Author: michelle-cox

  • HOW HASHTAGS can INCREASE ONLINE BOOK SALES – Part 4 by Kiffer Brown

    HOW HASHTAGS can INCREASE ONLINE BOOK SALES – Part 4 by Kiffer Brown

    Tips to Selling More Books Online – Part 4 by Kiffer Brown

    Hashtags
    And that is with just one hashtag…Make your social media posts work harder for you!

    The POWER of the HASHTAG

    Hashtags will make your social media posts work harder for you! They will amplify your posts. Hashtags will help new readers discover your books and help you discover new readers. – Kiffer Brown

    Definition of Hashtag:  A hashtag, introduced by the number sign, or hash symbol, #, is a type of metadata tag used on social networks such as Twitter and other micro-blogging services (i.e. Instagram, Facebook, Pinterest). It lets users apply dynamic, user-generated tagging that helps other users easily find messages with a specific theme or content. In other words: 

    Hashtags enhance your exposure to people who do not follow you. If you are just staring out building your social media platforms, #hashtags will help you increase your Followers — even if you only have one person following you. If you are already participating in social media, hashtags will enlarge your following!

    Hashtags are your hardworking  friends (you know the ones who will help you move or watch your kid in a pinch) in social media.

    • Hashtags help to gather different social media conversations about the same topic.
    • It makes the same topic easier to find and search throughout a social media platform.
    • Imagine being able to type in a word in your post that will allow other people on the platform to search the topic and, thereby, discover your post. Hashtags ( # )  will work for you in your posts on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.

    • Hashtags help to boost your social media posts beyond your own followers. It will help you find crossover markets for your books. Do some research to find out the hashtags that resonate with your targeted readers. For example if your work’s protagonist is an adult with autism, you may want to try #adultautism.
      • Or if your work centers around a protagonist who is a birdwatcher (example: Border Songs by Jim Lynch), you may want to have your social media posts use #birdwatchers  or #PNW  or #PNWBirds if the plot is centered in the Pacific Northwest Or if the work is science fiction but will appeal to computer geeks use #cyberpunk and #SciFiCyberpunk.

    • Hashtags need time to percolate. It will take some time to be able to drill down to discover the best niche hashtags to reach out to your audience. You must use the hashtags  over a long time to start percolating throughout the Internet and to allow potential new followers time to find you via #hashtag. Be patient. Be consistent.

    • Promoting on social media is a lot like brushing your teeth. You can’t just do it on Sundays or set aside a couple of days a month to do it. Your social media posts must be consistent and almost daily. You don’t have to spend a lot of time doing it— much like brushing your teeth, but consistency and long-term maintenance are the keys.   Some people I know set a tea timer or kitchen timer to keep themselves from going down the social media rabbit hole. Fifteen minutes twice a day is better than a whole Sunday spent posting.  Also, remember that social media levels the playing field against the big boys. It is mostly free (except for your time) and still a bargain as compared to the old Yellow Page ads or magazine ads.

    • A TWO-WAY STREET –– If you want others interact with you on social media, you must LIKE, COMMENT, and SHARE other peoples’ posts. Nuff said. Social Media is the world’s largest cocktail party—make the most of your networking time! Following a hashtag is just like following a friend. 
      • A friendly reminder:  The same goes with REVIEWS. If you want more consumer reviews, you will need to post more consumer reviews of others’ works. It is well-known by publishers that Editorial Reviews generate more Consumer Reviews (reader reviews).
    • Find Readers by Association with Top Authors in Your Genre by Discovering their hashtags and key words. Determine two or three best-selling authors’ works whose works you would like to have your books shelved next to in a bookstore. Then follow the author on social media (and interact), read and leave consumer reviews wherever you purchase books, and  subscribe to his/her blogs and emails. Again, a long time strategy, but when you are ready to for a “peer review” and/or ask for an author quote, you will have increased your chances. Discover their hashtags to discover new readers. 
    • #Hashtags can help you enlarge your reader base. Meanwhile, you can state that  “If you are a fan of MISS BIG AUTHOR’s works, perhaps take a look at my works while you wait for the next one in the series to come out… ”  A word of caution, make sure that your book is well edited and the best that it can be. Why? Because a few of Miss Big Author’s fans will take you up on your proposition. And if Miss Big Author likes your work, you may just get an endorsement blurb for your cover. Be ready for when Luck meets Opportunity and Preparation.

    Back to #Hashtags

    #Hashtags continue to work for you long after you have posted (percolation). The social media platforms’ crawlers continuously search for them and try to connect the people who use them.

    Here are some hashtags that READERS use:  #amreading

    #amreadingfantasy    or  #amreadingYA  or #amreadingthrillers   #summerreading    #tbr   (to be read)

    Here are some hashtags that writers and authors use:

    #amwriting  (1,045,508 viewers at the time of this article).  #novel (383,783 viewers at the time of this article)  #author  (1,448,021  viewers at the time of this article)

    Hashtags on Instagram

    If you only want to use #hashtags on INSTAGRAM, then use the following format:   #instawritingcommunity  #instawritersofinstagram  #instaamwriting

    On Instagram the hashtag   #books is banned. So, you must drill down instead of using the obvious. But #instafantasybooks is legal.

    One study shows that Instagram posts with a least one hashtag generate on average 12.65 percent more engagement.

    Other Hashtag Categories

    1. Brand Hashtags   #mysteryauthor   #cozycatmysteries   #spaceopera  #shewritespress   #ChantiReviewsBooks  #olreign
    2. Category Hashtags  #animals  #cats   #snickerdoodles  #PNW  #summerreads   #heartwarming #bebold  #sheplayshere    #WWIIhistory
    3. Event Hashtags  #authorsigning  #booksigning   #ComiconWest   #CAC20   #2019WFIFA  #internationalnursesday  #caterday
    4. Campaign Hashtags  #yourbookstitle  #yourseries   #titleofyourlaunchcampaign
    5. Feelings/Moods   #simplepleasures   #kitchenflowers  #rip   #petgrief  #ptsd  #swoon
    6. Activities   #bakingbread  #woodcarving   #daysailing   #yogaclass

    Hashtags NOT to USE

    • #Free
    • #giveaway
    • #deal
    • #offerexpires
    • #Sale

    Do not use ALL CAPS as it is seen as YELLING!

    The Jøssing Affair by Janet Oakley won the Goethe Book Awards Grand Prize. The award-winning novel is about the Nazi occupation of Norway and the Norwegian Resistance Fighters in WWII. There is also love, betrayal, espionage, and bravery.

     

    You can capitalize a couple of letters – for example:  #JossingAffairBookLaunch  #WWIINorway  #NorwayOccupation #NorwaySuspenseNovels

     

    Do not use ! or ? or ‘  or any punctuation in your hashtags besides the hashtag (#)

    Banned Hashtags

    Also, if you use a banned hashtag, your posts and account could be flagged and then “shadowbanned” which means that your posts will not percolate throughout Instagram.

    Some banned hashtags are innocent as #happythanksgiving  or #besties (banned because of overuse and spamming) to the egregious posts that you could imagine would go with these hashtags: #milf   #lingerie    #nasty    #xxx   #selfharm.

    Here is a link with the latest of banned hashtags of 2019. (2020’s list is not out yet).

    Hashtag Etiquette

    Where to Place Hashtags

    Hashtags may be used on any social media, and are typically found within a post in an #organic fashion, or at the end of the post like an index word. Twitter is a platform where the hashtag is so endemic that it often becomes like punctuation, performing its function while remaining nearly invisible to readers, as long as it’s not overdone.

    Using a hashtag as part of a sentence is understood and accepted on Twitter, probably due to the character limit. But on Google+ and Facebook the hashtags are used less and can be intrusive in the middle of sentences. When in doubt on Facebook and Google+, add your hashtags to the end of your post, even on a separate ending line.

    If your hashtags sticks out like a sore thumb, it may communicate “this is spam”, especially on some platforms, and that may create a negative reaction to the post.

    Hashtag Advice 

    Use 3 – 6 hashtags. Start with a popular standard then drill down. For example, @ChristineKatSmith used #catnap  #tabbycat   #happyhour  #landotter (a boater’s term for a cat) #friday #shelterinplace   Christine is the co-Captain of the David B, a small ship that offers adventure cruises to Alaska and the award-winning author of More Faster Backwards, Rebuilding David B. 

    In the above Instagram post, she used the following hashtags @ mvdavidb
    #glaciers #dawesglacier #alasks #alaskacruise #cruisealternative #tracyarmfordsterrorwilderness #photographyworkshop #travel #explore #adventure #wilderness #wildplaces #tidewaterglacier #boattour #yachtcharter #alaskayachtcharter #smallshipcruise #mvdavidb

    The post looked like this:

     

    Now to see how one of our favorite authors uses hashtags – Michelle Cox at @michellecoxwrites   Michelle’s A Promise Given won the Chanticleer Mystery and Mayhem Grand Prize along many other awards.

