending on how many books you have, or consider collaborating with other authors. You could even include exclusive content in that box set.

Sell Themed Merchandise

Kimberley: You could sell themed merchandise on your website. So again, depending on the age group, depending on the book’s themes, all that kind of stuff, things like custom t-shirts, coffee mugs, candles, cell phone or eReader covers, jewelry, framed art… It’s really unlimited.

Kimberley: This is why knowing your target audience is so critical because you have to know what they’re going to find valuable and what’s just not going to be that interesting to them. But you can have these things available for sale on your website, or even at events that you attend. 

Create + Send Digital Gift Packs to Readers

Kimberley: What else? You can send, this one’s kind of fun I think, send a digital gift pack to your readers. Sending anything through the mail can get really expensive, so digital gift packs can be a great alternative. This builds on the idea of having a link in the back of your book and offering additional value or bonuses to your readers. Surprising people by giving more than they expected, and having it be things like exclusive content, short stories, or it could be some author commentary, artwork, in-depth character sketches, posters, whatever… Something that’s digital, that won’t cost anything extra once it’s developed but can add a lot of value and enjoyment for your reader.

Sponsor Local or Charitable Events

Kimberley: And even, I guess if you want to look into sponsoring some local events, or maybe support a charity that aligns with your mission and your brand values. If you know where you’re going with it, you can really make it a distinct and uniquely valuable experience for the reader.

Q4: How Can Authors Come Up With Their Own Marketing Ideas?

Karen: Awesome, nice, so many good ideas in there, and while it’s definitely a good idea to model what already works, how would you suggest that authors can come up with some of their own ideas? Whether it’s something kind of new, or whether it’s modeling, but it’s their own idea? How would you suggest they do that?

Kimberley: Well, the critical thing, and I can’t stress this enough, and so many people just gloss over it, because it seems like it’s not that important—but you have to do the work we talked about for mindset, vision, mission, and goals. You must have that nailed down, and what I’m talking about essentially is your author brand. You’ve got to develop your author brand, so you know exactly where you want to go with your career and why. What the relevance is, because it’s the heart of it, it’s the essence of it, that actually speaks to people. It’s the emotional part of it, that people will be drawn to. 

Kimberley: Once you have that figured out, it’s much easier to develop these promotional plans that fit with what you want, and will actually move you in the direction that you’re looking to go, as opposed to just applying a bunch of little things—some might work, some might not. It’s the spaghetti against the wall kind of idea. It might work, but you won’t really know when you do a scatter of things, which one is actually moving the needle, which one is actually moving you in the direction you want to go… 

Kimberley: Here’s an example, I’ve had people—when I do a consult—where they’ve built an email list of probably lovely people, but they’re not anything like the audience they were actually intending to build. It doesn’t help you.

Kimberley: Second, obviously, as you said, you’re going to be researching other successful authors and brands—but you don’t have to just stick to authors, this is the thing. It’s brands and businesses and organizations – as well as things like movie-makers, clothing and product designers, other influencers – what are they doing to develop deeper connections with their customers and grow loyalty?

Kimberley: Analyze what’s working and capturing attention, and develop marketing plans that align with your brand and objectives. So, you’re going to be examining, you know, the age, gender, and interests of your audience. You’re going to look at any trends, or any shared interests, or beliefs that you can include in your marketing. All those kinds of things, including your own creativity and instincts about your market. And again, it’s an overlap between your brand, your objectives, and then what interests and experiences the people you’re trying to reach are going to be looking for. 

Kimberley: So, you want to take the time to really understand what motivates and moves your audience, and then create a content and brand marketing plan accordingly. Stay confident and genuine in your message, and then share it with your audience in a relatable way.

Kimberley: All of this, though, is what makes your brand unique. The better you can get at this, the easier it is for people to determine why you, instead of somebody else. That’s the key.

Q5: How Can An Author Create a Promo Kit for Themselves?

Karen: Yeah, that makes a lot of sense and it’s true. Okay, and then how can an author create a promo kit for themselves?

Kimberley: Okay, so anytime you’re doing anything public, as I said before, to market your book, make sure you’re taking pictures or have someone do it for you. You can use tools like Canva.com and Picmonkey.com to create many of your marketing and your visual graphics.

Kimberley: You’re going to want to start with things like your author bio, and you can have a short, medium and long version of it. Some fun facts, maybe. You’re going to have a book synopsis, and you can do that in the third person. 

Kimberley: You can add a press release, a sample chapter, maybe. A good thing to have on there is interview questions, or a Q & A tip sheet.

Kimberley: So again, when you’re aware of branding, you take the time to move that conversation in the direction you’d like it to go. So, things like interview questions, Q & A’s, tips and stuff, are all good things to have available. It saves people time and it makes it more likely that they’ll offer to give you an interview. 

Karen: When you say ‘Q & A tips’, can you give an example?

