Friday, August 28, 2020

Hiraya Cross' Written Works

Remember (Romance, Series)

Book 1, Lee and Oliver

Book 2, Lee and Oliver

Book 3, Lee and Oliver

Book 4, Allen and Clara

Book 5, Axel and Rhea

Book 6, Alex and Alex

Book 7, Charles and Aya

Book 8, Gabe and Carin

Book 9, Mike and Cara

 

Willingly (Romance, Set)

Willingly: Her Version

Willingly: His Version

 

A Curious Life (Collections of Poems)

Questions About Life

Questions About Love

Questions About Faith

Questions About Hope

 

Unveiled Secrets (Dreame, YA fiction)

The Prophecy of the Twins

The Promise of the Fae

The Progeny of the Enchantress

 

Ordinary Series (Sofanovel, Romance)

Worth the Wait

The Unexpected Best Friends

 

Distinct Series (Sofanovel, Romance)

Taming the Alpha Billionaire

The Billionaires’Choices

 

Not Even Close (memoirs x self-help)

Confessions of a Reader

Confessions of a Business Professional

Confessions of One Living this Life

Confessions of a Writer

 

Others

Prove Yourself Worthy (Billionaire Romance)

Moments in Life (Haiku Collection)

Inside the Inquiring Mind (Quotes Collection)

What Great Things?

Destined for Great Things

What You and I Fail to See

A Love-Hate Relationship

 

SCORE BOARD

Finished                 :        21

Currently writing     :         5

Will be writing         :        7

Total                      :        33

Dear Writing Community, How to Use an Email Automation Service

So, you have your list already? You have people to send your newsletter to?

That’s great! In this post, I’ll guide you on how to use an email automation service. As well as the dos and don’ts you should remember while using one. Add in some tips on how to engage with your readers list.

Ready? Let’s go.


As a newbie author, indie author, self-publishing author who may or may not have financial constraints which limits your budget… so, we’ll explore services that could be used for free.

For email service, I’m used to MailChimp. Their free plan allows you to add up to 2,000 email addresses. Their sending limit? I think it’s once a day to a list. I can’t be sure since I only send my newsletter once every two weeks. While I’m editing a new email, I got that notif that I can’t send it on the same day I just sent one. There.

Your list. The email addresses you add to your audience or recipients should have explicitly gave you permission to send them your newsletter. Don’t add them to your list if you got their email from somewhere and have no idea who you are. You might get reported. That would be a stain on your record and if there are many reports against you, you might be banned from using the service. This is true for all email automation services.

That unsubscribe link at the end of the email? Then, there are choices, one of which says “I never signed up to receive these email messages.”? That could get you banned if there are many clicks on there. So, be sure to only add people who gave you permission. Then, there’s GDPR in effect in EU, which requires a two-step sign-up. They give you their email, then they have to confirm the email. In other cases, normally, outside EU, the confirmation email is not required. Which is problematic because I can input some random person’s email address if I’m a crook. There’s a hustle, but it’s a nice protection measure in place.

Normal unsubscribes are… well, normal. If they clicked on the choice that says “I no longer want to receive these emails.”, then you’re alright. The person at least acknowledges that he once wanted to receive your email messages.

As a newbie, there’s really no point in having a large list if you have no ability to retain them. You start with a thousand, then at the end of the month, you’re left with a hundred. Technically, it’s not bad. But it’s still immensely better if you can keep them in your list, right? I’ll leave a section below on the dos and don’ts on how frequent you should send a newsletter, what the content should be, and how often you can solicit responses, if you need it.

Back to the email service, you can only use it to ease sending an email to a mass of recipients. On free plan, you can’t use other features such as scheduling it on a future date and time. You have to send it real time.

The 2k limit. If you’ve reached that limit, and you remove people from the list to make some space for new ones, you can’t if you’ve already sent an email to those people in a particular month. They get counted against that 2k. So, if you want to clean your list, do it at the start of a month or before you send your first newsletter in a particular month.

Don’t be disheartened by the number of unsubscribes. As early as now, I’m telling you that it’s something you should already expect. Don’t be hurt. You can’t keep everyone. A lot of people do subscribe to get free stuff, then unsubscribe as soon as they got it. It’s not always you, sometimes it’s them.

And really. Don’t sweat the unimportant stuff. Your craft is still writing. Writing alone should make you happy. Others are only bonuses. (Yes, my personal opinion.)

What information do you need? Well, one, email addresses. That’s the only thing the email service requires, but if you have names available, add that as well. Country? Yes, please. I feel that these three are what’s most important. Of course, the service could capture their IP address when they open the email and click on something, but not guaranteed. This feels important because of GDPR, that’s it.

First name, if you add it to the recipient information, there’s a lesser chance your newsletter will end up in the spam folder. With the first name, you could go into the promotions tab or the primary tab. At least for Gmail. Still not guaranteed, but you have better chances.

Do I track my numbers? Not really. I don’t want my emotions to be affected so I’d rather not look at it. I will when I start implementing a detailed marketing plan, though.

CSV file. It’s a simpler format of an excel file. For you to be able to upload your list to the email service, it has to be saved as a CSV file. Open your excel file, go to File tab > Save As > Browse folder > File type under File name: CSV (Comma delimited).

You can also use Copy + Paste function, but Import contacts is much easier.

Tags. Sometimes you get multiple lists. People who signed up in July. Others in August. I use tags for it. Whatever you’re comfortable with. First list. Second list. Or July list. August list.

