Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Self-Publishing with Smashwords Udemy Course

Smashwords is the world’s largest distributor of self-published ebooks. 350,000 authors have published with Smashwords for these great reasons:
1. Pays you 85% royalties on direct sales.
2. Converts your ebook into every file type for any possible e-reading device.
3. Distributes your ebook for sale to other retailers like Apple, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Page Foundry, Baker & Taylor, Library Direct, Oyster, Scribd, Flipkart and OverDrive while handling the finances.
4. Allows you to generate ebook discounts for any amount and time frame. Perfect for gifting books or creating sale events.
5. Design an author profile with photos, videos, links to your print books, interview and more.
6. It's a free service. They only make money when you sell ebooks.
The course is taught by Jason Matthews, bestselling author and Udemy instructor for self-publishing topics.
Everything you need to:
  • format documents with NCX file
  • pass Meatgrinder and make Premium Catalog
  • convert to ePub
  • make covers
  • upload and sell at Smashwords
  • distribute to major retailers around the world
List price $29. Save with coupon, just $15: SMASHWORDS

Want Your Blog Featured? See the Course and Contact Info

Friday, May 1, 2015

Featured Authors Sandra V. and William L. McGee



We're pleased to feature Sandra and William McGee, authors of multiple books including The Divorce Seekers: A Photo Memoir of a Nevada Dude Wrangler.

The book sounds fascinating.
The year was 1947. The place, Reno, Nevada. Young and handsome Montana cowboy, Bill McGee, recently discharged from the U.S. Navy, is hired on as the head dude wrangler at the Flying M E, an exclusive divorce ranch 20 miles south of Reno that catered to wealthy Easterners and Hollywood celebrities seeking a six week divorce.
McGee recalls these post-war years in a collection of stories about the guests he met Eastern socialites with names like Astor, du Pont and Roosevelt, and Hollywood celebrities like Gable, Gardner and Hayworth and the places they frequented while serving their six week residencies.
The coffee table book is illustrated with more than 500 black-and-white photographs (most from private collections and never before published) and give the reader an up-close glimpse into life on this exclusive Nevada divorce ranch.

What's the name of your blog, Sandra?
DIVORCE NEVADA STYLE, About the Brief But Glimmering Reno Divorce Era 1930s-1960s: divorceseekers.wordpress.com/. Also the name of a book I co-authored with my husband Bill. However, I'm contemplating upgrading the blog domain name this year so it includes "Divorce Nevada Style" in the URL.


How long have you had it and how often do you post?
I started the blog about eight years ago (wow!) and post when I have news to announce which is, on average, maybe every other month.

What do you like the most about your blog?
There was a learning curve in the beginning; then I found Wordpress.com pretty easy to use.

What have you learned that you can share with a newbie?
I appreciate when a blog post contains information that is worth my time to read.

Good tip, instead of just writing fluff. What's the best link for readers to find your books?

Divorce isn't always pretty, but it makes for interesting reading. Thank you, Sandra and Bill.


Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Featured Author Dan Alatorre



We're pleased to featured best-selling author of the Savvy Series and humorist, Dan Alatorre, from Florida. Dan's blog platform is the free version of Wordpress, a fine choice for any author: https://savvystories.wordpress.com/.

Dan, how did you decide on the domain name?
Originally, I thought I’d do what Steven Spielberg and other people do, make their first book or movie the name of their production company. So at first I had the book Savvy Stories and not much else; later I thought I’d probably publish under Savvy Stories Books or something, and use it that way so it still tied in.

How long have you had it and how often do you post?
I have probably had the blog for 1 ½ years now, maybe a little less. I posted weekly or more often at first, until I realized after a year that nobody was reading it. Then I cut way back. Now I am more balanced. I do Twitter daily to feed the blog and as an overall fun presence, Facebook daily for other things as a presence, and blog at least weekly but in a focused direction of helpful writer tips and little snippets of the books.

