Branding.
It’s a vital component to your burgeoning authordom.
Without it? You’re basically just a regular person. Wandering the clearance racks at K-Mart, mumbling to yourself, giving off an odor of desperation (which smells like cat pee, so sometimes if you’re in an old house and you smell cat pee, you think, ooh, somebody has cats here, but the truth is there might instead be an unrecognized, unbranded writer living there, which means YOUR LIFE IS IN DANGER, GET OUT NOW, THE WRITER IS WRITING FROM INSIDE THE HOUSE).
Branding is the keystone to your authorial strategy. Branding is even more important than actually writing. How will you know what to write if you have not branded yourself or been branded by outside entities? You’ll just be pinballing from genre to genre, format to format, like an old man lost at the mall trying to find his wife that died fifteen years before. “Martha?” you’ll bleat into the cavernous, plastic-stinking sad-cave that is an American Eagle Outfitters. And people will throw plastic hangers at you to make you go away. That’s you. An unbranded writer.
But today? Today we’re going to fix that.
It’s time to get you branded.
1. Envision What You Can Consistently Bring To The World
Think about your favorite brands.
McDonald’s — it’s the same delicious gray Meatt™ patty every time. Pressed seductively between two ancient couch pillows, and slathered with ketchup, mustard, a pickle, and other mystery unguents. That burger? It never changes.
All-Bran cereal? A basket of twigs and potpourri meant to maximize your intestinal fortitude. Wal-Mart? Plastic goods from foreign nations and also, bullets — all placed on shelves by hard-working, woefully underpaid Americans. Lexus? Automotive beauty and elegance, so beautiful and so elegant that Lexus drivers don’t even see people who might be driving, say, a dumb old Hyundai Elantra, or a is-that-even-a-real-car-who-buys-those Chevy Cruze.
These brands offer a consistent experience. Unchanging. Unswerving. Never faltering or altering themselves. People want that when they read your work. They want to know that every time they pick up a book, it’s the same thing every time. Comfort in constancy. The enduring power of enduring. Can you imagine if Chevrolet started making fruit snacks? Or if McDonald’s started to sell jetpacks? Or if Apple started holding Amish barn-raisings? It would be madness in the streets. The ululations of the bewildered. Blood. Blood! Pouring from their face-holes and other holes.
Basically: the apocalypse.
Brands are what keep the world united. Brands are the lens through which we glimpse our reality.
What does that mean for you, Dearest Writer? It means finding that same level of eternal consistency. It means: the same length book. Same characters or tropes of characters. Covers by the same artist. And, of course: same genre.
2. Determine The Genre In Which You Will Forever Write
You must pick a genre early on. Because once you have chosen the genre in which you will write, it will be your prison home until your body hits the dirt. I mean, can you imagine what happens if you start writing in science-fiction, and then — whuh, pfft, buh — you start writing in fantasy? Oh! Oh ho ho ho, this is my incredulous face. The very thought makes me red-cheeked and rageful. You can’t do that. You can’t. You’d be — you’d have soiled yourself with chaos. Your readers, all twelve of them, will find you and they will tear you apart in the street like the distempered dog that you have become. Trust me —
Choose your genre now and stick with it.
Even better: choose a microscopic subgenre that you will claim as your own. Find a literary niche that has no competition at all. From our research here at the Terribleminds Marketing Institute (TMI), we have found that the following subgenres are as-yet-unclaimed by any writers.
• Yarnpunk
• Lovecraftian middle-grade romance
• Haunted barns
• Geriatric BDSM space opera
• Epic shenanigans
• Horse porn
• Picaresque lesbian cyborg sestinas
• Preborn noir
• Books for “Dave”
Move fast! Stake your claim.
3. Obtain A Home Run Author Photo That Demonstrates Your Brand
Your author photo is everything.
Everything.
People need to recognize you. On the back of your books. On the street. At that little corner cafe you frequent where you buy those lingonberry scones you seem to like so much. Through the front windows of your Victorian house at 1456 Franklin Court.
Everywhere.