Kimberley: Let’s say for example if it’s a children’s book, and there’s a theme in there that you think is specifically something that you want to focus on in this particular interview… let’s say it’s a podcast, and it’s for new moms… so you want to try and have questions or tips that would speak to that particular audience. If you’ve got more general ones in your media kit, you can also create ones more tailored to the interviewer’s audience but are still in line with your book content. 

Kimberley: So maybe it’s a book for bedtime for kids… you can provide the questions for the interviewer about your recommendations for sleep time routines. Or you can talk about the struggles that you’ve had with getting your own kids to bed on time. If your book is humorous, and your brand is also a bit cheeky, then questions that lead you to tell funny anecdotes will reinforce your author brand image. You want to make it relatable, and you want to direct it to this specific audience. 

Kimberley: So again, if you know your target audience well, even the interviewer when he’s looking at the questions, is going to be able to judge whether this is a good fit for his podcast and listeners, as well. It’s always better for everybody if you can make it a good fit for all sides, as opposed to forcing or coercing. You don’t want to push anything on anybody. You want it to be a good fit, otherwise, it’s a waste of time because the interest won’t be there.

Kimberley: So let’s see what else… your contact info. You’re definitely going to want that. Do not play hard to get. I find this too on author websites. It’s so hard sometimes to find contact information for authors and it’s like, ‘But you want to be reached’. You definitely want to be reached. So, full name, email address, links to any of your other professional online platforms, your social media. If applicable, you can include your agent’s name, or any other representatives, or anybody else who people might have to go through to get to you. 

Kimberley: You may want to add a sell sheet for retailers and book bloggers. What else? Book review excerpts. You don’t want to overdo it, you don’t need 50 of them, but you want to have those key reviews and testimonials, so people can know right away, ‘Okay, this book is for me, or this is what I’m going to like about it’. 

Kimberley: Photos, of course. So, you’d want high-resolution headshots. Obviously your book covers, so people can access and download them because you don’t really want anybody off scraping the internet for random pictures of you, or your books, or whatever other info might be lurking out there online about you… best to control that kind of thing, again, because of branding.

Kimberley: You don’t want to overdo it, because you want it to be succinct. You want people to get the information that they need without being overwhelmed with a bunch of material. You want to be careful about that as well.

Resource: Author Media Kit Templates

(Please note that this is an affiliate link. If you click through to one of my affiliate links and make a purchase, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a commission. Thank you for your support in this way.)

Q6: What is Your Top Tip to Help Children’s Book Authors – or Any Author – Succeed?

Karen: Brilliant, that is a comprehensive answer, which is excellent. And then what would be your top tip to help children’s book authors – or any author – succeed?

Kimberley: It would have to be, ‘Focus on developing your author brand.’ And when I say ‘author brand’, I’m not talking just logos and colors and fonts and stuff like that. To me, a brand is, as I mentioned, the heart of your business – why you’re doing what you do. The vision, the mission, the whole thing. So it’s not enough just to be good at what you write. You have to be able to easily and clearly communicate your vision, or the purpose behind your work—coherently voice it to others—the importance of it, so that they understand. This is to me why effective author branding is such a big and significant part of developing and growing your writer platform. 

Kimberley: If you don’t have that nailed down, everything becomes much more difficult. Knowing who you are, what you’re about, and how it relates to the people you’re trying to reach, that’s, I think, probably the biggest thing you can do for yourself and your writing career. 

Karen: You gave so many specifics and such a good overview of what’s needed, and I really appreciate—well—everything you said, but specifically, as well, as you were speaking about the mindset and how certain things come before anything else can really work. Thank you so much for joining me.

Kimberley: My pleasure.


Karen Ferreira is an illustrator, award-winning creative director and owner of Get Your Book Illustrations. She helps self-publishing authors get amazing, affordable illustrations. She has spent many hours learning about self-publishing and enjoys helping others succeed in this field.


The post Book Marketing 101: The Crucial Basics of Promoting Your Book appeared first on Your Writer Platform.

Was I on the ball?
You can thank me later.

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Promote Your Work

Authors! Figured this just might be worth a look see. What do you think?

https://www.personalbrandingblog.com/5-reasons-everyone-needs-a-personal-website/

Howdy-do Free Spirits, this has an outside chance to be worth a read.

Websites aren’t just for businesses, big or small. They can serve as your personal home on the internet, allowing you to make yourself visible. A personal website can become a funnel through which you express yourself, showcase your portfolio, or highlight your expertise regarding your hobbies.

More than that, people who are considering you for opportunities — speaking engagements, training, freelance gigs, consulting — will expect to see that you’ve established yourself as a go-to person in your field. Your style, tone, and approach can signal to others whether you’d be a good fit. A personal website can let you make your pitch in front of people you might never meet otherwise.

Here are five specific reasons you should consider building a personal website.

