Platform-Building Tip #1: Switch Writing
Hats!
Around eighty percent of nonfiction books
today are written by "experts," that is
people who have a) earned credentials
in the field they're writing about, b)
germinated information via articles, live
presentations or other media, or c) had
extraordinary, unique or memorably told
life experiences relevant to their topic.
For an autobiographical work, such as
a memoir, an author needn't have any special
expertise-she is the foremost authority
on her own life. For a how-to or self-help
book, however, the first thing mainstream
publishers want to know is, "Does the
author have a platform?"
Among the multiple definitions of "platform"
in Merriam Webster's 10th edition are
1) a place from which to speak, 2) a set
of principles, and 3) a vehicle for carrying
things. All these are important to an
author's platform. The good news is, in
the six to eighteen months it will take
most authors to write either their book
proposal or their entire book, they can
develop a platform.
Here are some things editors look for
in a platform:
- publications in the field demonstrating
your expertise
- a mailing list
- pamphlets, tapes or other media carrying
messages related to those in your book
- teaching or leading experience on
the topic of your book
- a column
- a unique point of view with demonstrable
appeal
- regular speaking engagements
- courses taught at a local venue
- a well-designed website
The section of the nonfiction proposal
entitled Author's Bio or Author's Credentials
details the information about the author's
platform. Many aspiring authors I work
with, at least initially, grossly underrepresent
themselves in this section.
SOLUTION 1: WORK WITH WHAT YOU HAVE-THEN
SWITCH HATS!
Assume that you probably already have
more of a platform than you know. Instead
of beginning by writing your bio in paragraph
form, put on your Scribe hat and make
a list-yes, that's right, a long, tedious,
unsexy list-of everything you've done
that seems even remotely related to your
book.
Once you've made your boring list, switch
hats. You're now a Publishing Consultant
looking over your client's resume. How
are you going to make her shine? Simple-you're
going to take everything even remotely
relevant to the book and change into a
language that will make publishers perk
up their ears. How do you know what will
make publishers perk up their ears?
Switch hats again. You're an Acquisitions
Editor at a major publishing house sitting
behind a desk, asking yourself, which
of these 163 proposals that arrived this
week is worth risking my reputation, bank
account and job to publish? Then put your
Publishing Consultant hat back on, and
do your translation-but don't forget about
that anxious editor.
Here's an example:
Bob Jones, who's writing a book on personal
accounting and finance for the masses,
picks a phrase from his Scribe list, "Instructor
at Coleridge Community College for twelve
years." With his Publishing Consultant
hat on, he rewrites this phrase to read
"translated high-level accounting concepts
into laypeople's language to over 3,000
adults of various backgrounds over twelve
years."
Moving right along, Bob changes "facilitated
students home accounting practices, enabling
them to pay bills and prepare taxes with
greater efficiency" to "Over these twelve
years, the author developed a series of
steps, called the Number Crunch Shuffle.
Students consistently report that the
Number Crunch Shuffle helps them overcome
their fear of numbers, streamlines their
home accounting process and cuts their
bill and tax preparation time in half.
guerilla tip: Bob didn't really call
these steps the "Number Crunch Shuffle"
at the time he taught them at Coleridge
Community College. He got help developing
this tag for the technique around which
his book is built. However, he did develop
the method itself while teaching those
3,000 students.
guerilla insight: There's plenty of reality
to work with. Take what's there and describe
it in new and exciting ways. Find a gem
that makes your book special and give
it an attention-grabbing name.
| About The Author
You are welcome to reprint this
article any time, anywhere with
no further permission, and no payment,
provided the following is included
at the end or beginning:
Author Jill Nagle is founder and
principal of GetPublished, http://www.GetPublished.com,
which provides coaching, consulting,
ghostwriting, classes and do-it-yourself
products to emerging and published
authors. Her most recent book is
How to Find An Agent Who Can Sell
Your Book for Top Dollar http://www.FindTheRightAgent.com.
Jill@getpublished.com
|
This article was posted on February
24, 2005