Share like it matters

I would like to ask for your help today. Can you share your reaction to the possible title of my next book. Here it is:

Share Like it Matters.

Please email me directly (dan@wegrowmedia.com) or comment below to give me your gut reaction, tell me if you love it, hate it, where it is confusing, or bad, or great, or whatever. If you need more context, here are some possible subtitles I am playing with or others have suggested:

  • Share Like it Matters: Why Sharing Your Writing and Art is an Essential Part of the Creative Process
  • Share Like it Matters: Use Human-Centered Marketing to Connect Your Writing and Art To Those Who Will Love It
  • Share Like it Matters: How Writers and Creators Can Use the Human-Centered Marketing System to EnsureTheir Work is Seen

All of this is a big work in progress, so any feedback is useful. If you want to know more about the title and what it represents, keep reading…

Why “Share Like it Matters”?

The phrase, “Share Like it Matters” was originally a chapter title in an early draft for my new book. When my friend Jennie Nash saw it, she flagged it as a possible title for the entirety of the book. She’s an amazing book coach and basically a genius, so her suggestion quickly turned into action for me. I have a long list of possible titles, but this one kept resurfacing. It seemed to capture the narrative crux of the book.

The title reflects something I worry about: how will writers and artists ensure their work truly connects with someone in a meaningful way? Writers create because they are driven to, there is a message or story that they need to get out there. I love — LOVE — working with writers because they create for the best reasons: they believe in their work fully. This is the gift I receive in working with writers, every single person I work with is all-in with their creative work.

But…

I see too many writers and creators share their work as though it doesn’t matter. It pains me to even write that. Instead they:

  • Share too late. They justify that they should wait until their book is ready to be published to begin thinking of sharing. By then, it is often too late to develop the communication and trust you need to really give your book the shot it deserves.
  • Start at the wrong place. Instead of really defining their messaging, their identity, understanding their ideal reader, researching the marketplace, and creating a cohesive strategy, they instead blanket their book promotions on social media. They share the same message again and again, instead of looking for opportunities to truly connect with readers. What often happens is they find that few people engage, and they conclude, ‘Well, I guess I’m just not good at marketing. Oh well.” And they give up.
  • Focus on the wrong goals. They measure how many followers they have, how many subscribers they get, and then when they don’t see much growth, they move to a different social network or stop sharing their newsletter. It’s a process where they constantly feel bad about themselves, and hop from tactic to tactic with no real overarching strategy.
  • Share the bare minimum. They are so worried about overdoing it that they underdo it. They barely share, and when they do, they start by apologizing. So they may send a single email to those they know about their book and it will begin, “Hi everyone. This is the obligatory email I have to send to ask you to buy the book. Sorry for bothering you, but I was told I needed to do this.”
  • Half bake it. They copy a copy of a copy of a strategy that another author used, and then just do 1/4 of what that person did.
  • Make the wrong assumptions about what will work. I hear this all the time: “Everyone hates newsletters,” “Social media is dead,” “People are sick and tired of Zoom,” “Bookstore events don’t sell books,” “Aren’t podcasts over?” and so on. Each one makes an assumption and ends with the conclusion that it’s not worth it to bother trying.
  • Hope someone else shares their writing and promotes their work for them. They abdicate this responsibility with the hopes that it simply lets them off the hook. Then they are shocked that others don’t share their work with the energy that the author hoped for.

The result? Their writing and art languishes. It doesn’t get shared, doesn’t get read. It doesn’t live in the mind of a reader. And the writer feels disappointed. In that process, their voice grows even quieter.

But what if you shared your writing with the same passion by which you created it? What if you shared with verve and vigor? Not because you want to be self-promotional, but because you know that what you create can truly change someone’s life for the better?

What if you shared like it mattered?

Writing is Complete When it is Shared

The book I’m writing presents this idea that what we create is complete when it connects with someone. So the idea behind the title is to not avoid sharing because one is scared of it, but to embrace it because it does this beautiful thing of connecting people to ideas and stories.

Too often, writers dismiss the sharing part. Possibly because they don’t feel they know how to do it well. Possibly because they don’t want to look like they are trying to hard. No one wants to be “that person” who is always self-promoting and annoying others. Remember Ned Ryerson from the movie Groundhog Day who is constantly trying to sell everyone insurance. This is what writers fear becoming if they share their work:

Ned Ryerson in Groundhog Day.