1. It offers a better employment edge.

If you’re a prospective employee hunting for a job, a site that showcases who you are can give you an edge, especially in a saturated market. It immediately sets you apart from other candidates and can serve as an extension of your résumé. 

Although your social handles do a pretty job in that regard, a website portrays you as being passionate about what you do. For the best result, make sure your domain name bears your name alongside a .com extension. If there’s anything you want a prospective employer to see, don’t hesitate to feature it on your website. If you can connect it to a certain industry or need, all the better.

2. It showcases your talent.

If you have an incredible ability — graphic design, photography, cooking — you can showcase your expertise using a personal website. It automatically becomes a portfolio that serves as a location where people can meet you doing what you do best. 

Done well, you might be able to get some mouth-watering gigs that would turn your financial situation around. New opportunities might even be developed that take multiple talents of yours into account — most employers and talent seekers love getting as much bang for their buck as they can without hiring multiple people.

3. It enables you to build valuable skills.

By running a website, you’ll find yourself learning lots of different things every day. Technology is fast-advancing, and your site will keep you learning and in front of a computer. Once you start managing your website, you’ll be able to say you can create, manage, and create content for a site. In today’s world, that’s a big deal that can fetch a good amount of money.

To really stretch your creative and technical muscles, add new sections or features to your site. By adding videos, a chat tool, or a selection of products — whether it’s desktop wallpapers or screenprint T-shirts — you’ll push your skills further. Tutorials on YouTube offer a great place to enhance your presence and the “skill” section of your résumé.

4. You’re able to build an online presence.

By maintaining a personal website, you control your overall image on the internet. You can determine what you share about yourself and even debunk some myths. 

An owned website is a powerful tool you can use to set yourself apart and build reach. Before people are interested in engaging with you, they often do some Googling. If you include relevant keywords, location information, and samples, your site will no doubt pop up as a result. In other words, you’ll have total control of your image.

5. It can become your Plan B.

As discussed, when you’re running a website, you’ll find yourself learning some incredible skills like web development. You might even become a recognized expert or coach by sharing your knowledge. 

There are numerous people today who aren’t actively practicing in their field but are blogging or writing about it via their website. Through this medium, they can make money through Google AdSense, affiliate marketing, or even eBooks. A lot of individuals have been able to make a living through their website without currently having a direct role in an industry they’re well-versed in.

The advantages of having a personal website are enormous. The gains outweigh the costs, and it’s something you’ll never regret building. All you have to do is choose a reliable web host, register your domain, install WordPress, and share your expertise with the world.

 

The post 5 Reasons Everyone Needs a Personal Website appeared first on Personal Branding Blog – Stand Out In Your Career.

Was I on the ball?
Thank me later.

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Non Fiction

Readers! Considered this just could justify a look see. Ideas?

Greetings Freelancers, this could potentially be worth a read.

Review by Ariel M. Goldenthal

­­­cvoer of faculty brat - school building with ivyDominic Bucca’s Faculty Brat: A Memoir of Abuse is the winner of the 2019 Iowa Prize for Literary Nonfiction (University of Iowa Press, 2020). The memoir is broken into three sections, each carrying the title of a different last name that Bucca took in his journey for justice. Rather than a simple observer, Bucca asks the reader to immerse themselves in each of these three stages of his life.

In Faculty Brat, Dominic Bucca recounts thirty years of life shaped by the sexual abuse that he suffered at the hands of his stepfather. The sexual abuse is compounded by years of verbal abuse that continue even after Bucca moves to live with his biological father’s family. Slowly, the cracks from the abuse turn to breaks in his family and the legal system, revealed when he finally decides to tell his mother and sisters the truth. And long after the abuse itself ends, the dissociation remains, evident in Bucca’s decision to distance himself from his past by referring to himself as “the boy.”

The strength of this work is Bucca’s specificity—an all-too-common tale of abuse shaped into a unique and courageous memoir. The specificity reaches from the memoir’s structure to its language and stylistic choices. Each section of Faculty Brat begins with an aptly titled, “Orientation,” that tells the reader which role they will be playing for those pages. The title of “Orientation” plays on themes of college welcome weeks, but instead sets the reader in the specific context of the memoir: not only a preparatory school, but one of the most prestigious preparatory schools in the nation; not only a child, but the child of a teacher at the school—a faculty brat.

The first “Orientation” chapter tells the reader to “imagine you are the single mother of a toddler,” and gives us just enough detail to inhabit that woman’s life with her young son before the turn. The chapter ends with, “Now, remember your boy.” The suddenness of the switch allows the reader to sink into the role of the mother just long enough to forget, as she seems to do at times, about that son.

Throughout Faculty Brat, Bucca employs turns in the plot, and in the language itself, to remind the reader that nothing is ever what it seems. The “you” of the first chapter shifts from the mother to a powerless observer, and finally to the author himself; mirroring the separation and emotional transformation that Bucca endured.