What do you like the most or least about your blog?
Wordpress is MUCH less intuitive than almost any other social media I use. Facebook is almost child’s play; Wordpress isn’t. I call it clunky. I feel at home with it now, but it’s still not as easy to get stats and see what’s happening as Twitter or almost anything else, which is inexcusable these days. The description I’d use is that FB and Twitter are easy for noncomputer types; Wordpress seems like it was written by code engineers who don’t know what people want. And honestly, if you have Facebook, do you even need a blog? FB can be both. If certain people I respect HIGHLY (my wife, you) hadn’t told me to have a blog, I probably wouldn’t. FB was my blog.

What have you learned that you can share with a newbie?
Ooh. Tons. Because of Jason Matthews’ courses, which I recommend to everyone, and other things, I have helped Allison Maruska get her first book published, I’m helping a published young author develop a platform to market, I’m helping another author get her first book finished and published, and I’m willing to help almost anyone avoid the horrid mistakes I made from not knowing where to go and what to do. I recommend critique groups, editors, book cover designers, your FB group and on and on. I read and review books for new authors and work with them in critique groups to show them they have talent.

Because of what I’ve learned and my experience as a Fortune 500 company sales manager, I’m compiling an eBook sales marketing book series that should be ready soon, and which would make for a GREAT Udemy course if you’re interested in helping with that. I’d take you as a partner in a heartbeat, Jason! Think about it.

Okay, sounds good. What's the best link for readers to find your books?
Probably my Amazon author page http://www.amazon.com/Dan-Alatorre/e/B00EUX7HEU/.

Anything else you’d like to add?
Jason, your FB group and your Udemy course helped me a TON, I think you know that, so I recommend them both to everybody. Then I try my best to help each new author who asks or needs it, because as corny as it sounds, it feels good to help others.

Not corny at all. Dan, you're a great ambassador for the indie author crowd. I hope to meet more authors like you on this experience.

Saturday, November 1, 2014

How to Start a Blog for Authors: New Udemy Course




Perfect for beginners who haven't created one or intermediates who want to do it better.
BONUS feature: students who use the course can have their blog featured on mine!
Learn every aspect from choosing a domain name to posting and sharing with social media. We’ll blog in a schedule that fits yours as a stress-free way to assist your writing career.

Save big with coupon code: halfoff

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Social Media Icons Custom Made


How often have you wanted custom social media icons for your site, or to alter the look you already have?
This perplexed me for a while, and my initial solution was to use HTML code from someone else who made one, but that only allowed me to tap into their icons from their blog. What would happen if they ever deleted their blog or those images from their library? Bye bye widget.
I wanted my own, and you should want your own too. If you do, it's not as hard as it might seem. There are basically 3 main elements:
  • your profile URL at social media sites (that's the easy part)
  • your blog media library (or a blog post) containing these icons ahead of time. For Wordpress it's best to add them to your library, for Blogger you need them in a post like the ones above or a draft.
  • the URL of those icon images that you can get from your blog when you click on them (this will result in a URL with just a tiny picture of the image). For example, try right clicking on any of the small icons above, then scroll down to View Image Info and notice the Location is a URL. That's the URL for the source images in the HTML coding.
Now all you need is a bit of HTML text. It does help to upload small images first (these above are 35 pixels). Or you can use width and height attributes in your HTML code.
Click here to continue reading on the Social Media page.
Good luck and let me know how it goes!

Video Course: Blogging for Authors


https://www.flickr.com/photos/cambodia4kidsorg/
Welcome to Blogging for Authors. This is an example website for students in the video course.
You may have stumbled in from another source or you might be taking the course at Udemy, a great place to learn just about anything. We’re using examples for creating awesome blogs at Wordpress.com and Blogger, and these lessons are useful for people with blogging software from Wordpress.org or any other platform. There are so many people blogging but not enough people blogging well, so if you’re watching this course you could easily become a much better blogger than the vast majority of writers in the world.
All writers should consider blogging because it benefits you in so many ways:
  • It keeps you writing.
  • It gives you an online presence.
  • It acts as a home base for everything else about you including your books, social media links, other websites, examples of your writing and more.
  • It helps people all over the world find you through excellent SEO properties.
The truth is this--a blog can help any writer, and a blog can be done to fit into your schedule. Don’t worry, there’s no need to post every day or even every week. You can post as frequently or as seldom as you want and still get great benefit.
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