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Archive for May 2010

How do I: Add a Facebook page to my wordpress site?

Friday, May 21st, 2010

To add a Facebook badge to your WordPress-powered site, you’ll need to make a badge on Facebook itself.

On Facebook:

  1. Go here: http://www.facebook.com/facebook-widgets/ and choose the type you want. (Profile badge is used often).
  2. When it asks what type of code you need, choose “other” — it will give you an area of code to copy/paste.

Go To Your Site:

  • Log in to the backend of your site.
  • Once you’re at the dashboard, click on widgets on the right hand side — that’s where the sidebar features are.
  • Choose a “text” widget, drag it to the right side of the screen.
  • When it opens, paste the code into the text box.
  • Then hit save and it will appear on your sidebar.

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Website Content: What To Include?

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

There is a world of options when it comes to relevant content to put on your website.  Remember the audience and their goals:  form an impression and connect with you.

Start with the basics:

About You – Your site should include a few paragraphs about you, how you started writing, and what you write.  If you include a photo on this page, it should be a professional, nice one.  Again, professional doesn’t imply you paid to have it taken. It means you look professional in it.

Work/Books/WIPs –Your website should give a snapshot of what you’re working on.  Include working titles, genre, word count.  Whether or not you include blurbs and summaries of your WIPs is up to your comfort zone (and for a look at both sides of this, see this post (http://jeannieruesch.com/wordpress/?p=2940).  List content finals or wins.  List any articles you’ve published or other related work.

Contact Information – Be sure that there is an easy way to contact you on your site.  Include an email address or a contact form.  And if you’re active on social networks, include links to those as well – and include them prominently.  These are actionable links by your visitors and ways you can connect more personally with them.  Make it easy for someone to find you.

And make your site personal by adding other content:

With a focus on your writing, you could embellish your sites with facts, tidbits or interesting stories.

  • Include fun research facts you’ve discovered.  Chances are if you found it different or interesting, someone else will too.
  • Make playlists of songs that inspired you while writing or that match the tone and emotion of your stories, like you’ll find on Adrienne’s site (http://adriennegiordano.com/bookshelf/).
  • Pick out elements that are highlighted in your book – recipes, pets, causes, an historical era, whatever you can pull from your site, and build a page or section of your site around that.

And before you say, “I don’t know what would be interesting enough…”—think again.  Yes, you do.  Do you write sassy, strong heroines?  Make a section of your site about strong women you admire. Do you write alpha males? Focus a section of your site on alpha males in the world – perhaps with a focus on the careers of your characters.  Dig into your stories and find what makes them unique, find what inspires you within them and build that into your website.  It offers even more compelling ways to connect with you as a writer.

And don’t underestimate connecting as a person.  Even two people who have nothing in common can talk for hours about a favorite TV show or movie.  Put some personal touches on the site:

  • Try a list of your favorite things: books, music, television shows, and movies.  When considering “favorites” to include, look for things that connect people, rather than separate them.  Unless it’s part of your platform, staying away from politics and religion is always a good idea.
  • Include links.  It’s wonderful for both networking with others and your search engine results.  Offering a links page to helpful resources, other authors, chapters, research sites, or whatever else you want to focus on offers a chance for those websites to link back.
  • Do you have a hobby or additional job that would provide useful information to other writers? By all means, create a page to share your expertise and knowledge.

Ultimately, think outside of the box.  Kathleen Bittner Roth did that by adding an “Unbook trailer” to her site (http://kathleenbittnerroth.com/).  Without a book or need for a book trailer, she found a unique and entertaining way to add content to her site.

To summarize, for the unpublished author, your website is a place to build a bridge between you and your target audience.  For agents and editors, it means presenting yourself professionally.  For other writers and connections within the publishing world, it means offering a common ground.  If you keep that in mind, you can’t go wrong.

Romance Reader At Heart

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

Romance Reader at Heart™ is a romance book review website.  They feature authors and book lists along with favorite romantic reads, all broken down for you by subgenre. They also offer a community type content with interviews, contests, giveaways and a once a month trivia chat, plus much more.

Book Reviews

Romance Reader at Heart accepts romance books in all sub-genres except erotica.  Your book must follow these guidelines:

  • within 3 months of their publication date to the current date;
  • current releases;
  • upcoming new releases;
  • current re-releases of previously published works;
  • ebook submissions are welcome, following the same criteria as print submissions
  • We currently do not accept short stories. However, we do accept novellas (20,000-50,000 words) for review, and complete anthologies are welcome.

How To Submit Your Book

Submit your book details online:

http://romancereaderatheart.com/submissions.html

Pros

Books that are submitted for review are given promotional space for free on the publisher’s page on the website.

Other Opportunities

Contact or More Information

http://romancereaderatheart.com/advertise.html

Contact banners@romancereaderatheart.com to purchase or for futher information.

Have you advertised with this company/website?

Please leave your rating and a review in the comments.

Romantic Times Magazine

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

Romantic Times Magazine