Websites, Social Media and the Small Press: What You May Be Missing - Part I

Posted by Donna on January 10, 2010 under branding, creative writing programs, publishers, web design | Read the First Comment

Imagine your small press website was a book’s jacket cover.  Would you keep reading?

This week is bittersweet. My final semester in the MFA program at Wilkes University is coming to an end. For our MFA internship, we could take either a teaching track or publishing track. I chose publishing because I felt it made more sense given my background in marketing; I wanted to blend my two loves. So, my publishing internship was with Etruscan Press, a small, non-profit literary press housed at Wilkes University’s creative writing offices. This was a perfect match, as it allowed me to take my professional experience in eCommerce and social media and put it to use in the literary and publishing world.

The Etruscan Press website was outdated and the small press was very eager to learn the ropes of blogging and social media for itself and its authors. So, I presented a project plan which included a redesigned website and blog, a social media guide for Etruscan Press authors, and a social media plan for the press itself. This week, a half-year of work comes to a close: the new website will go live the week of January 11. All parties are thrilled with the new look and feel of the website. Have a peek:

Screen shot of Etruscan Press' redesigned website. Shown, the homepage with cascading navigation.

Screen shot of Etruscan Press' redesigned website. Shown, the homepage with cascading navigation.

Which brings us to the point of this post.

This blog is focused on social media, but I really feel I should write something regarding website design. After all, Twitter and Facebook are just a few strategies to the overall marketing plan for writers and publishers. One of the higher level goals may be to get traffic to your website and that means how your personal or professional website looks matters. You don’t want Facebook to be your sole web presence. And, when you link to things from Twitter, your site should look presentable.

While investigating how to set up the website, we looked to other small press websites for inspiration.  And, while editing the former Etruscan’s links page to make sure all links still worked, I came across dozens of other literary websites. What I found in my travels left a lot to be desired. There was so much room for opportunity on many of these independent press websites. I don’t want to be critical of an industry I love, but I guess this is just some tough love. I’ve been told often I am too nice, so this post is a way for me to also show that I can really be a critic, too! And, lots of types of people read this blog, so while small press websites were the inspiration for this post, the information is useful to anyone with a website. In fact, literary magazines are another area I see that could overall use an overhaul in the website department.

Feel fresh, new and more professional

As a small press, you are likely seeking out the newest book that, in addition to be a great piece of literature, will look great on store shelves. The same care should be taken with your website design. Think of your small press website as the book cover for your small press. Would you want to be published by you, solely based on the way your site looks? And, when old classics get reprinted, don’t the covers often get a fresh look? The average website should be designed every 2-4 years, depending on your industry. If you were early to the websites game and started with a free Geocities or Homestead site and then let it go, you’ve let a whole world pass you by.

The times, they are changing (Thanks, Bob!). Think about what image you are portraying to your audience, who could include writers, agents, editors, critics, and other consumers of literature who visited your site for a reason. Let your site convey professionalism.

There are general industry guidelines for submitting queries, right? The same could be said for web design. There are best practices to follow, no matter what the industry. By day, I work in eCommerce, and am often asked to do mini-deconstructions of online stores. That said, I am always in that mode whenever I land on a website. I may be a bit more critical than some, but for good reason – you have less than ten seconds to captures someone’s attention when they land on a website. And, the eye looks at a website a certain way. Now that the Internet has been a part of our everyday lives for some time, trends have emerged. These trends have trained us to know where to click and if your site’s layout and navigation ignores the norm, you could be turning people off.

What are some key signs your small press website may need a redesign? Here are some of my observations:

