7 Ways to Build Your Author Brand Online

On Saturday, I posted Four Surprising Conclusions About Author Websites. Yesterday, I posted on Why Every Author Needs a Powerful Online Presence. Today I want to address the how of building your author brand online.

Photo courtesy of ©iStockphoto.com/eyeidea, Image #3250049

Photo courtesy of ©iStockphoto.com/eyeidea

Let me begin with a disclaimer. I am not a web guru. I am not a professional. I am simply a guy who has been blogging since 1998 (before they called it blogging). I have some degree of success, but mostly I have just tried to be a student of what works and what doesn’t work. And, I have made a lot of mistakes along the way.

From my point of view, there are seven things that are important in building an online brand, particularly if you are an author:

  1. Read Tribes by Seth Godin. I reviewed Seth’s new book last Friday. It explains the importance of building a tribe of followers and exactly how to do it. It represents a paradigm shift in leadership and communication.

    If you are an author, your tribe members are your readers—or, at least, that’s potentially true. The only question is whether or not you will become the tribe’s leader and equip them to communicate with you and with one another. Monologues are so last-century. Facilitating dialogues and polylogues are what is happening now. Authors who understand this and jump in with both feet are the ones who will succeed.

  2. Start Twittering. Do this before you do anything else online. It will teach you more about where the Internet is going than anything else I can recommend. I know, I know. You don’t have time. You can’t understand what all the fuss is about. You don’t get it. Blah, blah, blah. And you won’t get it until you try it.

    If you aren’t on Twitter, I double-dog dare you to try it for 30 days. Start with my 12 Reasons to Start Twittering, then read my Beginner’s Guide to Twitter. You can read both posts in 15 minutes. Then sign-up and enter the fray. If Max Lucado, Donald Miller, Sheila Walsh, Colleen Coble, Patsy Clairmont, Rachel Hauck, and other successful authors find it valuable, you just might too.

  3. Open a Facebook account. This is an easy way to humanize your brand and help people get to know you. Your fans want more than just the output of your creative mind; they want to get to know you. Facebook is an easy, simple way to do this.

    Again, this is one of those things you just have to try to understand. If you already have a Facebook account then connect it to Twitter using the Twitter app. This way, your tweedts will automatically update your Facebook account. By the way, I accept all friend requests on both Twitter and Facebook. Period.

  4. Create a website. Surely you already have one, but, if not, then make this a top priority. If someone hears your name or reads something they like about you, guess what they are going to do? That’s right, they are going to Google you. And, if your own site is not at or near the top of the list, they are not going to take you seriously. Worse, how will they find your other works or become a fan?

    But having a Web site is not enough. If you don’t have your meta tag data populated, you are missing traffic and opportunities. This is not that difficult. Run your website through WebsiteGrader.com and follow the directions. If necessary, get your webmaster to fix the problem. This was the number one problem with most of my own top authors’ websites.

  5. Write a blog. A static website (one that never changes) is boring. You’re not going to build a fan base, loyal readers, or repeat visitors unless you offer your visitors frequently-updated content. You must give them a reason to come back, again and again. This is what builds a following.

    A blog is like a lab for writers. It gives you an opportunity to try out new ideas and see if they get traction with your audience. It will also hone your writing skills. But you must make a commitment to write frequently. How often? That depends. I go through different seasons. In general though, I would say brief and more frequent is better. (I know, I could work on the briefer part.)

  6. Participate in the conversation. If you have a blog, you must—MUST!—allow comments. Today’s readers are not content just to sit at your feet and take notes. They want to interact. They want to challenge, question, and add their own comments. If you don’t allow this, you are making a big mistake.

    Yes, people will sometimes hurt your feelings. But they will also provide you with near-instant feedback. Both are essential for your development as a writer. So make it easy. Don’t require them to sign in, have a valid email address, or have you approve their comments first. This only creates delay and unnecessary friction in the conversation. Occasionally, you will get inappropriate comments, but you can easily delete these. I am speaking from many years of experience here.

  7. Be generous and show the love. The more you give to your readers, the more they will give back. Reply to tweets, Facebook comments, and blog comments. Leave comments on other people’s sites. Promote things that you think your readers will find valuable, even if it means directing them to your competition.

    This may seem like it will take a big investment of time. I don’t think so. But even if it does, you can establish some boundaries. Turn your email and other pings off while you are writing. Then, when you achieve your word count for the day, get out there and interact with your readers.