Bucca balances the devastating darkness of his story with emotionally open language that draws the reader into his world and holds them there, even in the deepest moments of despair.

“You’ve finally found at least some of that unnamable strength, the opposite of a lifetime of silence, finally managed to access your anger, finally found the proper outlet for Gozer, that frighteningly strong, self-righteous part of yourself, the subversive keeper of all your rage.”

In a memoir of growth and the struggle for power and control, it is the hurt and angry part of Bucca that finally succeeds in sharing the truth of his stepfather’s abuse. Faculty Brat: A Memoir of Abuse is more than what the title suggests: It is a story of strength and quiet hope, expertly drawn and beautifully told.

 

Ariel M. Goldenthal is an assistant professor of English at George Mason University, where she also received her MFA in fiction. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Grace in Darkness; An Anthology of D.C. Women Writers, Fiction Southeast, and Flash Fiction Magazine, and has received an Honorable Mention from Glimmer Train.

Was I right?
Was I wrong?

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Screenwriting

Scribes! Kind of figured that this could warrant a gander. Any opinions?

https://screenrant.com/parks-recreation-amy-poehler-rewatch-story-video/

Hi Free Spirits, this might really be worthless.

Parks and Recreation star Amy Poehler admits she doesn’t remember the plot of the classic sitcom. Though it did indeed later become considered one of the great comedy shows of of the 21st Century, the series fondly known as Parks and Rec certainly didn’t get off to a very momentous start after it debuted in 2009. But following some tweaking of characters and tone, the show took off creatively in season 2 and soon established itself as a legendary comedy.

Set in the fictional town of Pawnee, Indiana, Parks and Rec offered up a unique combination of sharp satire and warm-hearted character comedy as it depicted a group of oddball people toiling away in local government, led by the ever optimistic Parks Department deputy director Leslie Knope (Poehler). In addition to Poehler, the show’s quirky cast featured a group of performers who have all become household names, including Nick Offerman, Aubrey Plaza, Chris Pratt and Aziz Ansari. Despite that great cast and loads of critical acclaim, the show never quite took off as a ratings hit and finally saw its run come to an end in 2015.

Related: Parks & Rec: The Reasonabilists Cult Explained (& What They Really Want)

Poehler and company still talk about the potential of a Parks and Rec revival even five years after it aired its last original episode, but if that revival ever does happen, it seems Poehler will need a refresher on her character and the other goings-on from the show’s 7-season run. As she explained during a quarantine edition of Late Night With Seth Meyers, she has been re-watching the sitcom with her kids but is unable to answer their questions about what happens next because she doesn’t remember:

“I don’t just say this because I am on it, it’s such a good show to watch right now cause it makes you feel good and it’s about a bunch of people working together to solve problems. But it’s really funny because my kids are always like, ‘Mom what happens?’ and I’m like ‘I don’t know.’ I don’t remember. I don’t remember any of it. It’s one long blur. I mean, I remember shooting the scenes and how I felt when I was shooting the scenes, but the actual story of episode to episode I couldn’t even tell you, so it’s pretty fun to watch again.”

Of course, being a sitcom, Parks and Rec doesn’t necessarily rely on continuing story arcs week-to-week, so the question of what happens next isn’t quite as pressing as it would be on a drama with an on-going storyline like Breaking Bad. Indeed, the comedy on Parks and Rec grew more out of character than story as the show’s collection of eccentric small town weirdos developed over the years into an interesting ensemble played by a group of comedically gifted actors whose rapport became razor sharp.

Sadly, in the current era of TV with shortened seasons and more emphasis on over-arching narratives, sitcoms like Parks and Recreation that truly adhere to the classic “situation comedy” formula are becoming rarer and rarer. Perhaps that’s part of the reason why shows like Parks and Rec, The Office, Seinfeld and Friends maintain such loyal followings years after running out of original episodes. Though shows with on-going narratives can definitely be rewarding, there’s also something nice about a series you can dive into at any point and enjoy without much context. If new shows aren’t being made that satisfy people’s craving for quick jolts of commitment-free comedy, then folks will keep returning to the old ones.

More: Parks And Rec: Why April & Chris Aren’t Real Friends

Source: Late Night With Seth Meyers

Was I on the money?
Maybe it was just me.

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Freelance Work

Wordsmiths! Figured that this just might qualify for a look see. Comment if you like.

https://millo.co/digital-marketing-jobs

Yo Avid Readers, this just might be time killing.

As more and more people get online on a daily basis, the way people are advertised to shifts along with the move. In 2005, people logged around 10 hours online per week week.

In 2014, that number jumped to over 20 hours, with 16-24 year olds spending the most time online, around 27 hours. Today, the number continues to grow as a Pew Research study notes that 81% of Americans spend at least some time online on a daily basis. In short, people are spending rather a lot of time online.