  • Cookie cutter templates – I still see some small press websites that look like they were designed with a default Microsoft Publisher web page template – the one with the ovals and bars. You are different; your publishing house website should be, too. From simple color tweaks to a fully custom design, don’t slack on the originality department. You don’t for your books, do you?
  • Animated graphics – these are so outdated. In the early 90s, they were cute. Today, they are laughable. Not talking flash here; that can be very tasteful. I’m talking about the Send us an Email graphic where a note folds itself up and pops itself into a mailbox and similar .gifs.
  • Left justified and/or sites – best practices deem sites should be centered and widened. Monitors have grown in recent years.
  • Cluttered menus or poor navigation– Do you have a very long menu, or do people have to click many times to get where they are going, perhaps to find hidden pages? All higher-level pages should be linkable from the homepage menu, and ideally, some kind of expanding or cascading navigation to show subcategories. There should be some clear structure to point people where to go so they don’t have to guess. The navigation menu should also be global, meaning the menu doesn’t disappear or change when you are on a certain page. This may happen if you create your site in a program where you make each page individually. If you are one of those who are still creating your website one HTML page at a time, good news. Those cumbersome days are over! Wordpress is a fantastic platform that will save you a ton of time because it dynamically generates a lot, and at its basic level, its free.
  • Image-based navigation -text-based navigation is best for SEO and just looks better than big graphics everywhere
  • Gobbledygook – so many sites had no consistency in branding or layout from page to page. When you design a book or lay out a literary magazine, there is a set of fonts and rules you use. (A Colophon?) But, I see websites with one color and font here, another over there. I see big fonts, small fonts, everywhere a new font, font. I see cluttered images and just no consistency with page flow.
  • Hidden information – no one wants to be overwhelmed with queries, but you also shouldn’t bury contact information. Chances are, a good chunk of people are visiting you to find submission guidelines. Link directly to that page from your homepage. Also, is your phone number and mailing address on your website? People often use your website as a source for information. Make your contact information available easily so that people can contact you. Maybe a bookseller wants information about buying books or booking a reading. Maybe an agent wants to contact you about a potential author. Maybe the media wants to talk to you. Don’t make this information hard to find.
  • Website missing – If you are a small press that used to have a website, but no longer do, listen up. That website address may still be out there and it may come up when people are searching for you. What is there now? I don’t want to embarrass the press in case they still do exist, but one small press link I clicked on went to a site for Hot Russian Brides. The domain had expired and someone new took it. Curious, I Googled the name of the press to see if there was a new domain for it. I didn’t find a new website, but I did find a ton of market listings that linked to this publisher as well – with the site that goes to the Russian Bride site. So, watch your domain name! Don’t let them expire. (For more tips on owning your brand in the search engines, read this post.) If you moved your site, contact everyone you know of that is linking to you so they can also update accordingly.
  • Google Ads - Google ads are a fine way for some to generate revenue, but I strongly feel it cheapens a professional organization’s website. It’s one thing to have on a personal blog or hobby website, but for a true company that makes its money selling books, I think Google ads just look in poor taste. If you do want to find ways to make money from your website, perhaps partnering with companies as an affiliate with literary-related or other companies that offer products/services valuable to your audience makes more sense. Besides, unless you really customize your adsense account, you have little control over what ads show.
  • Social media missing - there were so many sites I came across that did not list Twitter, Facebook, a link to a blog It could be very well that a lot of these small presses are active in these spaces, but have not updated their websites to reflect this. Bridge the two. That’s what it’s all about!
  • Piece-mealed sites - sometimes, just by looking at a site, you can see that it’s just pieced together. Maybe the original webmaster/designer is no longer in contact, so whoever took over did the best they could, with what they had. Over time, this leads to sloppy code on the back end, slow load times, and on the front end, a lot of the gobbledygook I discussed above. A redesign is often needed to wipe all that out and start fresh.

I realize as I write this, this this is turning into a very long post, so I will stop with those few. I just am so passionate about a properly-designed, professional website that I can’t shut up about it sometimes! Based on the length so far, I just decided to make this a two-part series, so stayed tuned for the second part on social media and small presses. But real quick, here are some reasons some small presses may be outdated:

It’s too hard to redesign a website for a small press
It’s not hard at all! Sure, there may be a learning curve, but when you use a platform like WordPress, which is what I used for Etruscan Press, it’s so user-friendly. If you can use Microsoft Word, you can use Wordpress. It’s what is known as a WYSIWYG editor - what you see is what you get. Although, you can edit in HTML, too, or go back and forth. Wordpress has free themes you can use, and for more customization, you can host your own site and purchase and modify templates to match your branding, or have a custom template designed for you. The most important thing is to get on a new, updated platform, so if you need to take baby steps, at least get on a clean platform that will give you room for growth.

It’s too expensive to get a redesign for a independent press website
If you take the nearly-free route of using WordPress, it won’t cost you much. You may want to have someone make custom graphics or a custom header. You may want to buy some stock photos to use. You may choose to host the site yourself. So, there could be minimal costs, but as you can see, there are cost-effective and even free ways to get a small press website redesigned. Of course, my full-time job is for a web developer and therefore I am a huge advocate of totally custom design. That’s the route I’d ultimately suggest, but working with a small press, I understand the budget limitations many may face, especially if they are non-profits. On the other hand, see what types of grants are available. Technology is so huge right now in the arts. Having a quality website can help you take your press further, attract more readers, attract more writers, etc. Use that to your advantage. Use that to justify the cost. The long-term benefits of a professional design are worth it.