    Notice how she uses little known hashtags all the way to a broader net with #DowntonAbbey  #Chicago  #MissFisherMurderMysteries  and then associates her brand (#HenriettaAndInspectorHowardSeries) with the other hashtags such as #mustread  #booktofilm and so forth.

     

    This in an introductory blog post to hashtags. Remember that following a hashtag is like searching for someone or something. Just type your hashtag into the Search text field on the social media platform that you are posting on.

    Give it a try! Try it! You’ll like it! – Kiffer

    Chanticleer Reviews social media handle is @ChantiReviews   The hashtags we commonly use are:  #CIBAs  #ChanticleerFamily   #ChanticleerRReads  and the CIBA Divisions  such as #CYGNUSAwards  @MandMAwards  and so forth.


     

    HANDY LINKS – Chanticleer Reviews Tool Box Series 

    Click on these links to blog posts on the Chanticleer website for more information on how to increase online book sales: 

    How to Increase Book Sales Online – Part One

    How to Increase Book Sales Online – Part Two

    How to Increase Book Sales Online – Part Three

    BISAC CODES – Not Just Alphabet Soup

    Book Reviews – 4 Types and Why You Need All Four

    Social Media and Creating and Keeping Top of Mind Association with Readers


    Chanticleer Writer’s Toolbox

    Thank you for reading this Chanticleer Writer’s Toolbox post on Marketing and Book Promotion to Increase Online Book Sales.

    Stay tuned for our next post on the How to Increase Online Book Sales series.

    Also, we will continue to post the 2019 CIBA Finalists, so please stay tuned.

    And, we will have new writing craft posts from top editors coming your way to keep you writing and editing during these unprecedented times.


    We encourage you to stay in contact with each other and with us  during this stint of practicing physical distancing to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

    Let us know how you are doing, what is going on where you live, how are you progressing on your writing projects.

    I invite each of you to join us at The Roost – a private online Chanticleer Community for writers and authors and publishing professionals. You are welcome to email me for more info also.

    We are active on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. You can find us by using our social media handle @ChantiReviews

    Minimize physical contact! Maximize social connecting!

    Here are our contact emails:  

    General information:  Chanticleer@ChantiReviews.com

    Editorial:  BookEditor@ChantiReviews.com

    Reviews: Sanderson@ChantiReviews.com

    Me:  KBrown@ChantiReviews.com

    Take care, be safe.

    Keep writing and creating magic! 

    Kiffer and Sharon & Entire Team Chanticleer 

     

  • SPOTLIGHT on M&Ms – Mystery & Mayhem AWARDS CIBAs – Cozy Mysteries, Amateur Sleuths, and more!

    SPOTLIGHT on M&Ms – Mystery & Mayhem AWARDS CIBAs – Cozy Mysteries, Amateur Sleuths, and more!

    Welcome to our SPOTLIGHT on the CHANTICLEER INTERNATIONAL BOOK AWARDS (the CIBAs): the MYSTERY & MAYHEM Awards Deadline is upon us!

    We are seeking the best novels featuring “mystery and mayhem,” amateur sleuthing, romantic suspense, light suspense, travel mystery, classic mystery, British cozy, hobby sleuths, senior sleuths, or historical mystery. We will put them to the test and discover the best among them. (For thrillers, action suspense, detective, crime fiction see our Clue Awards)

    The APRIL 30th deadline for the Chanticleer Mystery & Mayhem Awards (aka M&Ms) has been extended until May 31, 2020 due to many requests for an extension due to these unprecedented times of the Covid-19 pandemic.

    In just a few short days, we go to work to uncover the hidden secrets, the lost key, the answer to the question, Whodunit?

    The 2019 Mystery and Mayhem FINALISTS were posted on April 30, 2020.

    Congratulations to these authors whose works have advanced to this new achievement level of the  Chanticleer International Book Awards in the Mystery and Mayhem Book Awards division.


     

    Michelle Cox won the 2018 GRAND PRIZE for Murder and Mystery for A Promise Given (A Henrietta and Inspector Howard Series, Book 3)

     


    The First in Category, First Place Winners for 2018 are:


     


     

    Carl & Jane Bock are the M&M Grand Prize winners in 2017 for Coronado’s Trail: An Arizona Borderlands Mystery


    The First in Category, First Place Winners for 2017 are:

     


    Alice K. Boatwright is the MYSTERY & MAYHEM Grand Prize winner in 2016 for Under an English Heaven!


    The First in Category, First Place Winners for 2016 are:

     


     

    Wendy Delaney is the  2015’s M&M Grand Prize Winner for There’s Something About Marty


    The First in Category, First Place Winners for 2015 are:

     

     

     

     


    Bernadette Pajer of the Professor Bradshaw Series — Fatal Induction took home the 2013 M&M Grand Prize

     

     


    Pamela Beason won GRAND PRIZE in 2012 for The Only Witness 

     

     


     

    Is your amateur sleuth suspicious of the little old lady who lives next door? Is there something wrong in Mayberry and your hero is going to find out what it is – no matter the cost? Are the stakes so high for your heroine, she succumbs to the hot, sexy delivery man who happens to be the guy with forty bodies buried in his basement? Is your character’s cat helping him solve the latest crime?

    If so, have we got the contest for you!

    Mystery & Mayhem

    Your book could earn a place in our M&M hall of fame for 2020!

    All you have to do is enter.

    And due to these unprecedented times, we have extended the deadline from April 30, 2020 to May 31, 2020.

    Unpublished Manuscripts and recently Published (Indie, Traditional, Hybrid) Novels (after Jan. 1, 2018) are accepted.

    Our Mystery & Mayhem Awards are the Chanticleer International Book Awards search for today’s best cozy mystery fiction books!

    Cozy Mystery Fiction Award

    Do not hesitate – or stop to solve a crime –

    the M&M Awards extended deadline is MAY, 31, 2020!

    Click here to enter – and good luck!

     

     

     

  • HOW to INCREASE ONLINE BOOK SALES – Part 2 by Kiffer Brown

    HOW to INCREASE ONLINE BOOK SALES – Part 2 by Kiffer Brown

    How to Increase Online Book Sales – Part 2 by Kiffer Brown

    I receive several emails a week from authors wanting to know if there is one thing that they can do to increase book sales. Many confess that they despise spending time that they could be writing on “marketing tasks” and abhor the idea of “wasting time” on social media.

    The Attack of Social Media – sometimes I feel this way…

    I get it. I truly do.

    However, as with any product, your books must have a marketing and promotional strategy if you are going to increase sales. Participating in social media is a must in just about any product marketing strategy.

    J.D. Barker, master of suspense and international best-selling thriller author and whose books are under contract for TV series and movies, reminded us at the Chanticleer Authors Conference,

    “Books are products—products to be sold.” – J.D. Barker

    If you want to make a living as an author,  never forget those simple words from J.D.

    At CAC 19, J.D. shared with us his very structured plan that he developed for launching his first novel. We hope to have him back soon.

    JD Barker presented at CAC19

    A successful marketing and promotion plan is part data driven, part art, and part luck. And you know the old saying that, “Luck is Opportunity meeting Preparation and Planning.” Your job is to write the best work possible, promote it like an expert guerrilla marketeer, and, of course, build your brand as an author. Easy Peasy. Well, no. But if you do, and one day the stars align, and those days do happen, you will be ready. And remember your plan doesn’t have to be perfect. Every little bit helps and builds.

    The main thing is to get started as another one of my favorite authors says.

    Whatever you can do or dream you can, begin it. Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it.  ~Goethe

    Your brand and book marketing strategy should be a multi-pronged approach that is consistent and plans for at least three years into the future. You can always pivot if needed.

    Remember that Budweiser, Pringle Potato Chips, Heinz ketchup, Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups,  and others pay the  $5.6 million dollars for a 30-second ad in the 2020 Superbowl just to keep their brands in your Top-of-Mind associations.

    Your marketing and promotion strategy is to keep your brand (author name) and products (books) promoted with  magazine articles, interviews, blog posts, social media posts, old-school marketing materials, graphics and visual images, etc. on a consistent basis with a few “major event promotions” throughout the year for content and P/R generation.

    Keep that $5.6 million dollars per 30-seconds in mind the next time you think that you are wasting time promoting your brand and your work on social media. And like the Superbowl ads, your social media posts must be compelling to stand out in a crowded field.