The more time spent online, the more things there are to do from reading the news, scanning social media and shopping. In 2016, 1.6 billion shopped online for goods and services, but that number is expected to reach 2.14 by 2021 according to forecasted trends. As a response, the marketing world has altered its course and begun to focus where the consumers are: online.

Today, brands slip in on your social media feeds, marketing is directed at you, through your device, often based off of your history or likes. It’s an elegant system if you’re a company, and it’s perfectly personalised if you’re a consumer.

All of this is of course very good news if you’re already in a digital marketing job or considering entering the digital marketing jobs market – it’s a market that is only going to continue to grow.

What is digital marketing?

Even if you’re involved in digital marketing you might not realise quite how broad the industry has become. So we’ll take a quick look through what digital marketing is today and how influential it is on consumers.

Digital marketing is simply any sort of marketing on electronic devices. Since most people are spending time online, it’s marketing catered to each individual.

The history of digital marketing

This aspect of marketing includes more than marketing on Facebook or personal websites, digital marketing has been around for over 100 years, begun when the Guglielmo Marconi invented the radio.

He sold show tickets to a Met opera after broadcasting it through the radio, but the technical definition of what he did wouldn’t exist until the 1990s. In the 1970s, Ray Tomlin sent an email, and that technology would forever alter marketing and the consumer. Officially, digital marketing began in 1990 when FTP sites created the Archie Search Engine as an index.

As consumers have changed, so have digital marketing methods. Massive changes were made in the 2000s and 2010s as the internet gained more daily users and as smartphones became prevalent. Opportunities for advertising now exist in people’s hands.

But, with the rise of personal devices came issues.

The switch to online shopping caught many companies off guard. As late as 2000, many UK retails neglected to even register their domain names. Marketing automation helped marketers, but moved slowly integrating adaptability to personal devices.

Today, there are concerns about customer privacy and data protection. As the world of digital marketing evolves, so will the issues being faced and how they are handled.

Digital marketing campaigns made up of search engine optimisation (SEO), content marketing, influencer marketing, e-commerce marketing, and more require experts in these fields to best cater to consumers.

While many of these digital marketing jobs require a technical ability, they all still require many traditional job skills such as teamwork, personal modiviation, and excellent verbal and written skills. Today digital marketing is as much an art form as it is a science.

Of course, some of the newer jobs, such as virtual reality developer, will require an intensely high tech background that comes from years of learning. Just as every person has a unique skill set, so does every job in digital marketing, and there is probably a place for you within this field that fits your qualifications.

Most popular digital marketing jobs right now

Social Media Marketer

With the influx of social media comes more and more jobs. As a social media marketer, your job is to help companies interact with consumers across the wide array of social media platforms. You’ll give input on social media campaigns designed to attract new customers, and retain current customers with.your knowledge of analytics and consumers.

Bot Developer

Today fewer people are willing to make a phone call for help and instead head to a company’s website for assistance. As a bot developer, you’ll be overseeing the creation and interaction of a chatbot with customers. Your chatbot will converse and hopefully sell products to customers or nudge customers towards a buying decision, making your contribution invaluable.

Digital Marketing Manager and Director

Overseeing and implementing digital campaigns is the job of digital marketing managers and directors. Tasks include organizing and managing a budget, planning out the project, setting milestones, and more.

To be a digital marketing manager and director, you must have stellar communication and organization skills, as well as staying firm with decisions and excellent delegation skills. Typically, this job requires a considerable amount of experience, but the payoff is excellent.

Content Manager and Strategist

A content manager and strategist can often work on developing content for a variety of marketing needs. They will have a solid knowledge of creating keyword orientated content, in addition to organizing and managing it.

They will know how to write well, channeling a wide variety of information into concise and informative content that will reach people effectively.

Email Marketing Specialist

If your writing is stellar, and you have a background in marketing, copywriting, or editing, this highly specialized job field may be for you. An email marketing specialist is part of a specific area of content development and marketing, and will probably be in charge of launches, campaigns, or PR activities.

As email is a strong and effective way to reach consumers, this job requires a persuasive method of writing. Not just any person can be an email marketing specialist, you must be able to showcase your excellent writing and editing skills and be prepared to work quickly and efficiently.

Data Analyst

A data analyst organizes and examines data, whilst preparing it for a company to interpret and apply it to their own digital marketing campaigns. As a data analyst, you must have a technological and computer science background. You understand programming, data optimization, and machine learning.

User Experience Designer (UX Designer)

A user experience designer or UX designer is involved throughout the design and development phases of a websites creation. Bigger websites may even have a UX team to ensure ongoing user experience improvements on their website properties.

Many tend to shift towards the technical or the design aspect of creating, but they must understand the website from a marketing aspect.