And, even more importantly, your author photo must speak to the consistent experience you’re offering your readers. Does it reflect your genre? Does it exhibit the themes and characters you have chosen? Can a potential reader look to your author photo and instantly recognize, “Ah, he writes science-fiction. You can see the starships twinkling in his eyes behind those very large eyeglasses, ha ha ha, that nerd. Book-keep! Give me all of his books and give them now!”
What message will your author photo send?
Let’s consider my various author photos and what message they send.
See? A consistent message contained as a visual timeline. Dependable. Homogenous.
Strong brand identity approved by a focus group for full monolithic market integration.
Want negative examples? Consider this awkward author photo contest!
4. Get Thee To The Social Medias
You have to get on the social medias. The Twitters. The Facebooks. The LinkedIns. Grindr, whatever that is. You need to get on all of them. You need to root your presence there. Use the social medias to establish a beachhead that demonstrates a logical, coherent personal branding strategy (PBS). Buy followers from various seedy Internet robots. Do not even begin to write your book until you have at least 10,000 followers across the social medias marketscape. Use the social medias to speak to your target market. Be a trendsetter and then follow the trends you set. Use hashtags, which means before you write a social media status update, you write the word “hashtag” before the update. (Example: “Hashtag, I saw a great movie today it was really super.” Or, “Hashtag, I killed a man and ate his face lol”) In fact, say ‘lol’ a lot. It lets people know you’re loose and fun. Unless that’s not your brand. But it should be your brand because who likes writers who are stiff and unfriendly? Nobody. Nobody likes those writers.
When tweetbooking, consider: user segmentation, packaging design, the OEM market, the freestanding literary intangibles, logical endorsement extensions by known authorial brandchannels, and other quintessential branding terms.
5. Assign Yourself A Personal Mission Statement
Who are you? Who are you, really?
You need a Personal Mission Statement (PMS). A motto. A logline. A branding tagline so that people know who you are exactly and what precisely they will be getting by choosing to follow you on the social medias and what happens when they buy your book-products. Consider branding yourself with the following slogans (and note that some of these can be sung to a catchy jingle):
“Narrative architect with strong thematic harmonization.”
“Da da da da da, I’m writin’ it!”
“With a name like [insert your name here], it’s gotta be good!”
“Cats cats cats!”
“I put the ‘oo’ in book! And the AW YEAH in author!”
“For a good time, call [insert your phone number here].”
“I killed a man and ate his face lol”
6. Pick Ten Google Keywords For Maximum SEO
The Internet is everything. If you’re not on the Internet, you’re not a real person. You’re basically just a bear. A sad bear that nobody knows. And these days, you don’t just need to be on the Internet, but you also need to be at the very top of the Internet, so that everyone can see you. If they can’t see you, you won’t sell any bookproducts or word-widgets. The way you climb to the top of the Internet and gain vital brand awareness is through SEO, which stands for Self Experience Optimization. Okay, that might not be right? Maybe it stands for Service Economics O… Onus… Opus… Origimental… you know what? It doesn’t matter. Who cares what it stands for? What matters is that you have it.
Here’s how you do it: you pick ten words that emblemize you. These ten words will concretize your brand and cement you into the asphalt of the Infosuper Cyberhighway and thus create top-of-mind awareness across All the Internet.
You should choose words that embody the experience you offer readers.
These ten words might be: “romance,” “undulating,” “over-the-pants,” “tumescent,” “peppy,” “zesty,” “salad-eater,” “wordsmith,” “sexxx” and “hashtag.”
Feeling stuck? Try a random word generator!
7. Determine Your Authorial Imago
You need to think Big Picture. Blue Sky. You need to take the 30,000 foot view. A 21st century author needs 21st century thinking. And you need to think of your imago. What is the idealized mental image of yourself? Is it a buff rad bro with sweet guns and oil-slick pecs? Is it a cool sexy librarian with devil wings and a pair of sexy katanas? Maybe it’s just a color. Or a favorite tree. Or a celebrity you’ve always admired, like one of the many Kardashian entities that have descended to our plane of existence after draining their home-world of its vigor and turning it into a howling, gibbering painscape! Envision your imago, and then apply all branding strategies toward it. Invoke your ideal self. Build your author platform from the illusions and deceptions you possess about yourself. As we say here at TMI — “Fake it until you make it!” Ha ha ha.