    Whether or not you are aiming to go the traditional publishing route or self-publish, building your brand and book promotion strategy is key to have a successful writing career.  Having a brand and marketing strategy will open many more possibilities and doors for you.

    Here is an all-too-familiar scenario that I have heard again and again from literary agents (mostly when we are having drinks together in the evening after book expos or trade shows):

    The conversation from the lit agent (no pun intended) generally goes something like this:

    I just read this compelling manuscript. I thought that it might have potential (as in commercial potential because that is what pays the bills). So, I got online to see what kind of digital footprint the author has. Crickets. The website’s last blog post was eighteen months ago. I clicked on the Facebook page–no fan-base or street team. Twitter was just re-posting of posts that have nothing to do with other authors in her genre or of interest to potential readers…and Instagram was the same. So, I guess I will have to give this manuscript a pass. It seems to me that the author just isn’t serious about having a writing career and I don’t have  the time to get her social media platform up to speed  while shopping the manuscript. 

    As opposed to this rare excited version of a lit agent discovering the magical gem of great writing and serious promotional efforts that I did have the opportunity to hear (and drink a celebratory glass of champagne with):

    Oh my god! I just read this compelling manuscript. I thought that it might have potential. So, I got online and JACKPOT! This author is doing everything right to reach her target market. Her marketing strategy will make it so much more easier for me to sell the book to _______ (insert publisher here). She has a lively website that is current and up-to-date. I saw a lot of consistent activity on her author Facebook page. Her Instagram posts are subtlety promotional. Perfect! And I see that she has a calendar full of scheduled events. It is so rare to find this combination of talent and business sense. 

    Now I understand that some of you will say, “Au contraire, mon ami!  If I self-publish, I will be the bane of literary agents. Lit agents will not touch self-published authors.”  I hear you mumble to yourself.

    As for the disbelievers who think that self-publishing makes you untouchable to literary agents, I will use J.D. Barker as one of the tried and true examples of disproving that is old advice from before 2010. What a difference a decade makes.

    J.D. Barker successfully published his debut novel as an indie and sold enough copies to land on the radar of the traditional publishers in a BIG way including seven-figure advances, two feature films, and a television series. 

    For now, please bear with me as I go off-topic for a bit… for those who are familiar with me, you probably have come to expect this wandering around bit on my part.

    SHORTS – (a prelude to Part Two — How to Increase Online Sales) 

    Even if you are planning on going  the traditional publishing route and not self-publishing, you will have to create a social media platform and a brand. Remember the book and the film Julie and Julia by Julie Powell. She is an inspiration to bloggers everywhere. Her book was basically a compilation of her blog posts.

    Julie Powell–inspiring bloggers everywhere!

    Hugh Howey self-published the science fiction blockbuster short story Wool – and Simon and Schuster picked up his omnibus of short stories. Howey is now sailing around in the South Pacific on his custom yacht as I write this. (I did have a chance to meet him several times before he embarked– he is a really nice guy.) Of course, everyone thinks that Howey  was an overnight success. It only took him ten years of writing consistently for one short story to take off and create a fandom for all of his works.

    Hugh Howey, author of WOOL

    Andy Weir self-published his debut novel, The Martian. He said I was writing all sorts of stories. I had three different serials going, and random short stories that I would post. I just kind of wrote whatever I wanted, and ‘The Martian’ was just one of the serials, but it was the one that the readers clearly liked the best, and so that helped encourage me to write it more than the others,” Weir told Recode.

    It took Weir a long time to get his writing career off the ground. He even took several years of as software programmer to work on his writing, but then had to go back to programming until The Martian took root and agents were contacting him about publishing deals and movie deals.

    As Jerry Macquire said, “Show me the money.”  In the publishing industry that equates to copies sold and your author brand.


    CIBA SHORTS

    We became so excited about Short Stories from writing this blog post that we decided to finally offer a CIBA Book Awards division. We have received many requests for an awards program for  just for short stories, novelettes, and novella. So without further ado… The CIBA Shorts!

    Anthologies and Collections are accepted along with solitary works. Click on this link to learn more https://www.chantireviews.com/contests/

     


    Back to the point of Part Two – as I circle back around to:  How to Sell More Books Online!

    Link to Part One of How to Increase Book Sales 

    Michelle Cox, a Mystery & Mayhem Grand Prize Winner, shares her strategy for promoting  her well-received Henrietta and Inspector Howard mystery novel series.

    Michelle says, “I spend five to seven hours a day doing marketing and PR—anything from writing the blog or the newsletter or articles or interviews, taping podcasts, setting up events, answering email, attending to social media, etc.  It’s really a full-time job, though, sadly, the actual writing, the part I love, is the part I get to spend the least on.”

    Award-winning mystery author, Michelle Cox

    Michelle continues:

    All marketing is pretty elusive, isn’t it?  It’s a constant process of throwing things at the wall and seeing what sticks.  It’s also important to remember that what works for one person, might not work for everyone.  It’s not an exact science.  If it were, we’d all be rich!

    But, in general, here are some good marketing tips that I have found to work:

    • Try to figure out where your readers are. Most of my readers, for example, are on Facebook, so that’s where I spend most of my social media time.
    • Think of yourself as a brand and try to match your posts accordingly. I post things about myself or the book or writing, but mostly old recipes, period drama news, or old stories from the past (which constitute my blog).
    • Also, I’m very careful never to post anything religious or political.  This is a business, and the more you see yourself that way and follow basic business protocols, the more successful you’ll be.
    • Try to build your newsletter list by offering a freebie (such as free story, writing tips, a webinar, a prequel). Personally, I do it by running contests with really big prize packages. I make sure to state that the contest winner will be picked only from my newsletter subscribers.  I pay a designer to create a beautiful graphic of the prizes, post it on Facebook, and then boost the post.  Not only does this get me a lot of new subscribers (sometimes up to 1,000!), but it exposes the series to new readers as well!
    • Build your network. Join online author groups (I am part of a fabulous private FB group organized by my publisher, She Writes Press. We all share ideas, marketing tips, and offer support and advice, especially to the newer authors just coming on board.  It’s a collective wealth of information.) or real-world groups in your area.  Don’t be jealous of the success of others, but help each other as much as possible. As my publisher, Brooke Warner has said, “There’s room for everyone at the table.”
    • Show up at other authors events, write reviews, help promote whenever possible.  Go to conferences to meet not just readers, but other authors who can potentially help you.  Remember that you are a business, and you need to do work within your community to begin standing out.

    Read more of Michelle Cox’s Marketing Tips that she shared with us by clicking this link. 

    You can discover more Book Marketing and Promotion Gems by reading Sharon E. Anderson’s 10 Question Interviews blog posts series  that can be found on the Chanticleer Reviews website.  

    The latest interview is with the CYGNUS Grand Prize winner, J.I. Rogers. Rogers discusses her marketing tips and her Patreon marketing strategy. Click here to read. 

    Please stay tuned for Part Three of How to Increase Online Book Sales by Kiffer Brown

    HANDY LINKS – Chanticleer Reviews Tool Box Series 

    Below are links to blog posts on the Chanticleer website that have more information on the above points: 

    How to Increase Book Sales Online – Part One

    BISAC CODES – Not Just Alphabet Soup

    Hashtag Primer 

    Book Reviews – 4 Types and Why You Need All Four

    Social Media and Creating and Keeping Top of Mind Association with Readers


    Chanticleer Writer’s Toolbox

    Thank you for reading this Chanticleer Writer’s Toolbox post on Marketing and Book Promotion to Increase Online Book Sales.

    We do a post (SOON) about book selling and distribution platforms – increasing your target market globally.

    Also, we will continue to post the 2019 CIBA Finalists, so please stay tuned.

    And, we will have new writing craft posts from top editors coming your way to keep you writing and editing during these unprecedented times.


    We encourage you to stay in contact with each other and with us  during this stint of practicing physical distancing to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

    Let us know how you are doing, what is going on where you live, how are you progressing on your writing projects.

    I invite each of you to join us at The Roost – a private online Chanticleer Community for writers and authors and publishing professionals. You are welcome to email me for more info also.

    We are active on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. You can find us by using our social media handle @ChantiReviews

    Minimize physical contact! Maximize social connecting!

    Here are our contact emails:  

    General information:  Chanticleer@ChantiReviews.com

    Editorial:  BookEditor@ChantiReviews.com

    Reviews: Sanderson@ChantiReviews.com

    Me:  KBrown@ChantiReviews.com

    Take care, be safe.

    Keep writing and creating magic! 