Finally, regardless of the online venue, be authentic. People today can smell a phony a mile away. The world is becoming increasingly open and transparent. The more you embrace this rather than fighting it, the more you will build a tribe of loyal readers.

Question: What am I missing? What else have you found to be important in building your brand online?
Disclosure of Material Connection: Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

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  • http://www.michaelhyatt.com Michael S. Hyatt

    M.L.: Good question. I used to personally participate in forums more, but not so much lately. Regardless, if it works for you, keep doing it!

    (The comments to my blog posts are a kind of forum.)

  • http://www.michaelhyatt.com Michael S. Hyatt

    @Lenore: Can you recommend some specific article banks?

  • http://www.michaelhyatt.com Michael S. Hyatt

    @Jeff: I would experiment. I am not an expert in fiction. The great thing about the web is that you can test different ideas and get almost instantaneous feedback.

  • http://www.aholyexperience.com Ann Voskamp

    Thoughtful, thorough analysis.

    And yet I wonder: in a cyberworld of twittering and facebooking and commenting… can one create an oasis of unusual quiet? A blog with 6 days a week of thoughtful, probing posts, that aren’t “quick reads and click away”… but entries that invite a reader to slow, to think, to really enter in and consider. A blog that is counter-cyberculture: No obligation to leave a comment. No twittering. No full sidebars. In the online world of so much noise, can you create a retreat for readers from the “loud” internet? And because it precisely goes against the trends, it finds its voice?

    I don’t know. These are things I’ve thought about, things I’ve intentionally cultivated (perhaps wrongly?) for the last four years of blogging. To build a still “chapel,” (so to speak) to think long and pray quietly…

    And yet, true, Jesus was eminently about community, not for his own glorification, but to humbly serve.

    You’ve given me much to prayerfully mull over, Mr. Hyatt — my genuine appreciation.

  • http://www.michaelhyatt.com/ Michael S. Hyatt

    M.L.: Good question. I used to personally participate in forums more, but not so much lately. Regardless, if it works for you, keep doing it!

    (The comments to my blog posts are a kind of forum.)

  • http://www.michaelhyatt.com/ Michael S. Hyatt

    @Lenore: Can you recommend some specific article banks?

  • http://www.michaelhyatt.com/ Michael S. Hyatt

    @Jeff: I would experiment. I am not an expert in fiction. The great thing about the web is that you can test different ideas and get almost instantaneous feedback.

  • http://www.aholyexperience.com/ Ann Voskamp

    Thoughtful, thorough analysis.

    And yet I wonder: in a cyberworld of twittering and facebooking and commenting… can one create an oasis of unusual quiet? A blog with 6 days a week of thoughtful, probing posts, that aren't "quick reads and click away"… but entries that invite a reader to slow, to think, to really enter in and consider. A blog that is counter-cyberculture: No obligation to leave a comment. No twittering. No full sidebars. In the online world of so much noise, can you create a retreat for readers from the "loud" internet? And because it precisely goes against the trends, it finds its voice?

    I don't know. These are things I've thought about, things I've intentionally cultivated (perhaps wrongly?) for the last four years of blogging. To build a still "chapel," (so to speak) to think long and pray quietly…

    And yet, true, Jesus was eminently about community, not for his own glorification, but to humbly serve.

    You've given me much to prayerfully mull over, Mr. Hyatt — my genuine appreciation.

  • http://www.steppingintothelight.net Diane L. Harris

    Thank you for being so generous. I’ve just ordered “Tribes” by Seth Godin and look forward to reading it.

  • http://jeanettefisher.com Jeanette

    Excellent information from all. I’ve had great results posting press releases on PRWeb. Also, listing your teleseminars on sites like TeleSeminarNation generates traffic.

    A warning about Twitter: I’ve not finished a book since I started paying on Twitter. And, it’s so much fun, I don’t even care.

  • http://www.steppingintothelight.net/ Diane L. Harris

    Thank you for being so generous. I've just ordered "Tribes" by Seth Godin and look forward to reading it.

  • http://jeanettefisher.com/ Jeanette

    Excellent information from all. I've had great results posting press releases on PRWeb. Also, listing your teleseminars on sites like TeleSeminarNation generates traffic.

    A warning about Twitter: I've not finished a book since I started paying on Twitter. And, it's so much fun, I don't even care.

  • http://www.liorahess.com Liora Hess

    Thank you. I was happy to realize I’m doing everything except for reading Tribes, and I’ll get that soon when my Amazon Kindle gets here. For those who don’t know, you can also post your Tweets directly to your Facebook as your current updates. This has been important as many of my Facebook contacts aren’t Twitter fans.

  • http://www.liorahess.com/ Liora Hess

    Thank you. I was happy to realize I'm doing everything except for reading Tribes, and I'll get that soon when my Amazon Kindle gets here. For those who don't know, you can also post your Tweets directly to your Facebook as your current updates. This has been important as many of my Facebook contacts aren't Twitter fans.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/TipsGoda TipsGoda

    hye Micheal..how are you doing?My name is Aidil and im kinda new with blogging and i want to build up my brand as well…do you think im on the right track?Just want your view..

    have a look at my blog and tell me what you think.thanks.

    http://www.TipsGoda.com

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/TipsGoda TipsGoda

    hye Micheal..how are you doing?My name is Aidil and im kinda new with blogging and i want to build up my brand as well…do you think im on the right track?Just want your view..

    have a look at my blog and tell me what you think.thanks.

    http://www.TipsGoda.com

  • http://www.1writeway.wordpress.com/ Marie Ann Bailey

    Michael, I came across your post via Twitter, actually two tweets, skipping from one to the other. Made my arrival here seem serendipitous, and much of the internet is still like that for me … full of wonderful surprises. I love this post and will definitely be following you on Twitter. Thanks for all the great info and the great forum your post generated.

  • http://www.1writeway.wordpress.com/ Marie Ann Bailey

    Michael, I came across your post via Twitter, actually two tweets, skipping from one to the other. Made my arrival here seem serendipitous, and much of the internet is still like that for me … full of wonderful surprises. I love this post and will definitely be following you on Twitter. Thanks for all the great info and the great forum your post generated.

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  • http://peaceforthejourney.blogspot.com/ elaine

    Thanks for all the wonderful ideas, Michael. I just ran my blog through Website Grader and have little idea as to what the result of "66" means, but it sure has given me something to ponder in addition to the thousands of words swimming around in my head and heart … just dying to jump out! I suppose a 66 is better than zero, which is what it would be had I never started a blog.

    peace~elaine

  • http://peaceforthejourney.blogspot.com elaine

    Thanks for all the wonderful ideas, Michael. I just ran my blog through Website Grader and have little idea as to what the result of "66" means, but it sure has given me something to ponder in addition to the thousands of words swimming around in my head and heart … just dying to jump out! I suppose a 66 is better than zero, which is what it would be had I never started a blog.

    peace~elaine

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/DebraWeiss DebraWeiss

    First of all, I really enjoyed this article. Your information is spot on.

    I just finished writing a (short) five part series on building your author platform. You can check out part one here – http://www.novelistscafe.com/2009/06/building-you

    I originally blogged about the topic because I had so much difficulty finding solid information about building an author brand/platform.

    Thanks again for sharing this! : )

    Debra W.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/DebraWeiss DebraWeiss

    First of all, I really enjoyed this article. Your information is spot on.

    I just finished writing a (short) five part series on building your author platform. You can check out part one here – http://www.novelistscafe.com/2009/06/building-you

    I originally blogged about the topic because I had so much difficulty finding solid information about building an author brand/platform.

    Thanks again for sharing this! : )

    Debra W.

  • Denise McClain

    Michael, great post! These are things that I, as a writer, have been pondering as I polish my first manuscript. I have a couple questions for you.

    When you say you accept all friends on Twitter, does that mean you follow them back? I find it difficult, at times, to scroll through all their tweets. What advice do you have for this conundrum?

    I have a website that I've created myself through http://www.realmacsoftware.com/rapidweaver/

    There is a way to add a blog page. I've done so but don't get many visitors. I've stopped blogging all that frequently. Do you have any advice for increasing blog traffic? The only thing I could come up with is to perhaps use Blogspot or WordPress and link my blog there through my website. Do you think that would be a way to increase traffic?

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

      Yes, I do recommend following them back (provided that they aren't robots). However, you can also block them, which means that they can't even see your posts. My wife vets each one before she allows them to follow and is very selective about which ones she follows back. For me, that's more trouble than it's worth.

      When you get a large number of followers, you can't really pay attention to all of them. That's where you need a tool like PeopleBrowsr.com or TweetDeck. It allows you to arrange you followers in user-defined stacks or columns. I have one for employees, authors, employees, friends, etc.

      I would definitely ditch the RapidWeaver site. I would create a blog-centric site and then hang the static pages off of that. You need something with good SEO—that's why I like WordPress. My blog traffic was up 70% just this last month. It takes months and months of faithfully blogging, but it is well-worth the effort if you want to grow a tribe.

      Hope this helps.

  • Denise McClain

    Michael, great post! These are things that I, as a writer, have been pondering as I polish my first manuscript. I have a couple questions for you.

    When you say you accept all friends on Twitter, does that mean you follow them back? I find it difficult, at times, to scroll through all their tweets. What advice do you have for this conundrum?

    I have a website that I've created myself through http://www.realmacsoftware.com/rapidweaver/

    There is a way to add a blog page. I've done so but don't get many visitors. I've stopped blogging all that frequently. Do you have any advice for increasing blog traffic? The only thing I could come up with is to perhaps use Blogspot or WordPress and link my blog there through my website. Do you think that would be a way to increase traffic?

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

      Yes, I do recommend following them back (provided that they aren't robots). However, you can also block them, which means that they can't even see your posts. My wife vets each one before she allows them to follow and is very selective about which ones she follows back. For me, that's more trouble than it's worth.

      When you get a large number of followers, you can't really pay attention to all of them. That's where you need a tool like PeopleBrowsr.com or TweetDeck. It allows you to arrange you followers in user-defined stacks or columns. I have one for employees, authors, employees, friends, etc.

      I would definitely ditch the RapidWeaver site. I would create a blog-centric site and then hang the static pages off of that. You need something with good SEO—that's why I like WordPress. My blog traffic was up 70% just this last month. It takes months and months of faithfully blogging, but it is well-worth the effort if you want to grow a tribe.

      Hope this helps.

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  • Denise McClain

    Thank you! I've started looking at migrating my site to a new server which allows for easier WP conversion. I may start out with WP for my blog and then eventually use it for my entire site.

    As for Twitter, I've just created a UserList on my Seesmic Desktop so I know which ones I should read each day and which ones to read when I have time. Thank you so much!

  • Denise McClain

    Thank you! I've started looking at migrating my site to a new server which allows for easier WP conversion. I may start out with WP for my blog and then eventually use it for my entire site.

    As for Twitter, I've just created a UserList on my Seesmic Desktop so I know which ones I should read each day and which ones to read when I have time. Thank you so much!

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  • http://twitter.com/AngBreidenbach @AngBreidenbach

    I've been blogging now for almost 3 years. I am on facebook, twitter, my space, shoutlife, LinkedIn, and I'm sure a few others :-) Building a platform is a constant time issue, but a newer necessity. I will keep building because I am placing the foundation for my future. And I love having reconnected with old friends and made so many new ones with the social networks.

  • http://twitter.com/AngBreidenbach @AngBreidenbach

    I've been blogging now for almost 3 years. I am on facebook, twitter, my space, shoutlife, LinkedIn, and I'm sure a few others :-) Building a platform is a constant time issue, but a newer necessity. I will keep building because I am placing the foundation for my future. And I love having reconnected with old friends and made so many new ones with the social networks.

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  • http://www.shyjumathew.com/ shyju

    that was an amazing article, i feel more confident that i'm somewhere right on the track, more to go… thanks mic.. u rock..

  • http://www.shyjumathew.com shyju

    that was an amazing article, i feel more confident that i’m somewhere right on the track, more to go… thanks mic.. u rock..

  • http://www.facebook.com/Lucy.Ann.Moll Lucy Ann Moll

    Nice. By the way, I know I've spent too much time tweeting when I develop "mouse hand" and need to pull out the winter right glove. : )

  • http://www.facebook.com/Lucy.Ann.Moll Lucy Ann Moll

    Nice. By the way, I know I've spent too much time tweeting when I develop "mouse hand" and need to pull out the winter right glove. : )

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    Take care!

  • http://www.twitter.com/chromedaffodils Wendy

    If anyone needs tech help with their websites and social networking aspects of their business, please contact me. I could really use the work and I am very active online and would love to help you navigate the web. I have a technology degree and a Bachelors in business admin/e-marketing, just so you know.
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