Good Seeds… overcoming the insidious myth of shortcuts and magic bullets
by Damon Suede
(A-game Advice was a monthly column offering practical
tips for winning promo that fits your personal style, strategy,
and measure of success.
Raise your hand if you’ve ever wondered
if there’s a secret code, E-Z solution, or quick fix for the
challenges you face as a professional romance writer. Yeah, ditto.
Since we are each the protagonist of our own story, we assume that
rules and work and steps are for all the “other” less-fortunate
suckers playing secondary roles as we ascend swiftly to stardom.
You see this kind of E-Z thinking a lot
in get-rich-quick writing guides: the hidden romance formula, the
surefire success kit, or the miracle bestseller system which can
turn you into the lovechild of J.K. Rowling and Johanna Lindsay.. In
this conjob, hard work is for the diligent rubes, but you are just
so darn special your book is brilliant from the get-go and your name
will be picked out in starlight for eternity. Anyone can be a
bestseller. Everyone is a genius. All books are great. Sucker bait,
all of it.
My family was in the jewelry business,
and my mom always said, “leave
fool’s gold for fools.” At the root of every swindle, grift, or
scam in the world lie ferocious laziness and greed… the craven
certainty that you can have something for nothing and that cutting
corners will get you somewhere faster. What’s bizarre is, all our
experience, evidence, and history proves how wrongheaded that
approach is. In a business as insular as romance publishing, burning
bridges and trodding upon your colleagues will do you few favors.
We all do it, of course…nursing the
poisonous belief that somehow WE are special, WE can cut in line, WE
know better than everyone else, WE deserve a break. If only
lightning would strike, anyone could be a household name, when the
truth is, lightning often strikes when we’re unprepared and
incapable of taking any kind of advantage.
As New Yorkers always say, “It takes ten
years to become an overnight success.”
My friends in showbiz used to laugh at
shows like American Idol
and X-Factor because of
the way they misrepresent auditions. A group of talentless punters
line up begging for judges to “make” them a star makes exactly NO
sense. American Idol didn’t make Carrie Underwood or Kelly Clarkson
stars; those ladies were going to be stars; they were talented and
driven and professional and they both exploited American Idol, which
exploited them right back. Mutual benefit, mutual exploitation.
Anyone who achieves real stardom has invested in the process in ways
few will ever understand.
What we want is a free ride, a fast
forward for our careers, a way to skip all the unfun, unlovable,
uninspiring things that make art into a career. We want the garden,
but we want to skip the weeds and seeds.
Success,
real success, comes from years of backbreaking, mindboggling,
heart-stopping labor through crushing choices and inadvertent
calamities. Even lucky people must be capable of taking advantage of
good fortune. As Mark Twain put it, “Luck is opportunity plus
preparation.” You have goals, hopefully specific, relevant, and
achievable goals that drive your professional decisions, but what
have you done today to advance them?
No one grows an oak tree in an afternoon.
Of course, there’s no
one way to be a success.
Each of us walks a different path, with skills, books, histories,
and talents that are (at best) adjacent to our peers’. Authors spend
their lives gearing up for a journey headed for the horizon. When we
take classes, read critics, network with colleagues, volunteer for
chapters, we’re laying bricks in a road we’ll be able to walk when
the way opens before us.
How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a
time.
While slow, steady accretion may not
sound sexy, every stable career grows from a base of time-tested
relationships and authentic experience. You develop your craft and
your voice, one book, one sentence, one word at a time. All promo,
even the flashy stuff, works best with a clear context,
extraordinary value, and an emotional experience that people can
rely on. You have to plant the seeds wherever you find fertile
ground.
That’s simply logical: publishers want to
work with positive professionals who understand the business and
their role in it. Agents wants to rep creative folks who can hit
targets and expand their audience. Fans return to authors who can
deliver the feelings they expect in ways that exceed expectation.
Marketing maven
Seth Godin says “The
best time to start promoting your book is three years before it
comes out.” Great advice! What will you need to promote the
books you’ll be writing in three years? How can you lay those tracks
now? What skills,
resources and allies should you be gathering so that they’re on hand
when the time comes, because it
will come.