    Kiffer and Sharon & Entire Team Chanticleer 

     

  • 12 MUST-DO’s for AUTHORS for a Successful and Productive 2020 and Beyond. Number Two of Twelve – a Chanticleer Writer’s Toolbox Series by Kiffer Brown and Sharon Anderson

    12 MUST-DO’s for AUTHORS for a Successful and Productive 2020 and Beyond. Number Two of Twelve – a Chanticleer Writer’s Toolbox Series by Kiffer Brown and Sharon Anderson

    Number Two of Twelve Must-Do’s for Authors

    Creating Your Marketing and Promotion Calendar for 2020 and Beyond… Part One

    I’ve been in marketing a number of years (dare I say decades?). Marketing and Promotion have always been moving targets, but now with the internet they are targets that move at light speed.

    If you want to sell books and you want to have your author career advance, you will need to have a promotion and marketing plan that can pivot and is flexible.

    Plan for your Success!

    And if you have an M & P plan already, you will need to constantly update it, add to it, and evaluate what works and what doesn’t.

    First of all, the M & P Calendar is complex and integrated at many levels, which can make it overwhelming. But that is where Chanticleer can assist.

    Do keep in mind, that many of the moving parts are small and incremental steps that are not hard to do, but they will add up and add up substantially.

    Promotion of a book (or any product) is a continuous exercise of good marketing and promotional habits. Many are not difficult or time consuming but most be done on a regular basis. Marketing  and Promotion are NOT one trick ponies.

    Let us start at the beginning. Laying the Groundwork for your M&P calendar.

    Strategy – First start with the Big Picture.

    What I do is keep a notebook and a calendar. I tend to be old school and like paper and pencil for my reminders and calendar. I then add the information to my Google calendar so that it will remind me on my smart phone.

    Andy prefers to go all digital with no paper. He uses integrated digital calendars and custom project management software—thank goodness because that is how we track and manage the CIBAs.

    Here are 10 Points to consider and implement.

    We will then fill in with more detailed information in Part Two of this blog-post.

    One. Identify 10 best-selling author in your genre that you would like to ask for an author blurb? 

    It doesn’t matter if you are launching a new work or promoting your back list.

    Write their names down in your M&P notebook. We will come back to this in the next blog post. Promise.

    Two. Identify any seasons or holidays that are associated with your titles. 

    I always think of Love of Finished Years by Gregory Erich Phillips at Christmas time because of his touching WWI Christmas Eve scene that takes place in the heat of battle. It is book that I can read and reread.

    Gregory Erich Phillips Love of Finished Years won Chanticleer International Book Award for Best Book while it was still a manuscript.

    Or Ann Charles’ Deadwood Series that feature Violet Parker, real estate agent and single mom gets me in the mood for Halloween.

    Would your books make awesome vacation reads? Or cozy sit by the fire reads? Or perfect for traveling?

    Are your books page turning thrillers that will have readers consuming it at one sitting? Or something for a reader to look forward to reading a chapter or two a night?  Know your readers.

    A personal favorite cozy mystery series of mine that I like to read is Michelle Cox’s Henrietta and Inspector Howard mystery series because I enjoy tthe time frame that series takes place in, and I like the protagonists. Reading the series is a wonderful escape for me.

     

    What holidays or seasons can you target to promote your works? Write them down in that notebook.

    Three. Target Book Clubs – Online and Groups that meet in person

    Book clubs tend to chart out their reads months in advance if not a year in advance. Start getting “Top of Mind” share and getting on the “think about list.”

    Make sure that your website, author description, Facebook page, Twitter, blog posts, and any other media alerts readers that you are available for Skyping, showing up in person, supplying stimulating questions for the group, and that you just adore BOOK CLUBS. If there are libraries that have your books in their book club kits, list them on the Book Club section of your website.

    Keep a running list of Book Clubs that you want to reach out to and keep in contact with them. Put reminders in your calendar to continually reach out to book clubs of all types. They can propel an author and have far reaching affects on readership gains.

    The Roost at Chanticleer will have a running list of book clubs and how to contact them. This will be up and running before the end of January.

    Four. Author Events

    Again, dates fill up at book stores, retail outlets, book fairs, book conventions, libraries,  and specialty events. Chanticleerians have passed on to me that they have had great success at wine bars, grocery stores, flower shops, seasonal events such at the Lavender events in the PNW, comic cons, brewpubs, entertainment events if your work has a connection with them, re-enactments, hobbyists, the list can go on and on.

    The award-winning Janet Shawgo has presented sessions on this at the Chanticleer Authors Conference. All in attendance were inspired by her creativity and willingness to share.

    Janet Shawgo’s author event at a winery.

    And I have it good advice that one shouldn’t discount small events. It is better to be a big fish at a small event rather sitting idly by while a line a mile long forms for a celebrity author. I’ve seen this happen more times than I can count.

    Guerrilla marketing is the friend of aspiring authors. It can even the playing field with its unconventional interactions and surprises. Remember, readers are acquired one by one—which makes guerrilla marketing especially effective.

    Be creative. Be open. But get those gigs lined up and on the calendar. Pronto! And start on next year’s events.

    Make your list with the venue, date, date of contact, date of recontact, results. Continuously add venues and events as you discover them.

    Add the confirmed dates to your Promotion Calendar. There will be more work to be done.

    Jesikah Sundin, award-winning author of The Biodome Chronicles excels at  guerrilla marketing, branding, and author events that build loyal readership. And her books deliver and keep her readers coming back for more!

    Jesikah Sundin

    Five. Discover experts who will resonate with your books. (We call this SLANT in the marketing industry).

    Who is an expert in the field that your work is associated with?

    Ann Charles is a full-time author of mysteries. Her popular protagonist is Violet Parker, a real estate agent in Deadwood? Guess who her biggest fans are? Real Estate agents! And she has targeted them and they have become evangelical fans for her series. The real estate network is huge. And so is her fan-base.

    For instance, Pamela Beason writes mysteries that tend to take place in wilderness areas. She is a career author (making a living at writing) and a retired private investigator. Pam targets hikers, backpackers, wilderness protectors. One of her mystery series is focused around Neema, a communicating gorilla who can communicate using sign language. Pam targets these folks in social media. Her YA series has a rescued elephant. You get the picture?  Did I mention that I am a Neema fangirl?

    Pamela Beason’s wildly successful Sam Westin wilderness series.

    What are your books’ angles? What is the slant? (what is the voice? what is your underlying message?) 

    This exercise is one that you should repeat each year with your back list.

    If you can get an endorsement from experts that have a common interest in your books, you will be able to broaden your target market. It doesn’t matter if the expert is a real estate agent, or a barista, or is leader in a knitting circle… This is how word of mouth is created. Create these bonds. It will make your next book launch much more easy.

    Remember Jesikah from Point #Four. Her books crossover from fantasy, YA, cyber-punk, eco-punk, gaming, science fiction, steampunk, and … just imagine all the blurbs, recommendations, and READERS and their reviews that Jesikah’s marketing attracts.

    Six. Identify 10 Authors to Network within Social Media and in Real Life. 

    These should be authors whose readers will also enjoy your works and authors that your readers will enjoy their books.

    If you have ten, then add ten more. You can never have enough.

    This is called increasing your CIRCLE of INFLUENCE. The relationship should be reciprocal. We will circle back around to this.

    A good test is to determine if your works and the selected authors works would be shelved together at the book store or at the local library.

    Write this list down in your M & P book/ledger. Each year, continue to expand it.

    J.D. Barker, a masterful storyteller,  recommends that your genre should crossover… just imagine having your books shelved in more than one location at booksellers. Get the picture?

    Shameless self-promotion here … you should check out his interview in the last issue of the Chanticleer Reviews magazine.

    Order your copy today… 🙂

    Seven. Focus Your Author Brand. 

    Each and every visual element associated with you as an author should have focus and should move your author brand forward on your website, in your social media, in your type fonts, in the background imagery. A reader should be able to tell in less than three seconds what overall genre you are writing in. Are your books dark and mysterious? Fantastical? Sexy? Historical? Dystopian? Everything from the icon that marks your website in the browser to the background that coordinates with all of your internet and real marketing collateral (covers, book swag, business cards, etc.). Make sure that your author photos resonate with your works. That doesn’t mean you have to be brooding in person if your books are dark and mysterious, but you should have a persona, a brand that distinguishes you from the other millions of authors and writers. A visual brand.

    Ann Charles is a maestro at author branding. Visit her website and Facebook pages for inspiration (and to buy her U.S.A Today bestselling books).

    Ann Charles

    Eight. Become an Expert in Some Area of Publishing and Share Your Knowledge

    Writers by far make up the largest number of readers. We just can’t help ourselves. An excellent way to get on writers’ reading list is to present at writer’s conferences. It is widely known that after a writer gives a presentation, his/her/they see an increase in sales. Most would say a direct correlation.