There’s not enough resources to build or manage a redesign project
Small presses are often that: small. Look to MFA programs and find design interns. There are folks, like me, who are getting MFAs and need internships who are more interested in the business side of writing goes where the internship is concerned. Interns can work as project-based interns. That’s how Etruscan got their new website! Once the site is created and the main pages are added, there really isn’t much maintainence. You may want to add new books as they are released and keep events updated, so there are few key pages you may regularly update, but it’s managable. If you have a blog along with your website, that should be updated several times per week. For help with that, enlist guest bloggers or create a bunch of posts ahead of time and preschedule them.

I don’t know how to find a good designer
There are freelancers and professional companies alike that can come to your aid if you do want to leave it to a professional to build and design your site. Start with your local area. Contact me privately if you want some recommendations, as I enlisted a programmer I know to help with the Etruscan site. I would also highly recommend Solid Cactus, and not because I work there, but because I’ve seen what my colleagues have done to transform websites. (Especially if you are looking for a way to sell books online - you will also need a secure shopping cart solution.)

>>Want feedback on your website? Whether you are a independent press, an author, a bookseller, or whatever type of site you have, please comment below with your website and I will, within a week of your comment, provide some feedback on your site. I would love to help you find an opportunity to get your site up to date! Notate if you want me to send your comments to you privately, otherwise I will write them in the comments so that all can learn. It’d be great to start a nice dialogue!

In closing, here’s another screen shot of the new Etruscan site. The homepage features rotating banners. The image above showed one, and here’s another:

New Etruscan Press homepage, showing another view as the banners rotate through to show new titles, and other messages

New Etruscan Press homepage, showing another view as the banners rotate through to show new titles, and other messages

How Blogging Can Help Land a Book Deal - From Copyblogger

Posted by Donna on January 8, 2010 under blogging, branding | Be the First to Comment

One of my favorite blogging resources has become CopyBlogger. A colleague referred this blog about blogging to me a few months ago and I’ve found it extremely helpful in many areas, from developing content and SEO to best practices in blogging. There was a new post this week from contributing blogger, Larry Brooks I thought would be useful to share here at Social Media for Writers: How My Blog Landed Me a Book Deal.

CopyBlogger contributore, Larry Brooks, explains how his blog landed him a book deal

Blogging is indeed crucial for authors. It’s great for building a personal brand, enhancing SEO, and for getting more personal with an audience. When it comes to using a blog to help a writer get published, blogging can help build an audience and a platform. That’s what Brooks writes about here.

Brooks’ blog post discusses how having a quality blog can help writers get a book deal, but he first demystifies that this is not a shoe-in or overnight solution. Rather, getting published as a result of a popular blog is something that takes time and something that is just part of the process, not an alternative route to being discovered. Not everyone can be Diablo Cody or Tucker Max, after all. Brooks leads his post with this valuable blogging advice:

“First, let’s get one thing out of the way. A blog alone, no matter how popular, isn’t enough to score you a book contract. It’s not quite that simple. In other words, it doesn’t quite work the way it does on television.”

I encourage you to check out the rest of this post and learn how blogging can help you build an audience and platform, and perhaps, add Copy Blogger to your list of writing and social media resources.

How Writers Can Dominate Search Results: 5 Steps to Owning Your Personal Brand

Posted by Donna on December 9, 2009 under branding, search engines | 9 Comments to Read

There’s a great article from Vertical Measures I often pass along to eCommerce business owners I know: Be Proactive With Your Reputation Management.

This article stresses the importance of ownership of your brand. When someone is looking for a certain brand online, the top results should be official sites or supplemental sites for those brand names — not “garbage”. Imagine if the top link for a brand or individual was a bad review? Try searching for Wal-Mart. There’s plenty of “hate sites” about that monster of a store. (For that I am actually thankful, but I digress.)

As a writer, what does this mean for you? It means that if people are searching for you online, that you should not just be showing up, but appearing high. If you are not a household name, a public figure locally, or have not written heavily for the Internet, chances are there are very little reasons your name would show up in the search engines. After all, the spiders can only find information that exists. This was something someone asked me at the talk I did Monday. Her name turned up few results. But, the reason why? She had no online presence. It’s seems obvious, but for some, a reminder of this is needed.

If the only results that are showing up when you type your full name into a search engine like Google are links to newspaper articles that you were included in, old school rosters that have made their way online, sports scores, or other tidbits, you need to do some brand building. In the article from Vertical Measures, you will see that the author took a screen shot of the first page of Google search results when “vertical measures” was searched for. I followed their lead and did the same for me to demonstrate how, over time, I was able to own my name and my brand.

searchresultsfor_donna_talarico1

Search Results When You Search for Donna Talarico in Google

Here, you can see that when you search for Donna Talarico even without the quotes, I own the whole first page. (As of this writing anyway.)