8. Connect With Others Inside Your Tightly-Regulated, Poorly-Oxygenated Niche
Inside this gray-walled half-lit prison in which you have placed yourself, you will find other invigorated souls motivated by marketing identity alignment (or MIA), all of whom are trapped eager to remain here in this well-positioned perception map. What that means is, it’s time to network. Share strategies! Buy each other’s bookproducts! Give massages and get massages in return. And if you find other authors who are attempting to occupy the same mindshare as you, stab them many times with one of your sexy katanas and remind the rest of your fellow authors that your brand is your brand and nobody can take it from you or you’ll ideate their bottom-holes with your vertically-integrated size ten boot.
9. Design A Logo That Will Be Literally Burned Onto Your Face Or Torso
All brands are exemplified by great logos. The golden arches! The Target bullseye! The snorting cyclopean dong-horned bull of Big Dan Don’s Dildo Emporium and Buttplug Barn. Consider what your visual calling card will be. A rocketship? Perhaps a funny animal. Maybe a sigil of the elder Kardashian that plans to use your blood and bones as reagents for its grim otherworldly alchemy.
Once you have chosen a logo, literally brand it onto your flesh. (That’s where the term ‘brand’ comes from!) Sear it into your meat so as to let everyone know — and to remind yourself from time to time, ha ha ha — just who you really are.
And who you must always be.
10. Build Your Audience
It’s time to build your audience. A tribe of people. Followers. Friends. Slaves. Sycophants. Cultists who embrace your ways and abhor all that is not you. Blood-caked acolytes who will read your books as if they are holy texts, written in stone and forever unchanging. It’s okay if they’re not real people. That’s why we use the phrase build. Consider scarecrows. Or people made out of vulture bones and mop handles. If you build the fake people, the real ones will come. Or you can kidnap them from your social medias! Once you have an acceptable audience of at least 1000 people who never want you to change and who will buy whatever bookproducts you cobble together, take them all to a distant island where you can live in changeless peace and eternal branding for the rest of your known existence. Also, here are some shock collars in case anybody decides to suffer a case of the I’m Specials. YOU CANNOT DO WHAT YOU WANT TO DO GODDAMNIT DO NOT DARE DEFY THE COMMANDMENTS YOU HAVE BEEN BRANDED IF YOU LEAVE THE ISLAND YOU WILL BE SHOT BY HELICOPTER SNIPERS AS IF YOU ARE A COMMON CUR
Ahem.
Anyway!
Now, go and write.
Or don’t. It doesn’t matter! You’re branded now, baby! A human Powerpoint presentation!
* * *
500 Ways To Write Harder aims to deliver a volley of micro-burst idea bombs and advisory missiles straight to your frontal penmonkey cortex. Want to learn more about writing, storytelling, publishing, and living the creative life? This book contains a high-voltage dose of information about outlining, plot twists, writer’s block, antagonists, writing conferences, self-publishing, and more.
All this, straight from the sticky blog pages of terribleminds.com, one of the 101 Best Websites for Writers (as named by Writer’s Digest).
Buy ($2.99) at:
smithster says:
…I cans only ever write one type of thing? Like, forever forever? But, but, I want to WRITE ALL THE THINGS!
::is sad now::
September 23, 2014 — 10:25 AM
Miriam Joy says:
Pfft, this made me laugh. Although I’m slightly concerned that people might take you seriously, which could cause trouble.
(And I’m 90% sure you’re joking, because for a start, you’ve written multiple genres. But there’s a 10% of doubt, and I’m ashamed of it. Deeply ashamed. Looking at it through eyes like dark pools under a sky studded with shame-stars. But it’s there. And I cannot run from it. Also, what is it about your posts that prompts surreal similes in comments?)
September 23, 2014 — 10:27 AM
Samantha Warren says:
(I’m with you on the 10%. I laughed at the post, then thought, “Wait? What if he’s serious?”
Then I shook my head and said, “No, it’s Chuck. He’s not serious.”
“But what if he is??”
“He CAN’T be. He’s CHUCK.”