Additionally, they must understand their audience, as well as the product or service they are promoting via the website. A UX designer often takes on the lead roles in project management, and caters to a website usability throughout the process.

SEO and SEM Specialist

SEO (search engine optimization) and SEM (search engine marketing) specialists are vital to a digital marketing campaign. Their knowledge is made up of both digital and technical aspects. As search engine algorithms fluctuate, so do businesses, and a person with SEO and SEM experience cannot lag behind in this speciality.

While businesses, particularly ones in e-commerce, will always need someone in SEO/SEM to maintain high ROI, this job requires a considerable amount of experience and knowledge. The payoff is fantastic though, and SEO/SEM jobs command a high price.

Internet of Things Marketing Specialist

With the rise of the Internet of Things (IoT) comes more and more jobs. An IoT specialist will understand and corral data collected from computing devices and be able to create a campaign from those devices to users of each device.

As personal computing devices grow, so will the needs and requirements of IoT specialists.

Virtual Reality Developer

This is definitely a highly technical role, but the paycheck should equal the technical requirements necessary for this gig. It is both new and highly specialized, but you must have strong creative skills.

A background in visuals, technology, or special effects would be helpful, as well as a very strong creative vision with an eye to the future. Many predict that virtual reality is the future, so you’ll be on the cutting edge of technology.

Where to look for digital marketing jobs online

The best resource for digital marketing jobs would be found on the internet itself. Here are some of the best ones sites out there, from smaller websites, to the largest.

FlexJobs

FlexJobs offers a variety of different job options in either full or part-time capacities. Their blog gives helpful advice, but more importantly, their research companies section allows you to research and ensure that a particular company and you would be a great fit. For professional, flexible jobs, FlexJobs is the site for you.

MarketingHire

Use Marketing Hire for specific searches in the marketing field. While the website feels dated, they have the info available in a wide variety of sources from podcasts to summer internships. Their free videos and webinars are helpful as well. They state that they display jobs from HP, Microsoft, and Nike and more, as well as smaller firms, making them an excellent resource for reliable digital marketing jobs.

Digital Agency Network

Digital Agency Network features jobs from all over the world, from Charlotte, NC to Vancouver, Canada. Their mission is “… to support the digital marketing industry and enhance the intelligence, expertise, reach and effectiveness of digital agencies, companies, and individual marketers through online platforms, consultancy, events and training.” Additionally, the ability to showcase work through DAN gives you the opportunity to display your talent, depending on your field.

Glassdoor

digital marketing jobs - glassdoor

Glassdoor is a behemoth in the job searching industry, and many employers use this site. While the jobs posted here will always have a high concentration of competitiveness, it’s a valuable resource to use. Additionally, you can search for jobs worldwide and in specific fields, so it offers more options than some of the smaller, specialized sites. Most importantly, Glassdoor allows you to assess your salary, making it an invaluable resource as you determine what to charge for your services.

SolidGigs

digital marketing jobs - solidgigs

Just the task of looking for digital marketing jobs is a full-time job in itself. Looking to save time and just get to the best jobs? Enter: SolidGigs.

For a mere $2 to try it out, SolidGigs scours the internet for the best jobs online and sends them directly to your email. It leaves you to just apply and do what you love (not searching for jobs). Not only that, they have a library full of resources to help you become a better freelancer.

The Drum

digital marketing jobs - the drum

If you’re looking for a wide variety of information on digital marketing, the Drum is the website for you. They have an equally wide array of job postings from design to PR. Their email newsletter offers useful information about the market, while their comprehensive social media helps you stay connected and informed. This is a worldwide job posting site.

Mashable

digital marketing jobs - mashable

Surprisingly, Mashable has a thriving jobs board that allows you to select your job title, location, and then organizes jobs by employers. It doesn’t display nearly as many helpful options about perfecting your CV or your specific job market, but it does have jobs available in marketing/PR. As a big name in digital talent, Mashable offers a unique way to find your perfect job.

Creativepool

If you’re looking for worldwide jobs, Creativepool is an excellent resource. They also cater towards freelancers and contract roles, but permanent roles are also available. Their magazine offers a wide variety of career advice, making this site and excellent and unique resource for job hunting.

Fiverr

Fiverr isn’t technically a job board, but it’s a great way to stay connected with others in the digital world. If you’re a freelancer, signing up will help you find short term projects, with a starting fee at $5. With a broad user base, and guaranteed payment, Fiverr opens up opportunities for the short term to give you experience and possibly help you transition into a full time job.

Facebook

digital marketing jobs - facebook jobs

Utilizing the jobs on Facebook feature may display possible jobs in the digital marketing sphere. While this is a relatively new feature, it might prove helpful for people in the tech world. The advantage is that it is connected to your social media already, making it simple to upload your CV and connect with others.