Think of it another way, what assets and
access do you wish you had available right now, and when could you
have gotten those sorted?
I’m as impatient as anyone you’ve ever
met. Most of the reason I plan promo s assiduously is because my
impatience goes thermonuclear when I get in my own way with
sloppiness or inattention. When I’m promoting I’m not thinking, how
will this sell th book I just finished, I’m thinking, how will these
relationships, this skillset, that meeting, those contracts lay a
foundation that will pay dividends in 36 months.
Baby steps, baby steps.
Almost every author I talk with worries
that promo work drains and derails them, and yet we all know how
essential it is in a world in which 75,000 books are published every
year and 58% of the population will never read another book after
finishing school. The thing is, if you take the promo is small,
steady steps not only will the payoff be greater, it’s less likely
to exhaust or depress you. One rung at a time may bnot sound
glamorous, but it’s your best shot at the next level.
When I first moved to New York, I was
green and 16. By great good fortune I got cast in a show with a
bunch of grizzled old-timers who took me under their sequined wings
and peppered me with superlative advice. The greatest of all may
have been the nudge to take small steps and plant seeds every day.
Because all these folks were working artists, they knew about
cyclical fame, fickle fate, and the vagaries of showbiz.
Every one of them urged me to take my
time and build a career one brick at a time, like a fortress strong
enough to withstand the elements. The assured me that rushing and
shortcuts would only bring me to grief, but if every day I did one
thing, just one, for my career, it would grow strong and steady
towards the light.
In addition to my daily pages, I did
exactly that, investing my time in my eventual career with something
small and meaningful: a note, a phone call, a meeting, a few hours
volunteering, a benefit, a favor, or a schlep. At first it felt like
drudgery, but over time, I started to see the (astonishing) power of
sowing seeds and reaping the reward when the time was right.
Over the next twenty-five years, all
around me young guns and wunderkind fell by the wayside or imploded
in public. I kept scattering small seeds in all directions never
knowing which would sprout, but confident that I was contributing to
the health of the industry and my career. I boosted talented
colleagues, navigated sticky situations, shrugged off leeches and
naysayers. Every day I did one thing to tend my professional
landscape.
So here’s a bit of grizzled showbiz
wisdom and a challenge to you in addition to your daily writing
regime: every day do one thing that advances your craft, your
career, or your genre. It doesn’t have to directly and immediately
benefit you, but you should be able to explain the ways it could
grow over the next three years. Best part? In three years, that
investment will start to pay regular dividends while you actually
need the help.
Since it’s only one thing, your daily “seed” doesn’t have to take up loads of time, but you’ll need a new one every day. Make a list; I love lists! Prioritize by deadlines, projects, and possibilities. Reach out to other writers and pros at your level to facilitate cooperation. Try to develop new readers rather than poaching existing fans of other authors. Focus on smaller, accessible favors rather than grandiose longshot nonsense. As my theatrical mentors would often say, no one person is powerful enough to start or stop your career. Mix it up when you can so that you don’t lean too heavily on one strategy or corner of your career, Diversify your career investment portfolio. Ask yourself:
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What would you like to be doing in three years and how can you set the stage now?
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What groups, events, and venues can you assist given your unique skills?
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Where can you find nonreaders with the potential to become genre fans?
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How can you help bloggers, book clubs, and journalists who might get overlooked by bigger fish?
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What incremental tasks would help you anchor your brand and platform for the long game?
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Who deserves some extra help from your professional quarter?
Of course the magic of working this way
is that once you gain a reputation for being positive, dependable,
and capable you attract other folks with the same qualifications.
Without realizing it, you build the career you want and deserve. Bit
by bit, people you revere become co-conspirators in your success.
Working from gratitude, generosity, and abundance encourages
cooperation and coollaboration.
Give it all you’ve got. Don’t stint in
your optimism and generosity. Be extravagant and imaginative because
you never know which one will pay off. Plant ten seeds and the
twelfth will bear fruit. Besides, you’re laying out the kind of
professional landscape you dig, and you’ll be around to enjoy once
it blossoms.
One thing, every day. You’ll thank
yourself when they sprout.
Originally published as part of A Game Advice for the Romance Writers Report.
If you wish to republish this article, just drop me a line.