“But–”
“No. Didn’t he say somewhere that he thinks branding is stupid?” (Totally paraphrasing and that might have not been him at all. If it’s not, sorry Chuck.)
“But–”
“Shut up and drink your coffee.”)
September 23, 2014 — 11:30 AM
Miriam Joy says:
My thought process entirely; glad I’m not the only one who had a moment of doubt.
September 23, 2014 — 11:33 AM
Allison Maruska says:
Wow, you wrote my exact thoughts!
September 23, 2014 — 6:31 PM
DebE says:
Ditto.
September 23, 2014 — 7:52 PM
Mick says:
Look out, Samantha. Everybody wants your coffee.
September 23, 2014 — 9:23 PM
Dave Higgins says:
I write because I have a crippling fear the world will otherwise run out of books for me to read. I therefore declare myself the seminal author in the ‘Books for “Dave”’ genre.
Come in, the water’s warm.
September 23, 2014 — 10:30 AM
mikes75 says:
Love to, but I’m wait-listed on Lovecraftian Middle-Grade Romance, and I really should wait for their response before considering other genres.
September 23, 2014 — 10:35 AM
Dave Higgins says:
I love Lovecraftian work, so you could merge them into one sanity blasting niche-within-a-niche:
Lovecraftian Middle-Grade Romance where all the characters are me.
September 23, 2014 — 12:52 PM
Jane Bryony Rawson says:
Where do I buy it?
September 23, 2014 — 9:13 PM
sporkdelis says:
I definitely want to join that, because as someone who has read Narbonic I know that the world is secretly run by a shadowy organization made up of and run entirely by guys named Dave.
That’s a real thing, right?
September 23, 2014 — 12:31 PM
Dave Higgins says:
No. There is no Davist Conspiracy.
I was not here. I did not post this.
September 23, 2014 — 12:53 PM
Nikkiwi says:
No, they’re actually all called Nick (And we allow female Nic’s too – equal opportunity and all that).
Welcome to the Nictatorship….
September 23, 2014 — 3:55 PM
Lynne Cantwell says:
YARNPUNK is *MINE*!!! Muahahaha!!!
September 23, 2014 — 10:35 AM
UrsulaV says:
Damnit! I just came here to see if I could stake out yarnpunk! *curses*
September 23, 2014 — 9:01 PM
Tony Payson says:
……dangit…..
October 3, 2014 — 1:54 PM
Brian says:
This gave me all the feels. I laughed, I cried, I stabbed someone with a grenade/spork combo. Now I will return to the catpee smells of my writing cave.
September 23, 2014 — 10:45 AM
squee1313 says:
Sarcasm much? Somebody having a pigeon hole day? 😉 But, oh god, what if this is all true? Nooooo……
September 23, 2014 — 10:53 AM
Sarah_Madison says:
OMG, I feel so much better now. Because, though sadly I do write from inside a house that smells of cat pee (I have CATS, okay??), I can’t seem to stick to one genre. Now I know that this is wrong, wrong, wrong and that someone will come to my door soon and take away my Real Author Badge and cut off all my fingers. I am now prepared to open the door with a smile and invite the Branding Police into my home, where I can eat their faces. Hey, it will save on the grocery bills this month.
September 23, 2014 — 10:55 AM
smithster says:
PS: my favorite author profile mugshot was the prison one. Best I can manage is a look of vague terror (eyes bugging as the flash goes off). I’m tempted to put one of my gamer avatars up there instead, only then nobody who plays any other game could read my stuff and retain street cred. There would be flamewars.
::thinks:: but flamewars are part of SEO these days. Hmm. ::goes off to spark trouble on the interwebs::
September 23, 2014 — 11:00 AM
smithster says:
…crap, that wasn’t supposed to be a reply lol. I failed at the interwebs, oh noes!
September 23, 2014 — 11:01 AM
Sarah_Madison says:
That’s okay, I realized that as I sniggered helplessly. Something I’d do myself.
September 23, 2014 — 11:39 AM
Mark Matthews says:
You are so GOD-DAMN sexy when you are sarcastic and snarky. I loved this, and everytime I see the overdone, rehashed, generic, how to market your book tweets, I will reply with this link. And they shall think you are sexy too, and you shall have a new brand.
