I love it when I get an email announcing that a review of one of my books has been posted. This week, so far, it has happened twice!
Mary Lewis at Virtual Wordsmith wrote a great review beneath the largest image I’ve ever seen of my book, The Right Way to Write, Publish and Sell Your Book. See this phenomenon and read the super review at http://virtualwordsmith.blogstop.com
She also posts my interview with her at http://blogstopbooktours.wordpress.com/blog
Thank you, Mary.
Dawn Copeman, the new newsletter editor for Moira Allen’s Writing-World.com and editor of the Newbie-Writers Newsletter, sent me a copy of her review of The Right Way to Write, Publish and Sell Your Book. It’s spectacular. She refers to my book in the first sentence as “dynamite!†Her great review will be posted at her website soon. I’ll let you know when it’s up. It already went out in the Newbie Writer Newsletter—in case any of you receive it. You might want to check out Dawn’s site for newbies at http://www.newbie-writers.com
As I understand it, it’s a work in progress, so visit often. Thank you, Dawn, for all that you do at Writing-World and with your Newbie Writers.
Interview Techniques
Have you ever been interviewed on behalf of your book? Do you know what you would say? How would you respond to sensitive questions? What do you want others to know about you and your project? What message do you want to leave with readers?
Here are my tips for participating in an interview:
First, how do you get an interview? Sometimes people will seek you out, but most often, especially when your book is new, you must be proactive in locating interview opportunities.
• Search out sites, newsletters and magazines that post/publish interviews with authors and other professionals in your topic/genre. Google Alerts can help you with this task as this service notifies you when there’s something new on the web related to your topic/genre. http://www.google.com/alerts
For a face-to-face interview
• Before seeking out interview opportunities, hone your communication skills. I recommend joining a local Toastmasters Club. http://www.toastmasters.org for one near you.
• Come prepared to be photographed or bring your professional photo with you.
• Choose your words carefully, some interviewers actually include every “um†and “er†you utter. Truly, it happened to me once. And believe me, this does not make for a very good presentation.
• Break those bad habits such as the overuse of words and phrases—“clearly,†“apparently,†“you know†and so forth.
• Learn to think on your feet. This is something you can practice with friends.
• Be real. Speak from your knowledge base, but also from your heart.
• Keep your audience in mind throughout the interview.
• What if you are asked a sensitive question—something you’d rather not answer? Fake it—just use that question as a segue into an area you are comfortable talking about. For example, you’re asked, “Your book focuses on childhood abuse, is this something that you experienced firsthand?†If your parents are still alive and you aren’t ready to reveal your personal story, simply say, “Millions of children each year suffer abuse at the hands of people they trust. It’s more common than you think.†And then go into one of the stories from your book, perhaps, or share a story from your files as a social worker.
Email interviews are popular these days. The interviewer will send you a list of questions (hopefully, after studying a little about you) and you can respond at your leisure. The beauty of the email interview is that you can change your mind in midstream of an interview question and no one is the wiser. For an email interview:
• Respond in a timely manner. I can’t tell you how many people cheat themselves out of interview opportunities for the SPAWN Market Update because they don’t respond promptly. Soon they forget the request and/or just never get around to it. If you put off responding to interview questions until you finally forget about the opportunity, you are the one who loses.
• Respond to the questions when you are fresh and then go back over your responses after letting them sit for a while.
• Think about your audience while responding. Are they mostly professionals related to your topic or newbies? Are they involved in your topic daily or on occasion? Do most of them seek a career in this field or are they just curious about it? Find out who your audience is and speak to them.
• When you’re asked to describe your typical day, this generally means with regard to your topic. If you’re a fitness expert, for example, with a book on fitness, your audience is interested in how you stay fit. Maybe yours is novel or a children’s book and your audience is made up mostly of new writers of novels or children’s books, they probably want to know how you schedule your day to include time for writing. They want to know how you write amidst chaos or clutter and what techniques you use throughout your day for inspiration.
• When you’re asked what led to you writing this book, your audience probably wants to be able to relate to your story. They want to be able to say, “If he came from an uneducated family and succeeded as a writer, I can, too.†Or “If she can write a book while working fulltime and raising a family, why can’t I?â€
• Always give more than you’re asked for. Give more than a one sentence answer to the question, “What would you advise others who would like to earn an advanced degree (or learn to skydive or become fit)?†The more you offer, the more apt the reader is to purchase your book.
Being interviewed is an interesting process. I always learn something about myself: my habits, my inspirations, my motivation, when I respond to interview questions.
If you need more information about any aspect of writing, finding a publisher for and/or marketing your book, please read this multiple 5-star rated book which, as you can see, is quite well-received by my peers: The Right Way to Write, Publish and Sell Your Book. http://www.matilijapress.com/rightway.html