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Cindy Ratzlaff

Bestselling author, award winning brand marketing and social media pro, Cindy Ratzlaff, creates sales driving campaigns for authors, books and publishers.

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*Author Platform* Building Checklist

By Cindy Ratzlaff May 2, 2011

Building a loyal, engaged fan base takes time and commitment. Ideally authors would begin building that fan base during the writing process so they could share their journey with the growing fan base.

Besides writing the book, building a fan base is the author’s second most important job.

Fans who know and like the author would watch and take part in the creative process as the author posts about writing, finishing chapters, editing, creating a book proposal, finding an agent, and the exciting ups and downs of submitting the proposal to publishers.  Fans would celebrate with the author as the book is sold and continue their behind the scenes journey through editorial suggestions, jacket design, marketing and promotion plans and ultimately reward the author by purchasing the book at publication time.

I’d like to see publishers give every author a base building checklist with their contract and strongly encourage the author to begin or continue building a strong social presence during the time between contract and publication.

The elements of a good platform building checklist could include:

1.  A Facebook profile in the author’s name.  Building a following on Facebook starts with your inner circle and grows.  Inviting those closest to you, the author, is the ideal place to start spreading the word about your book.

2.  A Facebook fan page for the book.  There are many applications and bells and whistles that can only be used on a Fan Page.  Additionally, a Facebook fan page is indexed by Google and is, therefore, a powerful opportunity to increase the author’s ability to be found in a search–both for his or her name and for the topic and keywords that best describe the book. Live links to the author’s website, on the information page, help keep moving fans toward the home base. iFrames custom designed tabs can be used to create a rich experience, including selling the book directly from Facebook, offering live author chats, a look at rave reviews, and regular updates on the author’s tour or live events.

3.  A Twitter account in the author’s name.  Twitter is a broadcasting and engagement platform that helps introduce an author to a large audience and invite them back to the author’s homebase for a deeper conversation and relationship.

4.  A YouTube Channel in the author’s name.  Almost every author can benefit by creating a home for their videos.  What videos some authors might be asking?  The ones you need to create.  Interviews, messages to fans, reports from the book tour, other short videos that help the fan or reader feel as though they have a relationship with the author.  Authors can even make their still photos into short, professional videos using a free and easy to use service called Animoto.

5.  A blogsite or website.  The blog or website is the home base and all of an author’s interactions on other social sites should eventually invite the author back to that home base to take an action.  That action can be purchase the book, sign up for the newsletter, check out the live events calendar or leave a comment with a question.  Here authors can run contests, giveaways, and increase interactions with fans to build a strong subscriber base.  Using multimedia such as video or audio messages combined with photography will increase fan engagement and help create a desire to revisit the site often.

The key to platform building is consistency, authenticity, value and creativity.  Post daily.  Share your personality. Give readers something they can’t get elsewhere–your work.  Make your fans and followers feel as though they’re in a special club.  Call them by name when you respond to their comments.  Thank them for taking the time to comment.  Let them know you’ve seen and heard them.  In other words, building a social platform is similar to building a friendship circle

Authors, keep writing, and add some social writing to your daily activities to create a vibrant fan base of readers eagerly waiting for your book.

What fan building activities do you regularly engage in?  Do you have ideas you’d like to share with this community?  Please let us know.  We’d very much appreciate the time it takes to leave your comments and will respond to every one.  Thank you.

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Filed Under: News & Events Tagged With: Authors, Personal Branding, Social Media Marketing

About Cindy Ratzlaff

Cindy Ratzlaff was named to the Forbes “20 Best Branded Women on Twitter” list and Forbes Woman called her one of the “Most Influential Women Tweeting about Entrepreneurship.”

During her 20-plus years as a publishing executive, Cindy created branded marketing and PR campaigns that ushered more than 200 books onto the New York Times bestseller lists. She was named to the Ad Age Marketing 50 list for the launch campaign behind The South Beach Diet.