    Many best-selling authors have gotten their start and created an ever increasing fan-base by sharing their knowledge and expertise with other authors and aspiring writers. Diane Gabaldon shared (and continues to) her knowledge for years by presenting at writers’ conferences. She is known for being extremely generous with her knowledge and expertise as is Robert Dugoni. The list goes on and on with international best-selling authors who share and mentor authors—authors such as J.D. Barker, C.C. Humphreys, Ann Charles, Ursula Le Guin, George R.R. Martin, Pamela Beason, are among the authors who believe in mentoring aspiring authors and giving back to the writing community.

    Robert Dugoni is one of our most popular speakers at CAC. Pam Beason is conducting the panel discussion.

    Discover your publishing expertise. Is it coming up with inciting incidents? Or world building? Or a knack for dialogue? Or social media  posts that garner attention? Or being creative in where to do book promotions? Or how to get that first draft out of your head and into black on white? Or discovering new platforms to sell works on? Or working ? Or posture while writing? Or?

    The main thing is to share your knowledge and expertise.

    So start asking to present or participate in panels at author events, in schools, at libraries, in your local writing groups, or the conferences that you are planning on attending.

    Write down your opportunities. Find out the deadlines for proposals. Keep a list and add to it.

    Nine. Podcasting and Video Blogging — Be the Interviewer or be the Interview-ee but be in the Podcast Airwaves

    With the advent of voice-driven assistants, podcasts are becoming more and more a part of daily life. Just like audio books. ( the fastest growing segment of publishing).

    Chanticleer has podcasts and video blogs. It is the new and latest that is certain to replace  “blog hopping.”  Make sure that you get your foot in the door! Even this blog post is converted to a podcast.

    As with any transition, you will need to do both: blogging and podcasting. Learn how to build your content pyramid at the Chanticleer Authors Conference 2020.

    Podcasting is going to be a feature at CAC20 this year with Hindenburg Systems (programs and apps to create podcasts and audio books) presenting sessions and podcast work shops.

    Paul Cutsinger, head of Amazon’s Alexa Code Labs will present and keynote.

    He will discuss

    • Why Voice Enabled Technology is Here to Stay 
    • The Publishing Industry and Voice Technology
    • StoryTelling and Voice Technology
    • Audiobooks and Voice 
    • Engaging Readers with Voice-driven Devices

    With more than 100 million Alexa devices in use, this a market segment that should not be overlooked in any author or publisher’s marketing plan.

    Time to start lining up your calendar with podcast and video blog events.

    Ten. Enter Your Works into Book Award Competitions and Contests

    Of course, we want to promote the Chanticleer International Book Awards with its 14 genre divisions and 2 non-fiction divisions.

    Book awards are a time honored tradition that help to distinguish best books and manuscripts from the millions of books that are written each year (and published).

    They give authors talking points, interviewers talking points, allow for point of sale marketing, social media marketing and so much more.

    Make sure to enter your works and see how they stack up against the others in your genre.

    Deadlines are closer than they appear! And there is nothing like a blue ribbon to help sell more books at a book fair or author event. #justsaying

    CIBA Grand Prize Ribbons!

    That calendar should be starting to fill in.

     

    Click here for a Handy Worksheet that you can print out to help  you to create your Market and Promotion Calendar.

     

    This Second Installment will take time to complete and you may need to work on it intermittently (but consistently) to get everything logged.

    Then the real work will begin.

    The next post will discuss implementing these first 8 Goals and creating discrete tasks to implement on a regular basis:

    Annually, Seasonally/Quarterly, Monthly, Twice a Month, Weekly, Almost daily.

    And social media postings, and blog postings, and articles, and…

    We elaborate on the first ten items and incorporate them into the calendar and create a schedule.

    Thank you for joining us in this Writer’s Tool Box series: The 12 MUST-Do’s for Authors Number Two of Twelve blog-post articles.We hope these were handy reminders or something new to consider. 

    If there is something we should add to this blog-post or you have an experience that you would like to share or a question that you would like to ask about this blog post, please contact us at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com or SAnderson@ChantiReviews.com

    We’d love to hear from you! 

    Thank you for joining us and please stay tuned for the next article!The Secret to Successful Publishing

     

     

  • A PROMISE GIVEN (A Henrietta and Inspector Howard Series Book 3) by Michelle Cox – Historical Mystery, Romantic Mystery, Mystery Suspense

    A PROMISE GIVEN (A Henrietta and Inspector Howard Series Book 3) by Michelle Cox – Historical Mystery, Romantic Mystery, Mystery Suspense

    Mystery & Mayhem Grand Prize Badge for a Promise GivenWith a much-anticipated wedding is in the works, but family complications and entanglements threaten the celebration, when is love A Promise Given, and when is it a compromise taken?

    Amidst tribulations of friends and family, the smart and beautiful Henrietta, and the intense Inspector Clive Howard say, “I do.” Now the loving couple will learn how to be Mr. and Mrs. Howard on their honeymoon in England with his relatives at Castle Linley, where intrigue and mystery await their arrival.

    This third book in the Henrietta and Inspector Howard series celebrates the happy couple’s lavish wedding day on October 19, 1935. All is not calm or peaceful, however. The big day finds Henrietta’s mother and younger siblings uneasily settled in a new house in Palmer Square. Wedding jitters are magnified as the lovely bride-to-be uncovers concerning stories and disconcerting marriage advice from friends and relatives. There is a question whether Henrietta’s Ma will even attend the ceremony, and what will be the outcome as Stan shifts his unrequited feelings for Henrietta to her sister Elsie?

    The newlyweds attempt to leave troubles miles behind when they set sail for a honeymoon in the rolling green hillsides of England at Castle Linley. They’re hosted by the Inspector’s relatives who welcome Clive and Henrietta with open arms. As she gets to know his English family, Henrietta ponders the long journey she’s taken since she first met the Inspector. In the meantime, Clive views some alarming changes to the castle, to the family, and even to the staff. Just as the news spreads through the town that a man has been murdered, Clive becomes aware of mysterious comings and goings of his cousin Wallace. Will the newlyweds investigate together? What secrets are waiting to be uncovered – and how will the family react?

    This romantic novel evokes a sensual aura that embraces and warms the reader. The setting is authentically historic. The story gives a new slant to the timeless question of whether the beauty of true love indeed conquers all. It explores what happens to those who don’t find love, and to those who compromise. Beyond the happily ever after wedding, A Promise Given follows two individuals into the challenges of starting a life together, while delving into a murder mystery that threatens to undermine their own family.

    A Promise Given by Michelle Cox won the CIBA 2018 Grand Prize in the Mystery & Mayhem Awards.

     

     

  • Hot Marketing Tips are Shared in the 10 Question Author Interview with MICHELLE COX – Author Interviews, Marketing, Craft of Writing

    Hot Marketing Tips are Shared in the 10 Question Author Interview with MICHELLE COX – Author Interviews, Marketing, Craft of Writing

    Mystery & Mayhem Book Awards Grand Prize winner Michelle Cox graciously shares her writing life and knowledge with us along with some hot marketing tips and tools! Read on!

     “When I finally decided to try writing, the creativity within me, that divine essence, finally found its true home.  I’m happiest when I’m creating, and I hope I can keep writing for a long time.” – Michelle Cox

    Michelle Cox, award-winning author, at work in her writing lair

    Chanticleer: Thanks for coming by, Michelle. Tell us what genre best describes your work? And, what led you to write in this genre?

    Cox: Well, that’s a great question!  I usually at least place as a semi-finalist in three different categories at the Chanticleer awards, for example, so that should be a pretty good indication.

    Romance Fiction Award Post 1750s Historical Fiction Award Cozy Mystery Fiction Award

    My series is set during the 1930s in Chicago, so that qualifies it to be historical fiction, but it’s also mystery and romance.  I guess “romantic-suspense” would be the best way to describe the series, but without the bare-chested guys on the cover.

    They always say to write what you would want to read, and this is it!  I set the series set in my favorite era; added a little bit of mystery, a little bit of romance; flavored it with the haves- and the have-nots of the era, as well as a touch of the English aristocracy; and then stocked it with lots of characters and subplots weaving in and out . . . sheer heaven!

    Chanticleer: And that’s why we love you and your books! What do you do when you’re not writing? Tells us a little about your hobbies.

    Cox: I no longer have any! I used to have hobbies before writing took over my life. If I do have a few minutes here and there, I still love to garden and bake, but my real love, however, is board games.  I’m a fanatic and have become a sort of a collector now.

    Playing games with Michelle Cox! Did the butler do it?

    Chanti: That sounds like a lot of fun! So, how do you approach your writing day?