September 23, 2014 — 11:02 AM
smithster says:
coz what he means is you’re not currently branded under #sexy
he said it. ijs.
September 23, 2014 — 11:04 AM
M T McGuire says:
The photos made me laugh a lot, especially the last one. Mwah hahahargh! I write fantasy AND science fiction… lorks a lordy I’m screwed.
Cheers
MTM
September 23, 2014 — 11:07 AM
physicsjenn says:
Oh man, this just reminds me of “We got both kinds of music here: country AND western.”
September 23, 2014 — 12:40 PM
M T McGuire says:
Mwahahahaargh snortle. Brilliant. I hadn’t thought of that. I was just trying to sound silly. 🙂
Cheers
MTM
September 23, 2014 — 4:17 PM
Michael Robinson says:
Anaerobic organisms are my demographic.
September 23, 2014 — 11:08 AM
Ruth Dupré says:
Oh dear, I thought you wrote “Anaerobic orgasms…”
September 23, 2014 — 7:59 PM
Drew Llew says:
Oh that was fun. Nice lunchtime respite from the tedium of the treadmill.
September 23, 2014 — 11:14 AM
Kaylin (@theleastshrew) says:
Do you really think that in the year 2014 horse porn is an unexplored frontier?
September 23, 2014 — 11:20 AM
Rachel Aukes says:
YA tentacle westerns is mine, all mine…
September 23, 2014 — 11:31 AM
Jim Heskett says:
Best advice ever. I just reserved http://www.YarnPunkDinosaurErotica.com
September 23, 2014 — 11:34 AM
Tina Gabrielle says:
This was great. I laughed off my chair. An yes, yarnpunk is perfect. Thanks for this!
September 23, 2014 — 11:37 AM
Jamie says:
This was terrifying. I bet somebody’s already working the coveted horse porn niche, though.
September 23, 2014 — 11:42 AM
Juli says:
When I first started reading this, I found myself getting all he’t up, all “this flies in the face of everything you ever say!”-ish. Before too long (but it did take too long) I realized the trut’. I am blaming this farting-brain-syndrome on not having had my coffee yet. At any rate, this made me laugh, and think, and I’m starting my ‘Epic Shenanigans’ Branding Campaign as soon as I’m done typing this.
September 23, 2014 — 11:45 AM
Priscilla says:
I’m kinda sleepy, so for a second there I was really worried, like WHAT HAPPENED TO CHUCK??? Then I got it 😛
I would totally love a Lovecraftian middle-grade romance, though.
September 23, 2014 — 11:46 AM
Doug Daniel says:
This explains why I have failed. I understand now. But I am limited and fearful, and must write only what I have in me….
September 23, 2014 — 12:03 PM
sherylnantus says:
*lays claim to geriatric BDSM space opera*
What? I’m halfway there with what I write now…
*giggles*
But seriously – great post. I flinch when I see new authors being told they have to CHOOSE NOW OR DIE on the vine as an unbranded author… then see them toss money at various peeps to promote their “brand”. 😛
September 23, 2014 — 12:07 PM
David says:
Sorry, Geriatric BDSM Space Opera is already taken. Reference Scalzi’s Old Man’s War novels.
September 24, 2014 — 12:57 PM
secretsofsuccessfulwomen says:
This relaxed the hell out of me. And I’m actually Amy, not “secrets of successful women” but I help my 92 year old mother with her branding (lol) and…I’m too lazy to log out of her account!
September 23, 2014 — 12:28 PM
mmschill says:
I love how this offended like 50% of the indie authors I know. Please, keep writing blogs like this…its makes me feel a little better about being a complete mess, locked in my house, working.
September 23, 2014 — 12:42 PM
terribleminds says:
Haha, did it really? Dang, it’s just meant to be funny.
September 23, 2014 — 1:20 PM
Sia Marion says:
This should come with a warning: NOT TO BE READ IF ALONE IN PUBLIC PLACE! Just FYI, I thought the fourth pic. looked more like an evil terrorist gloating over the many bombs he had strapped to his body and how, when he pulled the first grenade pin, they would go off in a carefully synchronized pattern that had been engineered to create the most damage and wreak the most vengeance. But, since I don’t write war novels, I could be wrong (lol).