1. My writing blog

2. My facebook profile

3. An article I wrote for a site, Associated Content, a content site which ranks very well

4. The Barnes and Noble page for a book of essays

5. My LinkedIn profile

6. My personal, more candid, blog Daily Dose o’ Donna

7. My profile at Amazon.com

8. My profile on a private social media network, through Ning.com

9. My Twitter account for my work username, @cactus_donna

10. My MySpace page (Wait? I still have one of those?)

Bonus link - My Google profile

What do I think about my search engine results?

Overall, I am happy with what I see. Anyone looking for me can clearly see what I do professionally - eCommerce and writing. The results show that I am social media savvy in that Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, MySpace, and even a Ning profile all show up. While I think the article I wrote in 2007 about me not being domestic is cute, I’d rather it not show up on Page 1. I’d rather my profile on the Ning site not show up in the results. And, since the book available on B&N is something I self-published in 2005, I’d rather that not show up either. But other than that, I feel comfortable with what is displayed. There’s no doubt in my mind that since this post mentions my name so many times, that this will eventually make its way to Page One.

I hadn’t Googled myself in a while, so I decided to see how deep I could go before another Donna Talarico showed up. On Page Two I still own all the results, with links to newspaper articles I’ve either written or have been interviewed for, or to other blogs, forums, or websites I frequent. It isn’t until Page Four that another Donna Talarico shows up. Then, all the other results are still related to articles and other mentions of me, and then, it’s all me until you hit Page Eight. Now, I have been online so long that my GeoCities page (RIP) used to show up first, until Yahoo! recently laid GeoCities to rest. I have been producing content for print and online publications since the late 90s and have jumped on board every social networking site early, so I’ve had time to develop this. Any social media expert will tell you that building rankings does take time, and since my profiles, articles, and such have been around for gosh, nearly a decade, I am fortunate that I rank well. I share this here to demonstrate how, over time, you can totally capitalize on being all over the Internet to help create and control your personal brand. (Attention future husband: I will probably keep my maiden name.)

What if I have a common name and want to stand out in the search engines, too?

The best advice I can give is, since you are likely a writer or in publishing, add your personal tagline to every web entity you have, such as Joe Smith, freelance writer or Lisa Jones, literary agent. This way, when people are searching for your name with some other keywords, you will be more likely to show up. It should be understood that people with common names are going to turn up a lot of results, so users will naturally use some type of identifier to go along with that name to dig deeper. So, use some extra keywords to define who you are, in addition to just your name.

To get starting building your personal brand as a writer:

Step 0: Find out where you stand
Google yourself. What comes up? Who comes up? Do a lot of other people have your name?

Step 1: Start with a solid, branded foundation
Create a blog and/or personal website and have a custom domain name with your name. This will serve as your hub. When you utilize your other social media tools for writers, such as Twitter and Facebook, you will link back to your personal blog/website.

Step 2: Be sure to create as many profiles as you can.

If you are not on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn, sign up. If you feel other networks also suit you, consider them too, perhaps Flickr, YouTube, or writing-related profiles such as Publisher’s Marketplace, AuthorAdvance, etc. As you can see from my results, the popular social networking sites and blogging platforms have some pull in the search engines. Use that to your advantage.

Step 3: Don’t make croutons out of your search results
The key to tip two is also keeping up with them. These profiles you create are also most effective when they are fresh — not stale. That’s right. Don’t make croutons outta your search results. This means that if these results are showing up and searchers are clicking on them, you will want to keep up them and make sure you are maintaining them. People often tell me that they won’t have time to write if they get sucked into all of this. You don’t have to get sucked in. I admit that I do. But once you get everything set-up, the hard part is done. Check in a few times a week. Create a schedule you are comfortable with. But, do keep updating, because search engines like fresh content. This is why you see rankings change all the time. You must not let things go, or down those listing go. But, you don’t have to update hourly either. Find the balance that works for you.

Step 4: Big brother yourself
Set a Google alert up for your name so you can be made aware when you are listed somewhere. This helps you monitor your brand, as well as let you know when search engines have spidered your name/sites/profiles.

Step 5: Get out your megaphone
Promote. Share your links with others. Friend people. Follow people. Comment on other blogs. This will help you grow, and also help you build links, which is another key to getting a higher ranking.

Those are some tips for how social media can help enhance search engine rankings and how, as an author, you can begin to manage to own your personal brand. Good luck! And please comment with any other ideas, or any other strategies you may have, as well as RT this post if you feel some of your network would enjoy this.

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