    Cox: As soon as my kids get on the bus at 6:50 am, I make my second cup of coffee and sit down at my desk.  I’m not allowed to do any social media, though I do always do a quick email check to see, you know, if I won the Pulitzer or something (it’s always no), and then I start working on whatever manuscript I’m currently on.  My brain is its crispest early in the morning, so I have to use that time for the work that takes the most concentration.  There’s something to be said about productivity when you know you only have a limited time to write.  There’s no room for writer’s block or procrastination.  When you know you only have so much time, you have a way of just sitting down and doing it.

     

    When I reach whatever my writing goal is for that day, I spend the next five to seven hours (until the kids come home) doing marketing and PR—anything from writing the blog or the newsletter or articles or interviews, taping podcasts, setting up events, answering email, attending to social media, etc.  It’s really a full-time job, though, sadly, the actual writing, the part I love, is the part I get to spend the least on.

     

    Chanti: Marketing pays off, right? Name five of your favorite authors and describe how they influence your work.

    Cox: My series is known for the plethora of rich characters scattered throughout and the big saga-like plots.  I was definitely influenced in this by my early favorites: Louisa May Alcott, Catherine Cookson, and Charles Dickens.  My other two favorites would be Anthony Trollope and Jane Austin for their subtlety in character and their overall ability to use language so beautifully.

    Chanti: I cannot argue with your choices. These are delicious authors – and novels!

    I know you gave us a snapshot of your work-day earlier, but could you give us your best marketing tips, what’s worked to sell more books, gain notoriety, and expand your literary footprint.

    Cox: Wow!  That’s a great question, but so hard to answer.  All marketing is pretty elusive, isn’t it?  It’s a constant process of throwing things at the wall and seeing what sticks.  It’s also important to remember that what works for one person, might not work for everyone.  It’s not an exact science.  If it were, we’d all be rich!

    But, in general, here are some good marketing tips that I have found to work:

    • Try to figure out where your readers are. Most of my readers, for example, are on Facebook, so that’s where I spend most of my social media time.
    • Think of yourself as a brand and try to match your posts accordingly. I post things about myself or the book or writing, but mostly old recipes, period drama news, or old stories from the past (which constitute my blog). Also, I’m very careful never to post anything religious or political.  This is a business, and the more you see yourself that way and follow basic business protocols, the more successful you’ll be.

    • Try to build your newsletter list by offering a freebie (such as free story, writing tips, a webinar, a prequel). Personally, I do it by running contests with really big prize packages. I make sure to state that the contest winner will be picked only from my newsletter subscribers.  I pay a designer to create a beautiful graphic of the prizes, post it on FB, and then boost the post.  Not only does this get me a lot of new subscribers (sometimes up to 1,000!), but it exposes the series to new readers as well!
    • Build your network. Join online author groups (I am part of a fabulous private FB group organized by my publisher, She Writes Press. We all share ideas, marketing tips, and offer support and advice, especially to the newer authors just coming on board.  It’s a collective wealth of information.) or real-world groups in your area.  Don’t be jealous of the success of others, but help each other as much as possible. As my publisher, Brooke Warner has said, “There’s room for everyone at the table.”
    • Show up at other authors events, write reviews, help promote whenever possible.  Go to conferences to meet not just readers, but other authors who can potentially help you.  Remember that you are a business, and you need to do work within your community to begin standing out.

    • For example, my publisher and I overprinted Book 2 of my series, so, as per my contract, when the first year of publication had passed, I was faced with having to pay a storage fee for these extra books (a couple of thousand), have them shipped to my garage, or have them destroyed.  I decided, instead, to send them to libraries and conference organizers.  It was a lot of work and expense, but it got my book into the hands of hundreds, if not thousands, of potential readers, and hopefully, they’ll come back for more and buy the rest of the series.  You have to be willing to take risks.

     

    • Also in this category would be to try to get a Bookbub deal, which, as we all know is really tough.  Again, for Book 2 of the series, we submitted four times, trying to get a deal with the book being priced at .99 cents.  I finally decided to offer it for free, and we cleverly put a buy link to book 3 at the end of Book 2.  Bookbub then offered me a deal, and I had over 55,000 downloads in one day!  Hopefully, a lot of those people will go on to buy Book 3 at full price.

    • Lastly, if the first book of your series is free, either permanently or occasionally, you can join Book Funnel, in which you “bundle” your book with others of a similar genre with each author promoting the bundle to their social network, which exposes your series to a whole new crop of readers.  Readers are able to download your free book in exchange for their email address.  So not only are you getting readers hooked on your series (hopefully!), but you’re building your subscriber/newsletter list.

     

    Chanti: You could teach a Master Class on this at CAC20! Let’s chat about this later.

    Chanti: What are you working on now? What can we look forward to seeing next from you?

    Cox: Book 5 of the series is currently in production and scheduled to be released in Spring 2020.  I said I was going to take a break from the series after that, but I admit, I’ve already started sketching out Book 6 –  I can’t help it!

    But what’s really exciting is a new stand-alone novel, The Love You Take, that I wrote, also based partially on a true story and set in Chicago in the 1930s.  It’s a really fabulous book if I do say so, about a “backward” girl who has to go and live at a home for “bad girls” after she unwittingly becomes pregnant. I’m currently querying agents for it.

    Chanti: Sounds intriguing. Please keep us updated. Who’s the perfect reader for your book?

    Cox: Though some men enjoy my books, the primary audience is women. Anyone who loves Downton Abbey; Upstairs, Downstairs; Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries, the old black and white films, like The Thin Man . . . basically any period drama or old movie . . . will love my series.  I can’t tell you how many people have written to me to tell me that the series is so visual, that reading it was like watching a movie.  It’s delightful escapism; people tell me all the time they feel like they’ve been transported back in time after reading them.

    Chanti: I know that’s why we read your books #delightful! What is the most important thing a reader can do for an author?

    Cox: Tell a friend!  Research shows that the number one thing that influences people to buy books is word-of-mouth.  If you like a book, recommend it to friends or your book club.  The second best thing is to write a review!  People seem wary of doing this, telling me that they’re nervous about what to write.

    “Nonsense!” I say.

    A review can be one sentence: “This was a great book; I enjoyed it!”

    There.  Done.

    You don’t have to go into a lengthy reworking of the synopsis (why do people do this?) or delve into symbolism or themes or whatever.  Just give your one-sentence opinion!

    Chanti: I’ve been telling my non-writing friends this for years… Do you ever experience writer’s block? What do you do to overcome it?

    Cox: Not really!  I have a lot of story ideas in my head, and thus I usually have the opposite problem.  This is where outlining can really help.  If you have a pretty weighty outline sketched out, then when you sit down to write each day, you pretty much already know what you’re supposed to write that day.  Likewise, I enjoy taking an evening walk (or I try to, anyway!), during which I think about tomorrow’s chapter and what needs to go into it.  Sometimes I even voice record if I have a really good idea or some strands of dialog.  There’s something about walking—moving the legs back and forth, back and forth—that seems to stimulate something in the brain. They say that Dickens used to walk the streets of London for hours in the wee hours of the night.  Now I know why!

    Chanti: Time to reflect and let your mind wander. Movement really does help with this. What excites you most about writing?

    Cox: Creating something out of nothing.  I’ve always been a really creative person.  Looking back, I see now that I’ve always been striving to create, and for a long time it took on many different forms.  As a kid, I was always trying to illustrate Louisa May Alcott’s books or write little fan fiction stories based on Jo March.  As I got older, it took the form of gardening and decorating the house, and then baking and then creating elaborate kids’ birthday party invitations!  When I finally decided to try writing (long story), the creativity within me, that divine essence, finally found its true home.  I’m happiest when I’m creating, and I hope I can keep writing for a long time.

    Chanti: We hope you do, too, Michelle. What a fabulous interview! Thank you for sharing your story with us. 

    Speaking of sharing, if you like what you’ve read, please “like, comment, and share!” Sharing is caring, baby!

    The CIBA Grand Prize Winners

     

    Michelle Cox is a multi-award-winning author who recently spent some time with us at CAC19. This year was particularly special because Michelle won the CIBA 2018 Grand Prize for Mystery & Mayhem Awards!

     

    and took 1st Place in the Chatelaine Awards for Romantic Fiction – both awards are in honor of her book, A Promise Given. We will probably never stop celebrating this – it’s just too much fun!

    To find out what Michelle’s up to next, Find and Follow her here:

     Facebook 

    Twitter

    Instagram 

    Michelle’s Website: http://michellecoxauthor.com/

  • The Chanticleer International Book Awards Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners 2018 (CIBAs)

    The Chanticleer International Book Awards Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners 2018 (CIBAs)

    We are deeply honored to announce the 2018 Winners of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs). The winners were recognized at the annual Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Banquet Ceremony on Saturday, April 27, 2019, at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether, Bellingham, Wash.