 

I grew up as the art kid. I started going to art lessons when I was 5, in the basement of Ms. Flannigan’s house. There on the cement block walls were murals she had painted with her students. It was an average basement of a house built around 1970, with one long table for her students, and an area for art supplies. 
There I painted each week.

As I grew older, I expanded into other art forms: illustration, photography, poetry, pop up books, sculpture, and yes, writing writing writing.

My favorite class in high school was Creative Writing with Ms. Adams, where I constantly overdid it with my projects. When we were assigned to create a small “book” of writing, most students just stapled together sheets of paper. But I went to a friend’s house who had tools, and I created a spine out of wood, pounded out a sheet metal cover, with the book opening via hinges I bought at the hardware store.

Yes, I was a dramatic teenager. But I loved creating.

Throughout the years I have created countless artistic and writing projects. Along the way, I was surrounded by creators: dancers, photographers, actors, writers, visual artists, and the like. If there was an “artsy weirdo” who came across my path, I was going to befriend them. Of course, for the past 12 years, I have worked with writers full-time, helping thousands of them share their work.

What I have found in my experiences is that magic happens when someone shares their creative work and it truly connects with someone. It is something beyond what the writer or artist could have ever created on their own. It is a co-creation of sorts. The writer intended one thing, and the reader brought their entire life experience to it. The result… magic.

That is why I believe in sharing.

As someone who grew up as an artist, who feels immersed every day in the arts, I genuinely believe that marketing and sharing are a creative process.

It could be that Share Like it Matters isn’t the right title for this book. But that is the story behind it. Your feedback will help me determine what happens next. Please reply back and share your thoughts on the title!

Thanks.
-Dan

P.S.: Last week I shared an updated version of my Creative Success Pyramid, which is the system I use to help writers get clarity in their work, develop an audience, and launch their work in a meaningful way. You can download the PDF here, and watch the video replay of last week’s workshop here.

Case study: How an Author Turned a Newsletter Into Big Publicity

Today I want to share a case study of how an author I’ve been working with turned an issue of her newsletter into writing an essay for The Atlantic and an appearance on CNN, all within 2 weeks.

Melinda Wenner Moyer is a science journalist and author of the book How to Raise Kids Who Aren’t Assholes. She has been a client of mine for awhile, and one of the things we have been working on are strategies to not just grow her audience, but engage with them as a community. To do so, she has been doubling-down on her Instagram presence and her email newsletter. Again and again, we have been developing ways to not just share content, but create a sense of connection with her audience that leads to meaningful engagement and word of mouth marketing.

Overall, she’s had an incredible year, growing her Instagram following by more than 65% year over year. But that’s the story for another case study. Today, I want to share what she did to turn an email newsletter that she wrote and published in less than an hour, into massive publicity. Let’s dig in…

It Started With a Single Email Newsletter

A little more than a year ago, Melinda created her email newsletter. She started bi-weekly, but then moved it to weekly. As any longtime readers know, I’m a huge fan of weekly newsletters.

As a science journalist, Melinda often identifies a topic to research, or is assigned one by an editor. Her reporting is based on extensive interviews with experts, and she translates it for a broader audience of parents.

But for the first newsletter of 2022, Melinda did something different. She sat down to write and started with: “If you’re anything like me, you’re losing your mind…”

She was reflecting on her own experience of starting the year amidst a new wave in the pandemic, and that of the many parents and experts she spoke with. This newsletter shared her personal experience in a very honest way. The email included phrases such as:

“I’m having an especially hard time with the cognitive dissonance…”

“This is the other thing that’s putting me on edge…”

And she shared details of what she and her family were going through at the moment. It was raw and honest. She described it as more of a rant, and explained how she wrote it quickly in less than an hour.

This is the kind of authenticity and honesty that tends to truly engage people online, when they feel as though they are truly connecting with you as a human being, not playing some small part in a “content strategy” that someone devised to optimized for social media likes.

The response was immediate — loads of emails back from her readers. When she posted an excerpt of it in her Instagram feed, it received 10 times the level of engagement as her other posts.

I often talk about focusing on every individual person you can engage with, and not worry about an “audience.” What happened next illustrates why…

Every Reader Counts

So it turns out that one of her readers is an editor at The Atlantic. Melinda had two essays run in that publication in the past four years, but for different editors. This editor immediately asked if she would write a piece for them based on this newsletter.