September 23, 2014 — 12:42 PM
Richard says:
I’ve been smelling pee all day, wherever I go there is that smell again, so this explains it.
No, seriously, I have.
September 23, 2014 — 1:03 PM
Melissa Clare says:
I was working as a new intern at a local paper, sitting at my desk and thinking “this room smells like dog shit”. Then I was finished my shift, got in my car, drove away… realized, “MY CAR smells like dog shit!” It was my boots. Big wad of dog dookie. I can only imagine that the pro journalists were glad when I left that day.
Check your shoes. Or your pants…
September 23, 2014 — 1:30 PM
Pamela says:
“hashtag” “Wild horses branded by nature are like every sunset branded by its own colors. There are no two alike. Just ask my Muse. Follow me by 10,000 please! lol Enjoyed your article Chuck?. 🙂 Oh and thank you Hope Clark for sharing this on Facebook. 🙂
September 23, 2014 — 1:13 PM
angel011 says:
*claims* Cats, cats, cats!
September 23, 2014 — 1:38 PM
Rachel Rush says:
Dammit, I wanted that one!
My house may or may not smell like cat pee. I have cats, cats, cats in my house, and replacing the carpet is not yet in my budget. But I also write, so…maybe I’m the source of the cat pee smell? Maybe replacing the carpet won’t help at all? *ponders new excuse for not replacing the carpet just yet*
September 24, 2014 — 10:01 AM
Robert Misner (@Wordsicle) says:
This thing is art. Is it alright if I call dibs on yarnpunk?
September 23, 2014 — 1:41 PM
Katherine Hajer says:
It’s already taken. In all seriousness, it was taken over a year ago (not making that up!).
September 25, 2014 — 3:00 PM
Terri says:
*looks up from hammering planks onto my platform*
Like an Onion article, you have to think for a second . . . Is The Chuck serious or is he funning me?
I am opting for YA Legal Thriller as my sacred genre. All of the characters will be higher-school interns at the police and prosecutors’ office who solve cases in between staple-pulling and filing.
0.o
Be right back . . .
The SEO one cracked me up because when I was prepping my novel for pre-order, I didn’t know what to put in the meta data that wasn’t already in the blurb. So, I tossed in stuff like motorcycles, muscle cars, shotguns, smuggling.
The list of “Those who viewed this also viewed . . . ” was highly entertaining. I guess I should put more than 45 seconds into that.
Back to hammering on my platform. No really. I’m building a deck. A place to drink writers’ tears cocktails and curse the vagaries of taste and my disdain for “the market.”
Terri
September 23, 2014 — 2:13 PM
susielindau says:
After writing over 350 posts, I should pay more attention to my SEOs! Thankfully, my daughter is working professionally with Google Analytics. I plan to bribe her into helping me. Twenty-year-olds always need money.
You should have used the image I made for you! Now that’s statement. Decapitated head being flown across the moon by a crow. It says it all.
September 23, 2014 — 2:50 PM
Russ Linton says:
Sadly, I’m almost positive Horse Porn has been claimed. I don’t want to go a check though so I’ll give that one to you.
September 23, 2014 — 3:51 PM
Badger says:
Y’all, there are people writing BIGFOOT PORN. Horse porn is tame.
September 23, 2014 — 5:17 PM
Thomas Weaver says:
I’m claiming quiltpunk as my subgenre. It’s kinda like yarnpunk, except it has (entirely futuristic, damnit!) airships, whereas yarnpunk which tends to be set on planets that don’t have atmospheres and thus cannot have airships of any sort.
September 23, 2014 — 4:00 PM
Thomas Weaver says:
(…and I really ought to know better than to change a sentence halfway after I type it. *sigh* Correction: “…whereas yarnpunk tends to have…”)
September 23, 2014 — 4:01 PM
Erika Mitchell says:
This was hilarious, thanks for the chuckle!
September 23, 2014 — 7:27 PM
Jane Bryony Rawson says:
Sorry, I’ve already got Epic Shenanigans sewn up, so LOOK ELSEWHERE for your genre niche if you don’t mind.