Indeed

Lastly, no comprehensive list of job sites would be complete without including Indeed. As easily one of the largest and most recognized names in the job search world, Indeed offers a wide variety of job postings across the world. Their job resources are helpful and it’s very easy to upload your CV and apply to an assortment of jobs.

Other ways to find digital marketing jobs

By staying up to date on LinkedIn and following companies relevant to your interests, you will stay abreast of changes and possibly find yourself ahead of the competition for a job.

Even Twitter can be beneficial, as long as you’re active on it and not derogatory or demeaning. Utilizing the background information that is available on social media may also help you better understand certain companies and hopefully help you ace that interview.

If you use social media in applying for jobs, remember to keep your social media clean and try to paint yourself in a positive light. Using social media to attack others, act violently or erratically, or use hate speech is not just unkind, but will probably keep you from getting a job in the digital field.

More often employers today use social media as a way of checking on possible employees to make sure they measure up. Think of your social media as an extension of your CV.

Do you really want your future employers to see your drunken comments and pictures from your holiday in Cancun? Probably not. So use this time to clean up your accounts.

Tips on landing digital marketing jobs

So, you have your dream job in mind, you have resources for finding your job, now what?

Do your research on the companies you’re applying for to make sure you’re going to be a good fit and that you and the company are aligned in values and culture. Before you send in your cover letter and CV, make sure they’re unique and will stand out from the crowd.

Have a friend proofread your documents to make sure you use proper grammar and spelling. Stay honest and tell the truth. Be positive, but don’t add in falsehoods to your CV. And lastly, check in, but don’t stalk. Prove yourself as a go-getter, but if the job is a bust, move on to another company.

Best of luck on your digital marketing journey!

Armed with your newfound knowledge and skills in the digital marketing, you should be set to land yourself a job in digital marketing. While you’re waiting for your job, keep practicing your skills and stay relevant online to keep yourself qualified for your new digital marketing job.

The post Digital Marketing Jobs: Choosing Your Path + How to Find Your Next Gig appeared first on Millo.co.

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Freelancers! Kind of thought this could probably justify a value post. Opinions?

https://blog.alexa.com/free-website-analytics-alexa-rank/

Hi Persons of Letters, this could potentially be readable.

5 minute read

Every marketer has a few free website analytics that they can’t do without. For some, that includes Alexa Rank.

At Alexa, we strive to be a global pioneer in the world of analytical insight. Since our founding in 1996, we’ve focused on delivering the most meaningful analytics tools for our customers, and now offer a suite of website analytics tools for marketers.

But today we’ll talk about the original Alexa Rank and how marketers both at agencies and on in-house teams continue to rely on Alexa.com’s still-free website analytics metrics.

What Is Alexa Rank?

Alexa Rank is a public measure of a website’s popularity. Every day, Alexa ranks millions of websites according to traffic data from the previous three months. The resulting Alexa Rank metric shows how a website compares to others. The lower the number, the more popular a site is. The website with an Alexa Rank of 1 receives the most traffic and engagement of all sites in our panel.


The Alexa Rank metric shows how a website compares to others. The lower the number, the more popular a site is.
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Because Alexa Rank is a comparative measure, it’s useful for benchmarking and competitive analysis. You can also find similar sites that share an audience to uncover new and unknown competitors.

Read more: What is Alexa Rank?

How We Calculate Alexa Rank

Two major inputs affect a website’s Alexa Rank: unique visitors and page views. Our algorithms calculate Alexa Rank by looking at traffic data from Alexa’s global sample of millions of Internet users over the previous rolling three-month period.

Some sites’ traffic is estimated based on a sample of global web traffic. Data for sites who choose to certify their rank are based on the direct measurement of actual site traffic. Additionally, we employ data normalization to correct for biases that may occur in our data.

There is a lot of misunderstanding about how Alexa Rank works. Find out the Top 6 Myths about the Alexa Traffic Rank, including misinformation about how to manipulate it. You can also learn more about how we determine Alexa Rank and see the difference between estimated and certified Alexa Rank data.

5 Ways Marketers Use Alexa Rank

Alexa Rank is only one metric, but it’s a useful way to check the performance of a website when you don’t have access to its website analytics. It also serves as a reliable measure that others can look to for evidence of value, because anyone can access it via Alexa’s free website analytics tool.

Here are five ways that agencies and in-house marketers use Alexa Rank today.

1. Gauge the value of a website relative to its competitors

Alexa Rank is a powerful measure to show where a website stands relative to its competitors.

This can be useful for agencies that are researching new clients. Let’s say you get a new client in the cloud computing industry. Using our free website analytics tool, you can see that your new client’s website has an Alexa Rank of 617,600. When you research the Alexa Rank of competing sites, it becomes apparent that your client has a ways to go to overtake competing sites.