In less than a week she wrote it and it was published. It immediately became one of their most shared articles, filling Melinda’s inbox with messages, and her Instagram with DMs.

When she shared it on Instagram, her online engagement was (again) 10x what it would be for a typical post.

Be Prepared for Opportunity

A couple days later, she got an email from a producer at CNN, they wanted to invite her to the studio to do a segment on the topic of the essay. CNN quickly switched the appearance to being through Zoom instead of in-person.

Because of her Instagram feed and the promotion she did for her book, Melinda was well set up to appear on video. Not just having her technical system down, but being super comfortable knowing how to talk about her work in a manner that was professional, yet engaging.

So there she was on CNN, with her bed in the background, talking about the topic that started as a quick rant in a newsletter and snowballed from there.

Other national newspaper editors have reached out to her as well, interested in her writing for them too.

Bring Your People Together

Melinda didn’t stop there. The outreach to her piece was so massive that she decided to hold an event on Saturday evening for her readers. This would be a chance for parents to come together to share, vent, feel heard, and know that they are not alone in their challenges.

Even though The Atlantic and CNN offered her a greater breath of audience, Melinda didn’t stop showing up to engage deeply with her core community. Dozens of people joined and Melinda engaged with every single person. It was such a meaningful experience, that she is doing another event.

Outcomes That Matter

In working with writers full-time for 12 years, I have long since learned that publicity can be complicated. I’ve spoken to plenty of authors who had the media appearance of their dreams — having their book featured on the Today Show or other national media, only to see zero bump in their sales numbers, and no growth in their followers.

But the strategy that Melinda has been taking is different. Let’s talk about the outcomes of this entire experience as it relates to some of her goals as an author:

  • She saw 1.5% growth in her Instagram followers and free newsletter subscribers during this timeframe. But, she saw 10% growth in her paid subscribers, which is huge!
  • New professional connections were created with editors and producers that could lead to other assignments or appearances later on.
  • Deeper reader connections were forged — those who don’t just know her as the author of a book, but someone who brings people together and truly sees them as a reader.
  • She created a new type of event that she can now use with her audience down the road.
  • Of course, this entire experience gave her lots of material to share about on social media.
  • It adds to her already impressive list of credentials. She is hired for speaking events too, and these credentials could increase the chance that someone becomes aware of her work, or hires her.

What Melinda achieved here is why I believe writers need a system in how they establish their identity, find their readers, and launch and promote their books. What she did here follows a progression and a strategy. If you want to explore how we can work together for your goals as a writer, take a look at my process and reach out.

And you can find out more on Melinda — her book, newsletter, Instagram, speaking, and more — on her website.

Thanks!
-Dan

How I Work With Writers (Podcast)

This is my 12th year of working full-time with writers and creators. Each day, I get to wake up and spend time with people who write because they choose to, create what speaks to their heart, and share what makes people’s lives better. Every day is a gift. Today, I want to talk about how I work with writers, and give you a behind the scenes look at the process.

You can listen to the podcast by clicking ‘play’ below, or in the following places:

You can watch the podcast here:

How I work with writers

This is my 12th year of working full-time with writers and creators. Each day, I get to wake up and spend time with people who write because they choose to, create what speaks to their heart, and share what makes people’s lives better. Every day is a gift.

Today, I want to talk about how I work with writers, and give you a behind the scenes look at the process.

Who I Work With

It’s most common for someone to reach out to me when:

  • They want to ensure they give their book the best possible chance to reach readers.
  • They don’t want to struggle alone through a hodge-podge list of ideas on how to share their writing. They want a strategy and a collaborator.
  • They want their writing to truly connect with readers, and have a positive impact on their lives. They aren’t looking for hollow vanity metrics.

I work with a wide range of writers. Each week I’m working with those who are pursing various publishing paths: traditional, hybrid, indie, and those who are not yet sure. I work with writers who are at different points on that path: still writing the book, looking for an agent, looking for a publisher, pre-book launch, book launch, and months/years after book launch. These people write fiction, memoir, nonfiction, poetry, essays, and so much else. I’ve worked with authors in seemingly every genre.