She is the author of three books, and her essays on happiness have appeared on Oprah.com, CNN.com and her articles on social marketing have can be read on Business Insider. She speaks to conferences such as BookExpo America, Pennsylvania Conference for Women, Romance Writers of America, Ernst & Young, Garden Writers Association, Texas Conference for Women, United Way’s Ignite Leadership Network, Massachusetts Conference for Women, and more on the topics of happiness, personal branding and creating a digital footprint.

She engages daily with more than 450,000 people through her popular Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and blog sites.

Comments & Feedback:

  1. Ashley Pichea

    May 2, 2011 at 1:47 pm

    As someone who would love to be a published author someday, I’m working hard to build my platform now. I started with a blog and have moved into social media. Now I’m considering self-publishing a number of e-books to start, moving into print when/if the timing is right.

    Reply
    • cindyratzlaff

      May 15, 2011 at 6:32 pm

      Ashley, Self publishing can be a great way to build a platform and to grow your influence.

      Reply
  2. Kenneth Wedige

    May 24, 2011 at 3:06 am

    You made this article very interesting the way you explained it. I’m going to add your site to my blog roll!

    Reply
  3. Angie

    May 30, 2011 at 4:11 am

    After reading your article I decided to stop using pseudonyms and consolidate my writing and painting into one blog because my painting is what my memoirs are about. Thank you for sharing this information! I’ve posted a blurb on FB!

    Reply
    • cindyratzlaff

      May 30, 2011 at 8:07 am

      Angie, That’s great. Just checked out your blog and it’s looking fantastic: http://parispainter.blogspot.com/

      Reply
  4. Ryan Critchett

    May 31, 2011 at 8:41 pm

    Hey Cindy,

    Great post. Super informative. I align with most of what you’re saying, on many levels. About broadcasting.. yes, Twitter is a tool for broadcasting, but what’s happening is people are essentially extending their broadcast media efforts to conversational platforms. Scream marketing is about to be extinct in a few short years :

    I’d say.. broadcast less, don’t blow people up with links you’re promoting, and get your hands dirty in the guts of the conversations! Rapport is king!

    Either way, great post. Post more! Get out there in the blogosphere!

    Reply
    • cindyratzlaff

      July 7, 2011 at 6:03 am

      Thanks Ryan, Love the phrase “scream marketing.” Brilliantly illustrative.

      Reply
  5. Keesha Shibley

    July 7, 2011 at 1:41 am

    what’s up, informative post, I’ve just subscribed to your site. It’s with out a doubt getting harder to keep up with the ever evolving nature of the social marketing phenominum. Great work and keep it coming.

    Reply
    • cindyratzlaff

      July 7, 2011 at 6:02 am

      So true Keesha. And now with Google+ heating up the social sphere, it’s another steep learning curve ahead.

      Reply
  6. James Gill

    July 18, 2011 at 11:18 pm

    Cindy, thank you. I liked the concise, useful list. What do you think about Google+, and the potential pitfall of depending too much on Facebook?

    James

    Reply
    • cindyratzlaff

      July 19, 2011 at 8:35 am

      James, I think it takes enormous benefits or enormous pain to cause mass movement from one platform to another. Therefore, I think early adopters will use both G+ and Facebook for a long time. No one should depend solely on one social platform if they’re engaging for marketing or business purposes. Look how we all panic when Twitter goes down. I like what I see with Google+ but am not yet willing to ditch Twitter or Facebook.

      Reply
  7. schwinn midmoor bikes

    August 9, 2011 at 9:01 pm

    This is a smart blog. I mean it. You have so much knowledge about this issue, and so much passion. You also know how to make people rally behind it, obviously from the responses. Youve got a design here thats not too flashy, but makes a statement as big as what youre saying. Great job, indeed.

    Reply
  8. Lois

    March 30, 2012 at 4:34 pm

    I love how you make all your tips so simple to understand and follow. I’m a big fan of yours. I’ve been working on putting all the necessary parts of my platform together as you suggest and now all I have to do is keep the content flowing and inform the world of my presence!!

    Reply
    • cindyratzlaff

      April 9, 2012 at 11:28 am

      Thanks Lois. I can’t wait to see what you create!

      Reply

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