Posts Tagged ‘networking’

Temple Grandin Recommends The Watchman’s Rattle

Monday, August 30th, 2010

imgres-6By Fauzia Burke

On Sunday, August 29th, an HBO movie on Temple Grandin’s life won 5 Emmy Awards. What an exciting night for her and everyone involved in the project! If you have never read anything by Grandin, I would recommend it highly. Full disclosure, I did promote one of her books called Animals in Translations, which changed in many ways how I think and relate to animals.

A few days ago I read something else Grandin has written. She wrote a foreword to a new book due to be published in October. It is a fascinating book and one that addresses issues close to all our hearts. Why can’t we solve our problems anymore? Why do threats such as the Gulf oil spill, worldwide recession, global warming, terrorism, and pandemic viruses suddenly seem unstoppable? These are the questions Rebecca Costa confronts – and offers a solution to – in her widely anticipated, game-changing book, The Watchman’s Rattle.

Costa pulls headlines from today’s news to show how accelerating complexity quickly outpaces the rate at which the human brain can evolve new capabilities to manage it. With compelling evidence based upon research into the rise and fall of the Mayan, Khmer and Roman empires, Costa shows how complexity causes a civilization to quick-fix problems by focusing on mitigations — instead of finding permanent solutions — which leads to frightening long-term consequences. Eventually, a society’s ability to solve its most threatening problems becomes gridlocked, progress slows, and collapse ensues.

With that said, I will turn the forum over to Temple Grandin. Hope you find her comments, responses and observations as interesting as I do.

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“Critical Thinking is Required to Solve Problems Instead of Blind Ideology

By Temple Grandin

One idea in this book that I could relate to was the disturbing fact that when the Mayan civilization faced mounting problems with drought and food shortages, they stopped thinking in a rational manner. The government became gridlocked and they lost the ability to find real solutions to their problems. When the problems with food shortages became more, and more difficult, fighting increased. They stopped working on finding better ways to grow food and conserve water.

Today our government is gridlocked. When I was a child in the 1950’s and 1960’s, the government actually got useful and exciting things done. The Republicans built the interstate highway system and the Democrats went to the moon. These projects would never make it through the maze of regulations that we have today. Another important idea in this book is the observation that too often people campaign and protest earnestly and vigorously either for or against something, but they often have no concrete solutions. In some cases, the people who present real solutions are attacked.”

You can read the rest of Grandin’s essay on Rebecca Costa’s website where you can also see some interesting videos on complexity, evolution, gridlock and brain research.

I’ll Take a Community with That Book, Please!

Friday, August 27th, 2010

By Fauzia Burke

With today’s search empowered readers, do we need to market and publish books differently? Does general publishing makes sense in an age of Google searches, micro communities and niche marketing?

Today’s readers are tech savvy and resourceful. They know how to get the information they need and have higher expectations from publishers and authors. They don’t just expect a book, they expect a community with their book.

I often hear publishers say that there are “very few brands in book publishing.” But to thrive in today’s competitive, niche markets, perhaps brands are exactly what we need. What readers choose to read is personal and an extension of who they are. Shouldn’t their book choices be supported by a publisher, a brand that is invested in their interests?

Many small publishing companies have done an enviable job of branding themselves and building reader communities around their books. Take O’Reilly, TOR and Hay House. You may not read their books, but you know what they publish. Their communities trust them. People who share their point-of-view flock to their lists. These companies publish for a niche community, and are trusted members of their community. They provide extra resources, and often their authors are members of the community itself. TOR has even launched a bookstore to meet their readers’ needs. These publishers show passion for their books and an understanding of their readers, and as such their readers reward them with loyalty.

Publishing books for the community.

Besides reader loyalty, publishing for micro communities may have other long-term benefits as well. For example, the focus would help publishers save money on marketing. Marketing through online communities is less expensive and much more powerful than trying to reach the general public and hoping to find the right match. The publisher’s Web site wouldn’t have to cater to a wide variety of people, it would be designed to serve the needs of a small group. Instead of expensive advertising, they could announce the book to the community that has already bought into their brand. Publishers and authors could enlist the support of the community to spread the word (which will always be the most efficient method for marketing books.) The logo on the book spine would mean the readers have a promise that the book is worth reading. The readers would know that the publisher looked at over a thousand manuscripts all on the same topic and is offering them the very best.

So are large, general publishers at a disadvantage with today’s search-empowered, community oriented readers? I think so. General trade publishing is for everyone, yet there is no “everyone” out there.  Readers are part of micro communities. They want good books, and they need publishers who will support their interests and passions.

The bottom line is that publishers and authors need to evolve their marketing and publishing strategies to accommodate for a new kind of reader. A reader whose expectations demand more interaction and community. A reader whose loyalty you can have once you have earned it. A reader who wants more than a 6 week marketing campaign so you can sell a book. This new reader requires an investment of months and years.

Is that too much to expect? Perhaps. But this is your new reader, and she will stay with you if you stay with her.

It’s Sink or Swim for Content on the Internet

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

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By Ken Ishii

What a waste it would be to labor hours over an article only to have it become some nameless alga castaway in an ocean of facts and fiction on the Internet.  Smart companies, entrepreneurs, scholars, bloggers and more take advantage of SEO tools to help get noticed online.  What’s SEO? It stands for Search Engine Optimization, which translates to getting your stuff to appear on search engines ahead of other content that’s swimming around.  The point?  Well, we’ve all marveled at Google’s ability to dispense search results in numbers topping the human population, but even those of us without ADD could barely stand to click through more than five pages of web links.  This is exactly what makes the first page of a Google search (especially) the “Beverly Hills” of online real estate.

There are a number of ways of making it to the top with scores of books written on the topic, but an easy and effective way to start is by submitting entries to article archive sites for review. Upon approval, these sites will syndicate your work to people specifically looking for what you have written. Matching interests in content with those seeking them works a lot like a dating service does minus dinner and a movie.  You would expect these services to be everywhere and you would be correct, but the effectiveness of each service varies by those same numbers as well.  The FSB favorite at the moment is an article archive site called Ezine Articles.  The draw is in their pull.  Hundreds of thousands of daily visitors to Ezine’s site means lots of eyeballs on your articles and if you include their newsletter audience, the compounded views grow exponentially into the millions making you feel like the entire world is now staring at you.  It’s a good thing though because in no time you’ll be nicely seated overlooking the muddled waters of the web from your search page penthouse on the hill.

Take a look at Fauzia’s article submissions on Ezine for additional tips and advice on web publicity for book authors.

Hot August in Office

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

Sexy Book of Sexy Sex by Kristen Schaal and Rich Blomquist The Smart Swarm by Peter Miller Pretty Little Things by Jilliane Hoffman

By Ken Ishii

August is one of our busiest months at FSB. We’re working on so many awesome fall books. Current projects include, Pretty Little Things by Jilliane Hoffman, The Sexy Book of Sexy Sex by Kristen Schaal and Rich Blomquist and Peter Miller’s The Smart Swarm among others. Some hits came in recently and we are very proud of our authors: Peter Miller on CNN, Evan Marshall and Martha Jewett on Psychology Today, Dora Calott Wang on The Huffington Post.

At FSB, we believe that promoting our fine authors on the Web is a dream job. Together we create the author’s brand and build and maintain their online reputation through strong relationships grounded by meaningful interactions with the most influential social media communities around. If you need tips for building your reputation online, you can read Fauzia’s article on The Huffington Post, Five Easy Ways To Build Your Digital Reputation.