Website

Alexa Rank

salesforceben.com

70,348

garysmithpartnership.com

253,614

idealistconsulting.com

509,386

galvintech.com (your new client)

617,600

nuvemconsulting.com

889,668

One bonus of our free analytics tool is that it will suggest competing sites for you to look at. You might even discover competitors that you didn’t know existed.

free website analytics to find competitors

Periodically checking Alexa Rank for your own site can be useful for marketing teams who want to stay on top of the competitive landscape, too.

2. See if a site’s traffic movements are normal

When your site traffic takes a dip, it’s natural to wonder how competing sites are faring. If you notice their Alexa Rank is also dropping, it may be an industry trend. Or if one or more sites are surging ahead in its Alexa Rank, it could be that your site is losing traffic to a competitor.

Once you have the basic Alexa Rank measure, you can dig deeper into what’s happening. Scan through our free website analytics to see information on backlinks, traffic sources, keyword performance, and more for each site.

Free analytics - traffic sources

You get even more capabilities in our Advanced Plan, which you can try free for 14 days.

3. Validate claims made by web vendors

Websites and vendors that want to do business with you will make compelling claims in their favor. You can use Alexa Rank to independently verify their performance. Here are a few scenarios when that will come in handy.

  • Considering an SEO provider? Check the websites of clients featured in their case studies to see how those sites really do.
  • Wondering whether it’s worthwhile to advertise on a website or take on a site as an affiliate partner? Check their Alexa Rank to verify their claims of audience popularity.
  • Evaluating influencers? You can check their site’s Alexa Rank to qualify them for your influencer program.
  • Thinking about purchasing a website? Make sure to check its Alexa Rank as part of your evaluation.

The impartial measure of Alexa Rank can help you evaluate all sorts of new opportunities.

4. Evaluate opportunities for guest posting and outreach marketing

Thinking about how to get more traffic via guest posting or outreach marketing? Check out a website’s Alexa rank before investing effort into a relationship. It will give you a quick measure of value in terms of audience exposure. You can do this easily using the Alexa Rank toolbar.

Alexa toolbar gives free website analytics data

For fast access to our free web analytics, download the Alexa toolbar, and install it in your browser. Then you can see instantly the following information for websites you visit:

  • Alexa Rank
  • Sites that are similar to the site you’re on
  • Wayback Machine (how the site looked in the past)
  • Search queries driving traffic to the site
  • Site speed

This data will not only help you evaluate sites for guest posting and backlink relationships but also help you find new ones.

5. Convey the value of your own site

As a well-known branded web metric, Alexa Rank means something to people outside of specialized industries like SEO, unlike other free website analytics that are less established. Showing a strong rank for your site gives people peace of mind that your site is worth their attention.

So if you work in an industry where trust plays a big role, consider using Alexa Rank to convey the value of your site. You can include it in your marketing materials as a metric that others can verify. If you certify your site, you can also display metrics about your site publicly.

How to Check Alexa Rank Using Our Free Website Analytics Tool

Anyone can view the Alexa Rank of any website by entering it into Alexa’s free traffic tool, here. You’ll see the Alexa Rank of a website alongside other website traffic statistics.

Use free analytics to see Alexa Rank

Because Alexa’s free website analytics tool shows much more information than just the Alexa Rank, you will need to look around a bit. It appears in the Traffic Metrics section.

Site overview analytics show Alexa Rank

What Is a Good Alexa Rank?

What is a good Alexa ranking for your site? It depends. Since the rank is a relative measure, you will want to check your competitors’ Alexa Rank data and then see where you stand. Generally, many people consider a ranking of 1 million or lower to be good.

The popular media pitching site HARO requires that sites have an Alexa Rank of 1 million or less. Laura Spaventa of Cision, the parent company of HARO, said the site had initially specified an Alexa Rank of 5 million but moved it up to 2 million, and eventually 1 million, in response to customer requests. “Our sources are busy and if they are going to take the time to pitch themselves or a client for a story, they want to know the publication is worth the effort,” Spaventa said.

It’s worth noting that sites with an Alexa Rank over 100,000 will have a larger margin of error in their estimated rank than more popular sites. That is because we will naturally have less data to base our estimates on for sites that fewer people visit.

If you want to improve your Alexa Rank, get the facts in A Guide to Improving Your Alexa Rank.

Ready for More Intel? Try Alexa’s (Newer) Web Analytics Tools

Alexa Rank is a single metric that provides a quick summary of a site’s performance relative to all other sites on the web. But, of course, any marketer worth their salt needs rich analytics that let them dig into the story behind the numbers.

With our strong background in web data, we’ve been able to create the ultimate suite of web analytics tools for agencies and marketers. Extending far beyond Alexa Rank, we also offer deep analytics for competitive research, SEO analysis, audience analysis, and content marketing. Take a look today — try our Advanced Plan free for 14 days.

The post Free Website Analytics — How Marketers Use Alexa Rank Today appeared first on Alexa Blog.

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