Does this sound too broad? Well, I grew up as the art kid. My life has been surrounded by creators. Even at home, my wife is an amazing artist. I believe that working across all areas of writing makes me better at helping each individual writer. There are ideas I will see in one area that can be applied to another. What I care most about is that the writer strongly believes in what they write. That is what lights me up, and why I love — LOVE — working with writers.

I tend to work with people as early as possible in their process. Why? Because to establish your platform, find your ideal readers, and ensure your work reaches them takes time. What we work on can deliver better results if you set the foundation right, then focus on effective communication, and developing trusting relationships around your creative work.

What I Do

I help writers develop their author platforms, launch their books, and create marketing strategies that work. I work collaboratively with writers, meaning that I’m in there doing the work with them. We work through my system together, and customize the strategy for each individual author.

So on a day to day basis, that can have me:

  • Doing research to identify comparable authors
  • Identifying which podcasts that author can pitch to become a guest
  • Editing the author’s bio
  • Developing the marketing section for a book proposal
  • Creating a content strategy for a newsletter
  • Digging into the backend of WordPress or Substack or Twitter ads a wide array of tools for the writer
  • … and so much else.

Having worked with thousands of writers, I specialize in developing clear strategies and giving writers a step-by-step process.

How I Work

So how do I collaborate with a writer to make it all happen? Several ways:

 

The first is that they receive access to my 15+ tab spreadsheet that outlines key aspects of my system. This is a shared document that we will be working in together. Step-by-step, we move through it, with clear instructions that lead to a solid game plan. This is a key deliverable that the writer gets to keep and use long after we stop working together. It is a living document that will comprise their messaging, audience research, marketing plans, book launch timeline, and so much else. By the time we are done, this document is packed with total clarity about how to reach their audience, and also streamlined so they know exactly what to work on, and when.

We have phone calls every other week, which are usually an hour long. I come in with an agenda, but we also talk about any questions or topics the author wants to dig into. So, even if we are working on podcast pitching and newsletters, if they have a question about TikTok or their book proposal or social media ads or anything — we dive into it.

Each call ends with a clear set of tasks that we will be working on. Sometimes they are shared tasks, other times tasks for just the author, other times tasks for me. The writer is never guessing what to be working on or where we are in the process.

Between calls, we are checking in via email. Writers have unlimited access to me via email. This is where we can share progress, get direction, ask for help, or explore new areas.

I will often reply back to an email with a video. Here the writer can see me work through problems, learn exactly how to do things by seeing and hearing me do it, and experience the collaboration in a new way.

I have honed this system over the course of 12 years. What it is optimized for is getting the work done, and feeling a sense of calm and clarity along the way. This, as opposed to what I want to avoid: just dumping information on a writer as many courses do, leaving them drowning in ideas that they don’t know how to execute. In working together, we get the work done and level up their career.

My Studio

I work out of a private studio here in New Jersey. I’ve ensured the place is two things: incredibly practical, and filled with beautiful things. Namely: books and typewriters. Here I am in the studio:

Dan Blank

 

I have a pretty advanced technical setup so that I can easily create videos for the writers I work with, showing them exactly how to create marketing campaigns, newsletters, use social media, and so much else. They can see me, my screen, and anything else that is needed to illustrate how to get it done. Here is a behind the scenes photo you don’t often see:

Studio

 

What is in the photo:

  1. Computer with multiple redundant backups. If the computer suddenly dies, I’ll be back up and running within minutes. If a tornado destroys the studio, I’ll be back up and running in 15 minutes.
  2. Coffee. I mean, is there a more essential ingredient to creativity?
  3. Video and audio controller.
  4. Teleprompter with monitor.
  5. Sony camera with ultra wide angle lens.
  6. Overhead camera setup with a Canon camera and wide angle lens.
  7. Microphone.
  8. Compressor for audio.
  9. Large display so I can monitor all video and audio feeds at once.
  10. Studio lights. I have two of these, and will likely upgrade in the near future.
  11. Locked door. Every creator needs one of these!
  12. Miele vacuum. A clean studio is a happy studio.
  13. Guitar amplifier so I can practice during my lunch break.
  14. 1972 Sony TV and Atari 2600. Just because they are beautiful and sometimes I need to revisit the 1970s.

