How Tom Sawyer invented Web 2.0
[posted by Knowlton Thomas on July 6, 2011, courtesy of techvibes.com—who, incidentally, likely felt the same way as me when he read this post by Tom Kuntz in the NY Times from 2007.]
How Tom Sawyer invented Web 2.0
[posted by Knowlton Thomas on July 6, 2011, courtesy of techvibes.com—who, incidentally, likely felt the same way as me when he read this post by Tom Kuntz in the NY Times from 2007.]
Filed under Social Media, world news
Every day I play marketer and strategist for several organizations. I navigate the social playgrounds and promote their brands through conversation management and thought leadership. My technical savvy and chatty nature makes it easy for me to multi-task the different brands and industry audiences—creating ripples of awareness that become organic. It also helps that I have more business experience than someone with my youthful complexion should be able to advertise. Goods and services are easy. There’s usually a need the brand is managing, and I assist in the strategic mapping of that need with the social brand.
Self-marketing is a little trickier. Especially when that “self” is me. I find that marketing a novel does not fit neatly into a good or service. It belongs in entertainment—technically a service, although the novel itself is a “good,” which arguably may not be a need—or even a good “good.”
I’ve opted to create as many ripples of awareness as I can, and allow the organic nature of the industry to do the rest. But where to start the ripples? Ah, that is the question. I’m not certain that there is any one “right” answer. I’ve selected a few dominant sites to become active in, I’ve gifted book bloggers across the globe with copies, I’m getting out in the public locally, I’m building the most heart-stopping, pulse-pounding video book trailer of all time, and I’m committed to author interviews with various book sites. After that, it’s up to all of you—the readers.
To begin with, I’ve had an excerpt of my novel republished at indiesnippets.com. And my first author interview is posted on Peace Love Books—which you can find here. I’d like to be able to say that I lost my interview virginity to PLB, however, there was this incident when I was a kid at Safety Patrol camp (don’t judge me) that involved a locked school bus and a smoke bomb.
I hope I’ve started enough ripples. It’s a very big pond.
~uberscribbler
Filed under fiction, in a celandine world