     

     

    We want to thank all of the authors and publishers who participated in the 2018 Chanticleer International Book Awards (the CIBAs). Each year, we find the quality of the entries and the competitiveness of the division competitions increasing exponentially. We added a new level to the judging rounds in 2018—the SemiFinalists. The CIBA judges wanted to add Semi-Finalists as a way to recognize and validate the entries that were not selected for the very few First Place Award positions within each genre division.

    PublishDrive, a global distribution platform, and Hindenburg Systems, audiobooks and podcasts software, awarded more than $30,000 (cash value) in additional prizes to the 2018 Chanticleer International Book Award winners. Thank you!

    A Recap of the CIBA Selection Process

    • There are 16 divisions of the CIBAs: 14 fiction genre divisions and 2 non-fiction divisions.
    • First Place Category award winners were selected for each one of the 16 divisions from an overall field of  titles that progressed to the Semi-Finalists positions from the Shortlists, the Long List, and the infamous beginning slush pile rounds.
    • One Grand Prize award winner was selected from the First Place Category Award Winners for each of the 16 CIBA divisions.
    • One Overall Grand Prize award winner was selected from the 16 divisions of Grand Prize Award Winners

    All CIBA Semi-Finalists in attendance at the CIBA awards ceremony were recognized with their respective division at the CIBA awards ceremony along with receiving a Semi-Finalist ribbon and digital badge and a significant discount to attend the Chanticleer Authors Conference.

    Additional Prize from the DONALD MAASS LITERARY AGENCY

    An additional prize was awarded to the 2018 CIBA Grand Prize Award Winners by the Donald Maass Literary Agency (that represents more than 150 novelists and sell more 100 novels each year to leading publishers in the U.S. and overseas). Donald Maass has offered “a high priority submission” process opportunity to the 2018 Grand Prize CIBA winners and a “priority submission” process opportunity to the 2018 CIBA 1st Place Category winning titles for consideration by his agency.

    An email will go out to all 2018 CIBA grand prize award winners prior to June 10, 2019 with instructions, links, and more information about the awards packages. We appreciate your patience. As stated in the Semi-Finalist notification email, “One does not need to be present at the CIBA ceremony and banquet to win. But it sure is a lot more fun!”

    And now to present the 2018 Chanticleer International Book Awards Grand winning titles and their authors who were announced on April 27, 2019, at the CIBA ceremony and banquet.

    You read testimonials from the 2019 Chanticleer Authors Conference and the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony at  https://www.chantireviews.com/chanticleer-conference/conference-testimonials/


    Cygnus Award for Science Fiction

    The CYGNUS Book Awards for Science Fiction Grand Prize Winner

    The Korpes File by J.I Rogers took home the 2018 CYGNUS Book Awards for Science Fiction Grand Prize Ribbon.

    View the 2018 CYGNUS 1st Place Category Winners at https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/04/29/cygnus-book-awards-for-science-fiction-novels-the-grand-prize-winner-and-first-place-category-winners-2018-cibas/


    The JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction

    From Liberty to Magnolia: In Search of the American Dream by Janice S. Ellis took home the 2018 JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction Grand Prize Ribbon! 

    View the 2018 JOURNEY First Place Award Winners at https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/04/30/journey-book-awards-for-narrative-non-fiction-the-grand-prize-winner-and-first-place-category-winners-2018-cibas/ 


    Cozy Mystery Fiction Award

    The M & M Book Awards for Mystery and Mayhem

    A PROMISE GIVEN by Michelle Cox took home the M&M Book Awards for Mystery & Mayhem Grand Prize Ribbon

    View the 2018 M&M First Place Award Winners at https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/05/01/the-mm-book-awards-for-mystery-and-mayhem-grand-prize-division-winner-and-first-place-category-winners-2018-cibas/


    Gertrude Warner Children's Chapter Books

    The GERTRUDE WARNER Book Awards for Middle-Grade Readers

    A manuscript titled The PORTALS of PERIL by Jules Luther took home the Gertrude Warner Book Awards for Middle-Grade Readers

    View the 2018 Gertrude Warner First Place Award Winners at https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/05/04/the-gertrude-warner-book-awards-for-middle-grade-readers-grand-prize-and-first-place-catergory-winners-2018-cibas/


    Dante Rossetti Awards for YA Fiction

    The DANTE ROSSETTI Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction

    WHISPERS by Lynn Yvonne Moon took home the Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult  Fiction

    View the 2018 Dante Rossetti First Place Award Winners at https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/05/05/the-dante-rossetti-book-awards-for-young-adult-fiction-grand-prize-and-first-place-category-winners-2018-cibas/


    Pre 1750 Historical Fiction Award

    The CHAUCER Book Awards for pre-1750s Historic Fiction

    The SERPENT and The EAGLE  by Edward Rickford took home the CHAUCER Book Awards Grand Prize Blue Ribbon

    View the 2018 Chaucer First Place Award Winners at https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/05/05/the-chaucer-book-awards-for-pre-1750s-historical-fiction-grand-prize-and-first-place-category-winners-2018-cibas/


    Post 1750s Historical Fiction AwardThe GOETHE Book Awards GRAND PRIZE WINNER for Post-1750s Historical Fiction

    The Lost Years of Billy Battles by Ronald E. Yates took home the Goethe Grand Prize Ribbon

    View the 2018 Goethe First Place Category Award Winners at https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/05/07/the-goethe-book-awards-for-post-1750s-for-historical-fiction-grand-prize-and-first-place-category-winners-2018-cibas/


    Western Pioneeer Civil War Fiction AwardThe LARAMIE Book Awards GRAND PRIZE WINNER for Western Fiction

    Blood Moon: A Captive’s Tale by Ruth Hull Chatlien took home the Laramie Grand Prize Ribbon. 

    View the 2018 Laramie First Place Category Award Winners at https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/05/06/the-laramie-book-awards-for-western-fiction-grand-prize-and-first-place-category-winners-2018-cibas/


    Romance Fiction AwardThe CHATELAINE Book Awards  GRAND PRIZE WINNER for Romantic Fiction

    The House at Ladywell by Nicola Slade took home the 2018 Chatelaine Grand Prize Ribbon

    View the 2018 CHATELAINE First Place Category Award Winners at https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/05/07/the-chatelaine-book-awards-for-romantic-fiction-grand-prize-and-first-place-category-winners-2018-cibas/


    Early Readers and Picture booksThe LITTLE PEEPS Book Awards GRAND PRIZE WINNER for Early Readers

    The Tooth Collector Fairies: Home from Decay Valley by Denise Ditto took home the Little Peeps Grand Prize Ribbon

    View the 2018 LITTLE PEEPS First Place Category Award Winners at https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/05/08/the-little-peeps-book-awards-for-early-readers-grand-prize-and-first-place-category-winners-cibas-2018/


    Thriller Suspense Fiction Award The Clue Book Awards GRAND PRIZE WINNER for Mystery Suspense & Thriller Novels

    California Son by Timothy Burgess  took home the Clue Grand Prize Ribbon

    View the 2018 CLUE First Place Category Award Winners at https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/05/08/the-clue-book-awards-for-mystery-suspense-thriller-novels-grand-prize-and-first-place-category-winners-cibas-2018/


    The OZMA Book Awards GRAND PRIZE WINNER for Fantasy Fiction Novels

    Dragon Speaker by Elana A. Mugdan took home the OZMA Grand Prize Ribbon

    View the 2018 OZMA First Place Category Award Winners at https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/05/09/the-ozma-book-awards-for-fantasy-fiction-novels-grand-prize-and-first-place-category-winners-cibas-2018/


    Paranormal Fiction AwardsThe PARANORMAL  Book Awards GRAND PRIZE WINNER for Supernatural & Paranormal Novels

    The Madwoman of Preacher’s Cove, a manuscript by Joy Ross Davis took home the Paranormal Grand Prize Ribbon

    View the 2018 PARANORMAL First Place Category Award Winners at https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/05/09/the-paranormal-book-awards-for-supernatural-paranormal-novels-grand-prize-and-first-place-category-winners-cibas-2018/


    The Global Thriller Book Awards GRAND PRIZE WINNER for Lab Lit & High Stakes Thriller Novels

    The Moving Blade by Michael Pronko
    took home the Global Thrillers Grand Prize Ribbon

    View the 2018 Global Thriller First Place Category Award Winners at https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/05/09/the-global-thriller-book-awards-for-lab-lit-high-stakes-thriller-novels-grand-prize-and-first-place-category-winners-cibas-2018/


    The SOMERSET Book Awards for Contemporary, Literary, Satire Novels

    Hard Cider – a novel by Barbara A. Stark-Nemon
    took home the Somerset Grand Prize Ribbon

    View the 2018 SOMERSET First Place Category Award Winners at https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/05/10/the-somerset-book-awards-for-contemporary-literary-satire-novels-grand-prize-and-first-place-category-winners-cibas-2018/


     The Instruction & Insight Book Awards GRAND PRIZE WINNER for Non-Fiction, Non-Narrative

    Explore Europe on Foot by Cassandra Overby took home the Instruction & Insight Grand Prize Ribbon

    View the 2018 I & I First Place Category Award Winners at https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/05/10/the-instruction-insight-book-awards-for-non-fiction-non-narrative-grand-prize-and-first-place-category-winners-cibas-2018/


    CONGRATULATIONS to Ronald E. YATES for The LOST YEARS of BILLY BATTLES (Book 3 of the Finding Billy Battles Trilogy) taking home the CHANTICLEER OVERALL Grand Prize for BEST BOOK in the 2018 CIBAS

    “…the reader experiences that all too rare sense of complete transport to another world, one fully realized in these pages because the storytelling is so skillful and thoroughly captivating.” 