My System

Last week I mentioned the system that I developed to help writers get clarity, identify their ideal audience, build their author platform, create compelling marketing campaigns, and launch their books. It’s called the Creative Success Pyramid. It is having a plan for what you will do, and when. It connects all of your actions to a cohesive whole. It also helps you determine what you won’t waste your time doing, thereby conserving your energy to just what matters to you.

See below, and click here to see this full-sized in a PDF:

Creative Success Pyramid

It’s composed of five basic parts, you start at the bottom and work your way to the top:

  • Get radical creative clarity on what you create and why.
  • Build your platform to open pathways to your work.
  • Create and share with your authentic voice.
  • Connect with your ideal audience.
  • Launch and market your writing.

What Do Results Look Like

What are the results of this work? Here is what some clients have said:

 

Leigh Stein“I hired Dan to help me with the marketing strategy for my next book launch. This is my fourth book and already I can see the difference: not only do I feel confident about the message of my book, and who my audience is, but I was able to bring innovative ideas for marketing and promotion to my publisher and they took off running. I don’t think I would have gotten this much support from my publisher if I hadn’t jumpstarted my marketing with Dan!”
– Leigh Stein, author of Self Care

 

 

KJ Dell'Antonia“Dan made connecting with readers—aka marketing—a joy instead of a chore. He changed the way I look at the business side of writing for good.”

– KJ Dell’Antonia, New York Times bestselling author of The Chicken Sisters

 

 

Amanda Montell“An invaluable, eye-opening crash course in book marketing, self-branding, and how to shout your message to the world. My three months working with Dank Blank not only taught me what marketing is in the first place, they also gave me a better understanding of my own work, audience, and core message. Dan helped me take my book launch process into my own hands and focus on which strategies would be the best use of my time; the social media campaigns he helped me conceptualize have opened me up to new readers and opportunities in ways I couldn’t have imagined. Part therapist, part sensei, part consultant, Dan Blank is not just an expert, he’s also a kind and generous human. I couldn’t recommend him highly enough!”

– Amanda Montell, author of Cultish and Wordslut

Jasmin Darznik“Working with Dan Blank has been one of the best investments I’ve made in myself as a writer. Reading his book was a revelation; working with him one-on-one gave me the chance to really put the ideas into practice. When we started working together, I felt overwhelmed and confused about where to focus my efforts and time. The list of “must-do’s” felt endless and not remotely exciting. Dan inspired me look at marketing in a totally new way. What I loved best about our collaboration is that it grew out of my own interests and passions. He helped me map out a concrete plan and then challenged me to work through it on a weekly basis. To anyone looking for clarity and purpose, as well as actionable steps to support their writing and creative goals, I recommend Dan with complete confidence and great gratitude.”

– Jasmin Darznik, author of The Bohemians

Sarah Hays Coomer“Working with Dan changed my life and work forever. As a Mayo Clinic and Nationally Board Certified Health Coach, I am duty-bound to focus on the health and well-being of everyone I work with. The idea of “sales and marketing” always made me squirm, even when I was getting the word out about my books, which I knew would be helpful for readers. When my third book was coming out, I knew I needed to change the way I approached marketing and the way I thought about it too. Dan taught me how to help people feel better through my marketing. From there, I have been able to grow sales, social media, my mailing list, speaking engagements, and client base. His podcast began to shift my thinking, and working with him one-on-one cemented the way I’ll approach professional outreach for the rest of my career. It’s such a relief!”

– Sarah Hays Coomer, author of The Habit Trip

How to Work With Me

You can learn more about working with me here.

Ready to take action? Questions? Email me directly at dan@wegrowmedia.com and let me know what you are working on, the big challenge you are facing, and how you hope I can help.

(Bonus points if you add the subject line: “Dan, I’m ready to get it done.”)

I will send you a 12 page PDF that outlines my consulting process.

 

If you are interested, we will schedule time to talk via phone and explore a customized plan for you.
I only work with a very limited number of clients per quarter. This is your chance to take meaningful action.

Thanks!
-Dan

Author Platform and Book Launch Essentials (Podcast)

Are you a writer who is trying to develop your author platform, or plan for a book launch? Well, today I want to talk about three essential tips I would encourage you to focus on. I also want to invite you to join me for a live workshop on this topic on Friday January 21, 2022 at 1pm ET. Register here.

You can listen to the podcast by clicking ‘play’ below, or in the following places:

You can watch the podcast here: