Three Reasons Why Authors Must Develop Their Own Platforms

In order for authors to be successful in today’s publishing environment, they need two things: a compelling product and a significant platform. Many authors are under the mistaken notion that if they just write a great book that is sufficient. It’s not.

A DIver Standing on a Platform - Photo courtesy of ©iStockphoto.com/Graffizone, Image #1828518

I received an email message a few days ago from an aspiring author. It is typical of what I hear on a weekly basis. She wrote,

Two respected agents have told me they loved my book and proposal and are willing to represent it, but not until I have social media followers numbering in the thousands. I find this bewildering: Doesn’t a good book stand on its own anymore? Are writers now doomed to spend the bulk of our workdays trawling for blog subscribers?

The answer to the first question is, “no.” A good book does not stand on its own. It is foundational, but it is not enough. In fact, it hasn’t been enough for at least two decades.

As I often tell authors, “Writing a great book is half the job. The other half is promoting it.” This is true now more than ever. Why? Three reasons:

  1. Competition has never been greater. There are more books available now than ever before in history. According to Google’s research, nearly 130 million books have been published in all of modern history.

    Bowker, the service that assigns ISBN numbers to books, reports that more than 1 million new books were published in 2009 in the U.S. alone. While the number of books released by traditional publishers remained flat (about 288,000 titles in 2009), the number of self-published titles rose from 2008 by 181% to 765,000 titles. The numbers for 2010 have yet to be released. I am confident, however, the number will be even larger.

  2. People are more distracted than ever. It’s not just that we have more books available. We have more of every kind of media available. More movies. More television channels. More radio stations, podcasts, and the Sirius satellite radio network. More news sites, blogs, and, of course, Facebook, and Twitter. And then, of course, we have the whole phenomenon of Angry Birds, FarmVille, and other games.

    In other words, people’s attention is a finite resource. Authors are not only competing against other books on their topic and genre, they are also competing against every other media that wants a slice of their prospective reader’s attention.

  3. The publishing industry is stuck in an old model. I hate to admit this, because it is my industry. But most publishers are still focused on trying to find an audience for each new title rather than helping their authors build an enduring platform. Seth Godin was the first to get my attention on this, primarily through his book Tribes, which I highly recommend.

    But as an author, I wouldn’t assume that publishers will suddenly change and begin helping you build your platform. You must take responsibility for this yourself. If you can get help from your publisher, great. But in the meantime, re-calibrate your expectations. No one cares about your platform more than you. You must, therefore, carefully build it and nurture it. Done right, it will be an asset that will generate income for years to come.

The bottom line is that the time to build a platform is before you need it. Once you begin shopping a book proposal or once your book is published, it is too late. The good news is that it has never been easier. More on that later.

Question: What are you doing to actively build your platform? You can leave a comment by clicking here.
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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  • Mary Sanford

    Type your comment here.I am a new author also and had no idea about the process,all I knew is that God gave me a gift and I pursued it,cautiously but self published this year.Thank God for my local church and it’s members,I have been blessed to have someone build me a website,and help me with a news blast,my daughter forced me to get on facebook a few years ago.God promised to give us people for our lives and He has done that for me.I had an interveiwed on our local TBN station and from that a radio interveiw and so little by little doors are opening and I have told the Lord,every door He opens I will walk through.So I can ecourage others (like God told Moses)use what’s in your hand and don’t give up.I am thankful for the information that I am learning through Michael’s blogs.

  • http://www.kathink.blogspot.com Kathleen T. Jaeger

    “people’s attention is a finite resource. Authors are not only competing against other books on their topic and genre, they are also competing against every other media that wants a slice of their prospective reader’s attention.” This is an excellent point! How true.

  • http://www.DonnaPeruginiChildrensAuthor.com DonnaPerugini

    I’ve been working on my platform over a year now. My four children’s books were re-issued in Oct. 2010 (previously published from 1983-1987 through Harrison House selling 100,000 of the books). My greatest effort is reaching my target group.

    The startup of my blog and website were extremely intense as I had to begin to understand publishing ins and outs, geek-speak, blogging ins and outs, social networking, etc….all at once! I didn’t know if I’d ever understand any of it.

    Then one day it clicked. Instead of backing off, I then needed to put in to action ways to market my books. That brought up book trailers, free curriculum that goes with each book, songs written for each book, book tours, book reviewers, conferences, e-book assessment, book giveaways and contests.

    I’d love to have a literary agent but have put that as another step to take after the conference I’m attending in May 2010. During the conference I have appointments with a magazine editor, a publisher’s rep and will need to be able to ‘pitch perfectly’ when opportunity presents itself.

    Being an author in the eighties was much easier. The problem was, I saw the sales go down and had no idea what to do to keep the books selling. I’m glad I know as much as I do now, but the effort is tremendous all the time.

  • http://uma-maheswaran.blogspot.com/ Uma Maheswaran S

    It’s true in today’s competitive world to succeed as authors. (Where supply is very high and demand is only finite.) So, it needs quality content and some platform too.

    To begin with one needs to do his homework well. Success will not be an overnight affair. It takes hard work and substantial time to build a platform. I think every aspiring author must earn the right to be heard through consistency and longevity.

  • http://twitter.com/colleencoble Colleen Coble

    I think the word platform can be intimidating to authors. We hear that and think it is some kind of big speaking gig. Really, it’s just connecting with your readers. I love Twitter and Facebook for that. You connect with readers who tell others about your books who tell others about your books who. . . Well, you get the idea.

    It’s a little trickier with fiction. Often non fiction authors are talking about a particular subject that appeals to a specific audience. With fiction we are connecting to readers who like our type of story. Amish readers aren’t going to necessarily like my books that have mystery in them. So you find your core of readers and begin to expand on it. It doesn’t happen overnight, but you keep plugging away and working on craft. One thing I’ve done that has worked for me is to send out a welcome letter when someone signs up for my newsletter. I enclose signed bookplates (it encourages them to actually BUY a book if they’ve only read one from the library) and several bookmarks so they can pass one along to a friend. And of course there is Twitter and Facebook as well as the blog and website.

    Another thing you can do (this takes more time though) is comment on other blogs that talk about your book or about a subject covered in your book. For example, my Mercy Falls series is set in a lighthouse in Northern California. So I could look for blogs dealing with lighthouses and chat with people there.

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      These are great suggestions, Colleen. Thanks for dropping by!

    • TNeal

      Colleen,

      Thank you for your sound advice.

      As to “…you tell…who tells…” I’m reminded of the movie “Babe.” My family and I were out of the country when that movie hit the theaters so we missed all the advertising that accompanies a new-movie launch. On top of that, the premise of a talking pig didn’t seem very promising or interesting.

      But I kept hearing, “You should see ‘Babe.’” After enough friends commented, my wife, son, and I ended up in a theater to see a movie I didn’t see advertised and couldn’t understand the interest. I loved it. Then I started telling people, “You should see…”

      Someone mentioned “The Shack” in an earlier comment. I think it demonstrates the power of word of mouth. Our task as authors doesn’t stop with finishing the manuscript. It includes planting those initial seeds in people who will be our best advertisement.

      Thanks for your concrete examples and practical suggestions in building a following.

  • http://alyssaavant.com/blog Alyssa Avant

    My question is . . . how many thousand followers are we talking? I’m an avid social media marketer and curious.

  • http://twitter.com/LazyChristian R.A. Snyder

    I’m trying to social network like CRAZY before I start shopping my book around, but it’s a full time job! I see now why companies hire people just to do social networking.

    • http://www.DonnaPeruginiChildrensAuthor.com DonnaPerugini

      R.A., you start to see where you fit in personality-wise with social media. You might do better in Facebook than Twitter, so your emphasis will be FB. Having a ‘presence’ on the different social media networks is advantageous. Trying to do all social media with the same level of attentiveness is futile. Excel where you are comfortable!

      • http://uma-maheswaran.blogspot.com/ Uma Maheswaran S

        Amen to that Donna!

  • http://twitter.com/timmyhpchen Timothy Hung-Po Chen

    “Show me your ways, O Lord, teach me your paths; guide me in your truth and teach me”..Psalm 25:5-6

  • Cassandra Frear

    This is true. Even if it does make me grind my teeth a little.

  • Guest

    Michael, wonderful insight! Thank you!!
    The Seth Godin link is broken:
    http://us2.campaign-archive2.com/title=%22Seth%E2%80%99s

  • http://blog.ashleypichea.com Ashley Pichea

    When I first set out to be “a published author,” I spent some time reading Rachelle Gardner’s blog. She was very open about the fact that in order to get published in today’s publishing world, a platform is key. I decided to go about building my platform (blog, Twitter, Facebook, etc.) before ever sitting down to write. My online audience is a huge inspiration in the direction of my writing, and I want to be relevant to them!

    • http://uma-maheswaran.blogspot.com/ Uma Maheswaran S

      True ashley! Online audience bring great motivation to our creative work and it has ripple effect too.

  • http://www.thehahnhuntinglodge.com Nikole Hahn

    I remember reading something from Books n Such that an agent there received this great book proposal, but that the couple who wrote the book had no online presence. The agent wrote she had to reject it because she knew publishers would reject it.

  • http://www.cendrinemarrouat.com Cendrine Marrouat

    Hello Michael:

    Thank you for an enlightening post! It is true from beginning to finish. I am a self-published author and have been advising independent artists for years. I tell them the same things. You cannot achieve success if you rely on the quality of your product alone. You need to build a good platform with a solid circle of supporters.

    Brand visibility is crucial, and many authors are totally under the wrong impression that talent is worth something these days. If you have nothing to support it, you will definitely blow hot air for a LONG time.

    Thank you for the post once again!

    Cendrine

    • http://uma-maheswaran.blogspot.com/ Uma Maheswaran S

      Agreed Cendrine!

    • http://uma-maheswaran.blogspot.com/ Uma Maheswaran S

      Agreed Cendrine!

  • David & Lisa Frisbie

    Thanks for telling this truth: Authors (especially aspiring and new) need to hear it. Most sales come from two places 1) speaking engagements, classes taught, book-signing events and etc., and 2) on-line booksellers. It took us a while to realize that “shelf space” was pretty much a non-issue. We’re always delighted when stores stock our books — we are grateful — but volume sales occur when we travel and speak, and also via internet marketing. That’s where our mortgage payment comes from. And gas money. And future book contracts.

  • Steve Barkley

    In your interview with Todd Burpo he did not strike me as the self-promoting, platform-building type. Is he an exception, or does this offer hope to others? I honestly do not know how much of a following he had before being published or how much effort he put into it.

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      He is definitely an exception. As far as I know, he didn’t have any following, other than is small church.

      You can always find exceptions, but I would rather build my life and career on what successful people have in common. Just my two cents.

  • Crystal Jigsaw

    I have recently published my book and am working almost full time to promote it. Loyalty online goes a long way!

  • Marybeth Whalen

    One thing I will add to the discussion about platform building is that I have found that your readers can see right through you if you’re just there for the sole purpose of building a platform. If you’re actually engaged and caring and providing info for them because you desire to help them, then you will build a loyal following. I didn’t begin my blog nearly 6 years ago to build a platform. I began it because I really enjoyed sharing my stories with other people. And I still do. If that joy doesn’t infiltrate my posts, I think my regular readers will go elsewhere. Now that I am publishing beyond the blog, I still make the blog (and those readers) a priority. When my first novel came out, I saw the huge support system they became– not because they were part of my platform but because they feel like friends. All of this to say, blog and tweet and Facebook and all of it– for the right reasons. Yes to build a platform but also because you sincerely care about the people you are trying to reach. They do know the difference and they won’t feel manipulated if they see your heart.

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      I agree. You can only win by being generous. I have written about this before.

  • http://twitter.com/Belinda_Pollard Belinda Pollard

    I advise the authors I work with to start building their platform as early as possible. And I’m currently reworking for self-publication a book of mine that was published in the UK in2001, so I’m trying to build my own platform too. I think the biggest single change is that publishers used to help a good writer build their platform, but now publishers are stretched so thin by the “brave new world” of books that they can no longer afford to do so. If you wanna write, start tweeting as well. Now. From what I’ve seen it’s not really about being an “expert”, it’s about being trusted and authentic.

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      Yep. I agree.

  • http://www.allgroanup.com Paul Angone

    I agree with this article 100%. I experienced the same blunt reality of platform and audience “We love your book Paul, our test market readers in your target audience love it, tone, style, voice, check, check, check…BUT we can’t take a risk on a new author…” (Cue the violins and the lonely walk, on a pier, in the fog).

    BUT now we have our own BUTs ( in more ways than one). Mr. Hyatt is right. It is the most exciting time in the history of the publishing world to be turned down! Because like the 11th grade Prom Queen who laughed in your face in the middle of the cafeteria – honestly you might be better off. Sure it would’ve been nice to have that BIG NAME PUBLISHED BOOK around your arm at the football game, but now we have the opportunity to create, dream, innovate in ways never imagined before. There is such a pool of talented people looking to collaborate for a fraction of the cost that you can design, edit, write, with the best of them and put out there a sweet book that will make you the talk of your 20 year reunion when the Prom Queen shows up sporting an extra 250 pounds.

    We can chose to go down the bitter road of defeat. Or the freeing road of What can I dream and do right now that no one else can!

    I chose the second and have created a collaborative website geared right towards my target audience that I consider a bigger accomplishment than the book itself.

    No BUT’s (pun intneded) about it, this road is not easy, but it is so dang good!

    • http://uma-maheswaran.blogspot.com/ Uma Maheswaran S

      Many will agree when you say – “We can chose to go down the bitter road of defeat. Or the freeing road of What can I dream and do right now that no one else can!” We can always make a choice.

  • realist

    Oh, bullshit. This is so NOT true. One tiny example: Last year’s Pullitzer Prize winning novel, The Tinkers by Paul Harding. Many many more.

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      I don’t mind you disagreeing with me; that’s why I didn’t just delete your comment. However, profanity is not allowed. She my comments policy.

      I don’t doubt that you can find exceptions. I can think of several myself. But what works at the top of the bestseller lists doesn’t work for the 99.9% of authors who will never have that honor.

  • http://blog.cyberquill.com Cyberquill

    I use a colorful avatar because I figure it may draw more people to my platform than a less colorful one.

  • www.therextras.com

    Oh.dear. The minimum numbers for followers quoted here are killing me. Killing.me.

    Barbara

  • http://www.godsabsolutelove.com Patricia Zell

    Michael, the best thing I have done concerning my book was finding this blog and paying attention to what you have been sharing. You are a real blessing! (Oh, and my blog’s unique vistors this week came in at 450–my readership is growing!) :-)

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      Congratulations, Patricia. This is a great result!

    • http://uma-maheswaran.blogspot.com/ Uma Maheswaran S

      Congratulations Patricia! Keep going.

  • Peter Turner

    Hi Michael:

    Thanks for the post. I think “platform” and the issues surrounding that notion is the defining dynamic for any writer or content creater who wants to be read and compensated (financially and otherwise). I do, however, think it’s ironic how after all these years of publishers asking would-be authors “where’s your platform” (i.e. who’s going to read you)–self-publishing vehicles are offering a different question: “Do I really need a traditional publisher if they expect me to provide the platform.” One of the few core remaining values that a publisher can provide an author is an audience of readers potentially interested in what the author writes. What Amazon gave Seth Godin was use of their customer data.

    Peter Turner

  • Joe Breunig

    Another great article! Publishers are in business to do primarily one thing – publish titles as you’ve pointed out; some are slowly taking steps to add some marketing options – usually for a fee. For example, my publisher added an author’s page to their website on my behalf. I know, for I discovered it by accident.

    Today’s self-published authors need to understand the not only the basics of Maketing 101, but need to be plugged into the various social networking sites and other websites target for their title’s genre. An author has no credibility promoting their own titles – can you spell b-i-a-s? However, customer reviews and feedback and peer-to-peer marketing from satisfied readers can help to bolster sales, but not guarantee them.

    –Joe Breunig
    Author/poet, Reaching Towards His Unbounded Glory

  • http://www.johngallagherblog.com John Gallagher

    Workin, with my coach, Raymond Gleason!! What a challenge. We have been working on it for a couple months now. Thanks

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      Raymond is a great guy!

    • http://uma-maheswaran.blogspot.com/ Uma Maheswaran S

      Yup! It’s always a challenge John

  • http://www.inteliwise.com VirtualAgent

    Whoa, I wasn’t aware that there are existing demands of social networking followers et all, before a deal can be made for book publishing. I guess, I’m on the minority that would seem indifferrent to such mob mentality, or in away averse to that kind of methodology. It’s such a shame that the world doesn’t work out that way.

  • http://honeycombadventures.com Janice D. Green

    I have had blogs and web pages in the past. Through the encouragement of Laura Christianson (Blogging Bistro) I just consolidated them into one blog with a short list of categories – basically the themes of the earlier blogs. I’m posting more often on my new blog. I’m also active on Facebook. I’m also developing a second market that will complement my Bible storybooks, and that is unique to my books.
    http://honeycombadventures.com

  • http://sarcasticxtian.com/ Scott Smith

    I love writing. I have aspirations. I have written a lot of content, but not enough to form a cohesive book yet. I had begun blogging last year as an outlet for my opinions, but very quickly I realized it also served as an outlet for writing. (Duh!)

    So, between my several Twitter accounts, my blog, Facebook and scads of other networks, I’m somewhere in the 20,000 range of followers. How many of them actively follow me? Now, that is another question entirely!

    For now though, I’m happy blogging. Maybe some of the posts I write can even be repurposed down the road.

    Thanks for the post. Love your blog!

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      Thanks, 20,000 is a lot!

  • http://joeandancy.com Joe Abraham

    I think this post is timely for me. My wife and I are seriously thinking about and have started working on a book project. And your wise insights are truly helpful to guide us in our endeavor. Thanks Michael.

    • http://uma-maheswaran.blogspot.com/ Uma Maheswaran S

      Go on Joe! My best wishes for your endeavor.

      • http://joeandancy.com Joe Abraham

        Thanks Uma for your encouragement! That’s worth receiving!

  • http://www.transformationalleadershiphq.com Mighty

    I’ve been working on a book project for the past four months already. While I have not formally submitted it to a publisher yet, I’m working on it with a goal of tying it up with my blog and my social networks. great advice Michael! :)

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  • Anonymous

    I’m learning a lot about this and more in Guerrilla Marketing for Writers that a friend gave me. It’s like opening a new business. We have to do the work. We can’t expect everyone to do it for us. My book is my baby, and I’m willing to go the distance to nurture it, and watch it grow.

  • Paul Darilek

    I would be curious to gain an idea in numeric terms what publishers see as a “good platform”?

    Say, 5k facebook followers, 4k twitter followers, an e-mail list of 20,000 (of warm leads–people who’ve given to the cause your non-fiction book supports–is that seen as a good platform? Really good? Sorta good? Not good?

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      I think that is very respectable.

      • Paul Darilek

        I’m so impressed with your responsiveness on your blog. When I buy Rob Bell’s book tomorrow I’ll send them letter: “Dear Harper One, Michael Hyatt sent me.”

  • http://joyjoyg.com/ Joy Groblebe

    I’m doing just what you’re talking about…build a platform before you need one. In my current job I work for authors and speakers in the background…but someday, when my kids are grown, I look forward to being the speaker. So, I started blogging awhile ago and am staying involved in social media (FB, twitter). You never know what might happen in the future. So, if God ends up putting me in a position to speak to people, I’ll already have my platform in place. Thanks Michael for the great post!

  • http://twitter.com/ChrisVonada chris vonada

    Michael,

    I’m branding, branding, branding! Connecting with the local media and guest blogging more to help build an audience, trying to keep my exposure on the mark and informative, serving others, and really focused on this like a start-up business. Learning as I go.

    I really like WestBow Press, very useful and helpful!

    Thank you again for your excellent, on-target advice… sometimes it seems like I go to read your blog and you’ve already read my mind for the day. I guess that would be our Heavenly Father at work :)

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      Thanks, Chris. I appreciate your kind words.

  • Epic Writer

    It’s interesting that aspiring authors find this concept foreign. Everything else in the world changes rapidly–shouldn’t publishing? I agree that a platform is in order. I think most would realize how this can be done via a nonfiction approach. But what about the fiction writer?

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  • http://www.thesuspensezone.com Susan Sleeman

    Thanks for sharing this message, Michael. I can speak from experience that a platform not only helps in the sales of your books, but if you’re unpublished, it helps gain an editors attention as well. I started a book review website (www.thesuspensezone.com) dedicated to my genre, Christian suspense, before I was published and have thousands of people on my mailing list now. Plus I have made invaluable contacts with other writers in this genre and with publishers as well. The site does take time, but I look at it as a way to not only promote my work, but the genre itself, which is good for all of us.

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  • http://twitter.com/adrianwarnock Adrian Warnock

    Great post. Couple of things. One is that blogging etc helps one learn how to write. If you cant do a blog you will never write a book. 2nd is do you think we all need comments on our blogs?

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      Yes, I agree. Blogging teaches you to write.

      I personally do encourage community. Your readers want to engage with you. The more you do it, the more loyal they become. Thanks.

  • http://www.rainyofthedark.com/2011/01/how-to-improve-your-platform-in-just-minutes-a-week/ Rainy

    Thanks for the great post!

    Another thing authors should be aware of: building a platform is more than providing a notification of the next publication. The trick is to figure out what you know, how to share it, and still reach your target audience–all in one swipe.

    //R

  • http://www.idoinspire.com Jody Urquhart

    I get followers from my blog and when I speak
    I have an email newsletter to keep in touch
    I also stay on top of blogs I like…. Like this one to contribute to the conversattion

  • Gretchen

    This is all very eye-opening to me, a wanna-be-published author! My question is this: Since my book (which is currently in the end-editing stages) is geared to a YA audience… how can a blog (read, most likely, by adults) show a publisher anything about a YA audience’s apeal to my writing?

    Thanks for your time!

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      The blog should be geared toward the audience making the purchase. Often YA book are bought by parents, so if you have a blog that reaches them, that qualifies as a platform.

      • Gretchen

        Ok, thanks so much! I firmly believe that any YA book worth reading as a kid is still worth reading as an adult…so, truly, I write for YA…on up! So your answer makes sense and is also a comfort! THANKS!

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  • http://www.joeyo.org Joey O’Connor

    Michael, your post is spot-on. Take it from someone working on rebuilding an “old school” platform.

    After writing 19 books with 2 Christian publishers, four years ago I turned off my website because I was focused on building an arts and media non-profit ministry.

    Now that everything has gone digital the past two years, I am ramping everything up again “to rebuild” my platform.

    First with regular blogging. (This I resisted for a long time…my blog is now my writing palette for my non-fiction, fiction, and screenplay works.)

    Second, by acquiring the rights of my books and converting them to digital ebooks (not cheap!)

    Third, by going for the “long tail.” Once books are digital, they’re digital for life!

    Last, by creating an online community that encourages and inspires artists and Christ-followers from all walks of life.

    Many thanks to the MH Blog…I check in regularly and I’m learning so much.

    Standard theme included!

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      Thanks, Joey. This is a great story. Best to you!

  • http://www.pamhalter.info Pam Halter

    I’m a children’s book author. But I’m venturing into nonfiction and have learned I need a platform. I will be writing about being the parent of a special needs child, which means (obviously) I am a parent of a special needs child. Which means I can’t go running all over speaking to the masses. So, I’m planning to start a blog to see what kind of feedback I get.

    I do have a question about the title of the blog. Should it be the same title as my working title for the book? My working title is “Shut Up, It’s Not A Blessing” with the subtitle, “The Trials and Triumphs of Parenting a Special Needs Child.” I want it to be a real, raw look at what it’s really like – not the sugar coated thoughts and sentiments I typically get from people who don’t have a special needs child. I want to talk about the things we think but are afraid to say out loud. And I want to give hope and encouragement, because God has often said to me, “Shut Up, It IS a Blessing!” No, the situation is not a blessing, but there are blesssings in and around it.

    Thanks!
    pam

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      I think your blog should be broader than that one topic. That book will come and go, but you want to have an enduring platform that you can use to support your other projects.

      • http://twitter.com/21tigermike Michael A. Robson

        Great advice.

  • http://www.themessage2.us Steven Zachary

    Thank you Michael for your insightful words.

    I received the same message from a number of people. I wrote a bok about the finances from a Biblical perspective using my experience as a finance and bankruptcy attorney and a minister. Timely book but I was told that until I have 25k in followers then the book will pretty much sit on the shelf.

    I wrote on my blog, a sermon message “If.” I am keeping faith that if this book is the will of God then He will make sure those who need to hear this message will hear it. “If” I have faith the size of a mustard seed, then I will move this mountain out of my way.

  • Daniel

    Wondering if anyone can help me. I self-published through Westbow. When I attempt to order my own with my “author discount” I am connected to another company and quoted a price @ 30% higher than I can obtain the same through Amazon. Attempts to gain explanation from Westbow have yielded no results. Trying to someone I can speak with. Suggestions?

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      Yes, you can email me at mhyatt at thomasnelson dot com. I’ll get you in touch with the right people.

  • DCD

    As Lewis said, “It is through price that the devil became the devil.”

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