September 23, 2014 — 9:08 PM
Wendy Christopher says:
You can’t do that – ‘cos epic Shenanigans is not a genre IT’S MY LIFE 😉
September 24, 2014 — 7:08 AM
Jane Bryony Rawson says:
damn.
September 24, 2014 — 10:05 PM
nicolaeser says:
Your marketing team has failed. The genre ‘Horse porn’ is both valid and thriving with such classics as, All the pretty horses, Black Beauty – (Once you go black … )
September 23, 2014 — 11:24 PM
Ed says:
The very thought that there is a niche for horse porn worries me greatly, even more so, that as you mentioned it does this mean you actually considered it as a literary form???? You are a strange man Mr Wendig = )
September 24, 2014 — 2:32 AM
Brida Anderson says:
I was reading open-mouthed with bewilderment till “yarnpunk”, then sighed with relief that you’re not serious. I guess there are too many serious “instructions” for authors that run the same way, it numbs the mind 🙂 (And I’d love an Apple Amish barn event 😉 Calling dibs on Elfish yarnpunk — grannies who fall in love with cyborg-elves while they’re knitting … 😉
September 24, 2014 — 2:55 AM
springinkerl says:
I’m afraid if people took this seriously and did exactly what you say, they would have a pretty darn solid marketing strategy. That’s scary.
September 24, 2014 — 5:50 AM
Rachel Nichols says:
Yes, and if they took your advice about kidnapping readers and taking them to a desert island you would have the makings of a popular prime-time reality show! That’s even scarier.
October 27, 2016 — 2:54 PM
Robert Mitchell says:
F-ing hilarious! Reminds of the TV ad for that auto/motorcycle school called UTI, which according to them stands for “Universal Technical Institute” but which everybody knows actually stands for “Urinary Tract Infection.” I just blogged about how the harder you try to get everyone to like you the more people can’t stand you. Chuck must’ve been tapping into the white noise from the same inter-dimensional alien puzzlebox.
September 24, 2014 — 6:00 AM
Robert S. Eilers says:
That marketing guy at the writer’s conference had it all wrong, this advice makes way more sense than the dribble he was spewing at us. Thanks for the awesome tips. I’m going to go start implementing them now. Heck, I already have the black and white author photo done. Sweet, I’m that much closer to success. I wonder if amoeba porn is taken yet??????
September 24, 2014 — 6:19 AM
Wendy Christopher says:
Waaaaaahh, I am failing as an author! I have failed in the past, I’m failing right now and I am doomed to fail in the future, at every single point on this…
Oh wait – hang on. Maybe I can lure some cats into my house and make them pee on things…
Yaaay – author-y stardom, here I come! *goes out to bulk-buy tins of tuna*
Thanks for the chuckles, Chuck. I’ll be saving this list for those moments when I feel like writing my novel is getting in the way of me being an author. 🙂
September 24, 2014 — 7:13 AM
percykerry923 says:
My brand will be ‘brooding, reticent and possibly disturbed crime author who most of the time thinks of newer, gorier ways to murder people in her books and stirs up serial killers with the most demented minds. Don’t mess with her or she might just put you in a book and bump you off’ :D.
Muchos Gracias for this brilliant, laugh-worthy post, Chuck. XOXO
September 25, 2014 — 8:45 AM
Matthew Graybosch says:
What, I can’t just write more books and publish them? Screw all this. I don’t get paid enough for this shit.
September 25, 2014 — 10:44 AM
janinmi says:
::plops melon-sized, wrinkly grey mass on steel table:: This is your brain.
::sets fire to brain:: This is your brain on Chuck. Any questions?
::small, furry quadriped scurries off into shadows::
heehee
September 25, 2014 — 1:28 PM
Angelo Marcos says:
“Your readers, all twelve of them…”
Stop looking at my sales reports!
September 26, 2014 — 4:50 AM
Rachel says:
Lovecraftian middle-grade romance actually sounds neat. :3
September 28, 2014 — 10:39 AM
Jennifer Joseph says:
hashtag, awesome.
September 30, 2014 — 9:03 AM