     

    The photo below is of Ronald E. Yates with his GOETHE Grand Prize Ribbon and his Chanticleer Overall Best Book Ribbon

    “Reading a Book is Like Life: You Live it One Page at a Time.” (Ron Yates) Ron is a former foreign correspondent and Professor Emeritus of Journalism, Dean of the College of Media and is an award-winning historical novelist. Read more about this Pulitzer nominated journalist and Chanticleerian by clicking on this link.

     

    Twelve of the Sixteen Grand Prize Division Winners were present to receive their ribbons on stage at the 2018 Chanticleer International Book Awards Ceremony.

    We will post more photographs and information. Do check back and subscribe to the Chanticleer Reviews e-news letter.

    We have exciting news for the Chanticleer Community on the horizon so do stay tuned!  

    You know you want a coveted Chanticleer Reviews Blue Ribbon! 

    Submit your works (manuscripts or novels published after or on January 1, 2017, are accepted) to the prestigious Chanticleer International Book Awards today! Entries are being accepted into the 2019 CIBAs in all 16 divisions.

    Be sure to register early for the 2020 Chanticleer Authors Conference that will take place on April 16, 17, 18, & 19, 2020 with the 2019 CIBA banquet and ceremony scheduled to take place on Saturday, April 18th, 2020 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash.

    An email will go out to all 2018 CIBA award winners prior to June 10, 2019, with instructions, links, and more information about the awards packages. We appreciate your patience. As stated in the Semi-Finalist notification email, “One does not need to be present at the CIBA ceremony and banquet to win. But it sure is a lot more fun!”

    As always, please contact us at Chanticleer@ChantiReviews.com with any questions, concerns, or suggestions!

    We have begun planning for the 2020 Chanticleer Authors Conference (April 16, 17, & 18, 2020) and the 2019  CIBA Banquet and Ceremony that will take place on April 17, 2020, at the Hotel Bellwether, Bellingham, Wash.

  • The CHATELAINE Book Awards for Romantic Fiction – Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners – 2018 CIBAs

    The CHATELAINE Book Awards for Romantic Fiction – Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners – 2018 CIBAs

    Romance Fiction AwardWe are excited and honored to officially announce the Grand Prize Winner and the First Place Category Winners for the 2018 CHATELAINE Book Awards at the annual Chanticleer Authors Conference and the 2018 Chanticleer International Book Awards ceremony. This year’s ceremony and banquet were held on Saturday, April 27th, 2019 at the Hotel Bellwether by beautiful Bellingham Bay, Wash.

     

    We want to thank all of those who entered and participated in the  2018 Chatelaine Book Awards for romantic fiction, a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (the CIBAs).

    Sharon Anderson, the author of the award-winning of Curse of the Seven 70s  and winner of the 2014 Chanticleer Novelette Competition for the Stone God’s Wife announced the 2018 Chatelaine Award Winners at the Chanticleer International Book Awards Banquet and Ceremony.

    PublishDrive and Hindenburg Systems awarded additional prizes to the 2018 Goethe Book Award winners. Thank you!

    Congratulations to the 2018 CHATELAINE Book Awards for Romantic Fiction  First in Category Winners!

    • Allurement Westward by J.P. Kenna
    • Blame it on the Bet by L.E. Rico
    • Wrapped in the Stars by Elena Mikalsen
    • A Promise Given by Michelle Cox
    • Persuading Lucy by Felicity Beadsmoore/Tammy Mannersly

    And now for the 2018 Chatelaine Book Awards  GRAND PRIZE WINNER for Romantic Fiction:

    The House at Ladywell by Nicola Slade took home the 2018 Chatelaine Grand Prize Ribbon

     

     

     

     

    An email will go out to all First Place Category Winners and Grand Prize Winners with more information, the timing of awarded reviews, links to digital badges, and more before May 31st, 2019 (approximately four weeks after the awards ceremony). Please look for it in your email inbox.

    When we receive the digital photographs from the Official CAC19 professional photographer, Dwayne Rogge of Photo Treehouse, we will post the photographs of CHATELAINE award winners on this page.

    Click here for the link to the  CHATELAINE Semi-Finalists.

    This post will be updated with photos and more information. Please do visit it again!

    The deadline for submissions into the 2019 Chatelaine Book Awards is August 30, 2019 Midnight (PST).

    Our next Chanticleer International Book Awards Ceremony will be held on Saturday, April 18th, 2020, for the 2019 CIBA winners.

     Enter your book or manuscript in a contest today!

  • The M&M Book Awards for Mystery and Mayhem – Grand Prize Division Winner and First Place Category Winners – 2018 CIBAs

    The M&M Book Awards for Mystery and Mayhem – Grand Prize Division Winner and First Place Category Winners – 2018 CIBAs

    Cozy Mystery Fiction AwardM&M BOOK AWARDS for Mystery & Mayhem Fiction, a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (CIBAs)

    We are excited and honored to officially announce the Grand Prize Winner and the First Place Category Winners for the 2018 M&M Book Awards at the annual Chanticleer Authors Conference and the 2018 Chanticleer International Book Awards ceremony. This year’s ceremony and banquet were held on Saturday, April 27th, 2019 at the Hotel Bellwether by beautiful Bellingham Bay, Wash.

    We want to thank all of those who entered and participated in the  2018 M&M Book Awards for Mystery & Mayhem Fiction, a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards.

    Lawrence Verigin, the author of the Dark Seed thriller series and winner of CLUE and Global Thriller awards (CIBA),  announced the First Place Award Winners and the Grand Prize Winner for the 2018 M&M Book Awards at the Chanticleer International Book Awards Banquet and Ceremony. PublishDrive and Hindenburg Systems awarded additional prizes to the 2018 M&M Book Award winners. Thank you!

    2018 M&M  Book Awards for Mystery and Mayhem  Fiction First in Category Winners

    • Bert Mintenko and the Minor Misdemeanors by B.L. Smith
    • Fiction Can Be Murder by Becky Clark
    • A Promise Given by Michelle Cox
    • Campari Crimson by Traci Andrighetti
    • Evil Under The Stars: The Agatha Christie Book Club 3 by C.A. Larmer
    • Hair Brained by Nancy J. Cohen
    • Blood on a Blue Moon:  A Sheaffer Blue Mystery by Jessica H. Stone / Stone Winkler  
    • Moriarty Takes His Medicine by Anna Castle     

    Congratulations to the First Place Category Winners of the 2018 M&M Book Awards! 

    And now for the M&M BOOK AWARDS GRAND PRIZE WINNER for Mystery & Mayhem Fiction

     

            A PROMISE GIVEN by Michelle Cox took home the M&M Book Awards for Mystery & Mayhem Grand Prize Ribbon

     

     

    An email will go out to all First Place Category Winners and Grand Prize Winners with more information, the timing of awarded reviews, links to digital badges, and more before May 31st, 2019 (approximately four weeks after the awards ceremony). Please look for it in your email inbox.

    When we receive the digital photographs from the Official CAC19 professional photographer, Dwayne Rogge of Photo Treehouse, we will post the M&M award winners on this page.

    Click here for the link to the 2018 M&M Semi-Finalists.

    This post will be updated with photos and more information. Please do visit it again!

    The deadline for submissions into the 2019 M&M Book Awards has been extended to May 15. 2019 Midnight (PST).

    Our next Chanticleer International Book Awards Ceremony will be held on Saturday, April 18th, 2020, for the 2019 CIBA winners. Enter your book or manuscript in a contest today!

    As always, please contact me directly at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com with any questions, concerns, or suggestions.