NICHOLE REBER— CONSULTING PROPOSAL MANAGER & WRITER
  • Home
  • Work Samples
  • Home
  • Work Samples
Search by typing & pressing enter

YOUR CART

6/26/2019 0 Comments

Nonfiction writer? Get Started on that Platform

Roxane Gary started PANK, which gave her visibility. Cheryl Strayed was published in The Sun and wrote the Dear Sugar column in The Rumpus. We could go on and on about the various ways nonfiction's biggest names developed their platforms. The common theme would be that they had a platform. Platforms gave them name recognition and an audience who already knew them (much like celebrities), which exponentially amplified their chances of being picked up by a publisher and agent.

Do you have a platform? Are you using it to talk to the prospective readers, or are you only talking to other writers? Nonfiction writers, unlike fiction writers or poets, unequivocally must have a platform. However, other genre writers also boost their chances of landing a more prestigious agent and publisher with a developed platform.

Jane Friedman, who has worked for F+W Media and the Virginia Quarterly Review and whose advice to aspiring authors has been featured by The New York Times, The Washington Post, and NPR, offers abundant advice on how to build your platform. Consider the visibility notion.
"Visibility means: Where do you or your work regularly appear? How many people see it? How does it spread? Where does it spread? What communities are you a part of? Who do you influence?" she writes. "It’s typically not enough to say you have visibility. You have to show how and where you make an impact and give proof of engagement."

Platforms might contain a variety of means of communicating with perspective readers: your e-mail newsletter list, website traffic, high-profile reviews, testimonials from A-listers in your genre.

"A lot of people confuse platform building with marketing, promotion, and publicity," Friedman says. "While those types of activities can build your platform, let’s be clear: being an extrovert on social media will not, by itself, lead you to a platform that interests publishers."

The methods to building a platform are countless. Writers from across the world are invited to learn more in a live Zoom chat with the Writers Publishing Exchange, a (usually monthly) meeting of aspiring authors. 

Picture
Photo by Daniel von Appen on Unsplash
0 Comments

6/13/2019 0 Comments

Writers Publishing Exchange

Would you like to share some Writers Publishing Exchange convenes once monthly to help aspiring authors discover the business side of publishing to attract the best agent and publisher. The WBE is open to writers nationwide. Seasoned publishing experts and veteran authors help us to produce the necessary elements before publication:
  • why platforms are mandatory and how to expand them
  • realities behind publicity and learning how to sustain your career by not boxing yourself in by publisher branding
  • fighting for your rights in contracts and even book covers
  • formatting manuscripts and producing proposals.

A spinoff critique group will consider short pieces and book-length works.

Want to join in person or by Zoom? Want to speak to us about your successes or foibles? Contact me, Nichole L. Reber.
0 Comments

    Archives

    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016

    Categories

    All Book Editors Editing Lit Mags Manuscript Nonfiction Platform Submissions

    RSS Feed

What my clients are saying

You have a good grasp of what is needed...Thank you so much for your diligence and dedication to getting this turned around so quickly and comprehensively."
-- Doretha Owens, (Former) Director of Proposals at Optum
"Nichole is a fast learner, not afraid to ask questions and expand her knowledge. She meets her dead lines and also takes the initiative with minimal supervision. She is always willing to fill in and help. I found Nichole to clearly think through a problem, explore courses of action, and make sound recommendations for consideration. She is a team player and a real asset to any organization or team."-- Wayne Killian, Principal Consultant at ALK, LLC

Check me out on LinkedIn or email me.