Campaigns. I try to make it simple. First list (Email No. 1). First list (Email No. 2). Second list (Email No. 1). You don’t want to send a welcome email to your first list a second time. Careful there. I’ve experienced sending [First list (Email No. 2)] and [Second list (Email No. 1)] on the same day.

Design? Make it simple, but reminiscent of your personality or brand. I do use my Author logo as header in mine. Then, the content. That’s it. Do what works for you.

Proofread before sending. Do I need to emphasize this? You don’t want to send a correction email. That would suck. Sometimes, I find myself previewing the campaign at least five times before I hit Send.

NEWSLETTER. How often? I’d say maximum is once a week. You’re not the only one a person may be subscribed to. Personally, I’ve subscribed to 20+ newsletters. When I see a frequent sender, I unsubscribe. You’re eating up my time! That’s how it is.

Yes, you want to give them content, but respect their time. They’re busy, too.

Yes, you want interaction and get close to them by exchanging emails. But let’s face it, who has the time? Very few people do. I get excited when someone replies, but then… sometimes I myself forget to reply. Bad example, don’t imitate me. Reply kindly when you can.

What content? Give them something helpful. Give them something for free. It doesn’t necessarily have to be something you spent your blood, sweat, and tears on. If you’ve joined book promos offering free books, share it with your readers. They might find something they like. If you’re writing something and it’s available to be read for free on the net, share them the links. If you’ve written some good articles, share them.

Also, share tidbits about yourself. But really, don’t give them your life story in one email. Nooooooo! Share a little bit of yourself in every email. What are you working on? What inspired you to write? What have you written? What are your genres? How’s your journey so far?

Is it okay to share your troubles? Well, that depends. Is it heavy? Is it light-hearted? As long as you don’t spread negativity, it’s fine. Much better if you conclude it with a happy ending on how you overcame the trials and challenges. But be sure not to make it too long… if you’ve written a whole blog of it, you can invite them to check it out. Don’t put it all on the newsletter itself. You want to be inspirational? Go ahead. Do it well, though. Nothing over the top.

Length. A one-page email is ideal. Meaning they don’t need to scroll down. But if that’s a real feat, maybe one scroll or two. Nothing more.

Take into account the reason they are in your list in the first place. Are they purely readers? Are they writers? What do they need? What can you give them?

Once in a while, maybe once a month, you can do surveys as part of a newsletter you’re sending out. Say something like, you’re curating content for writers, if they could let you know if they’re interested with that. Plain readers would most likely not respond, but the aspiring writers will. Probably.

You have to keep in mind that there’s a ton of places for that already, writing communities. You have the whole of writing community, then there are smaller groups. I’m sure you understand the practicality of belonging to a smaller group and being able to interact closely with others, exchanging inputs, having beta readers, critique partners, mentors, writing buddy…

You want to build one, too? Maybe a small group of less than ten people? You can do that. Be sure you will have the time to participate.

Me? As an INFJ, my interactions are very limited. I couldn’t even bring myself to reply something witty, I simply “like” or “heart” a response to a post I sent to the void. Oh, well… My replies sound awkward at most.

That’s it for this topic. What should I write next?

Let’s explore Amazon KDP next week.

Thanks. Enjoy reading. Enjoy writing. 💙

Saturday, August 22, 2020

Dear Writing Community, Let’s build a readership

 I had this idea… In every one of us, there is at least a little selfishness.

There is that want to succeed and get ahead. There is that fear that if you help others, they might overtake you in the success ladder.

Is that really important? Should everyone be treated as a competitor? That shouldn't be the case, right?

So, this post is to let you know what I understand about building a readership. How do we do that?


To aspiring writers, and new authors like me, these are things that we need to learn.

First off, you’re not gonna make money with only one book, one story. You’re new. Who knows you? Why would I risk buying your book, not knowing if it will be good or bad? Give me a sample. That’s how business works. That’s how a lot of businesses start. By giving away a sample, a freebie… Here, try this out! See if you like it! If you do, buy some!

Kind of hard to do when you only have one book. Once you’ve given it away, what’s there to buy? So, yeah… you gotta write more than one book. And the more you write, the more choices your readers will have.

Personally, I write under different genres. I love reading from multiple genres so I felt like writing under them as well. Diversity! Some authors choose to write under different pen names for different genres, to create a brand for a particular name, so to speak. But my brand is writing multiple genres, so…

Anyway, back to the main point of this post: building a readership. And as mentioned, you need reader magnets. If you write 200-page romance novels, you can write a magnet that is about 50-page. If you write a short story collection of ten stories, you can write a magnet that contains three stories. Depends on you, really. There’s no concrete rule. Only that you should let the reader get an understanding of your writing style. Throw in an invitation to visit your author page and check out your other works if they like the magnet.

Now, to build your readers list, normally you give out the reader magnet in exchange for their email address, so you can have a means to contact them in the future if you have written something new or whatnot.

They can always unsubscribe if what you’re giving out is no longer up to their cup of tea. It may or may not be your fault. Maybe you send out too many newsletters, or they feel what you send is irrelevant to them, unhelpful, or simply not something they like to receive.

Now, how to build that list? You can use a number of services.

Number one on my list is BookFunnel. Then, there’s BookSweeps, LibraryThing, StoryOrigin, BookSprout, Voracious Readers Only, ProlificWorks, AuthorsXP…

Some of these can be used for free (BookSprout, LibraryThing, StoryOrigin).

Kinda limited. BookSprout, the free features is up to 20 ARCs per book. LibraryThing is up to 50 ARCs per book. StoryOrigin requires three types of files, EPUB, MOBI and PDF. I don’t think I’ve tried it yet because of this requirement.

Others are paid services.

BookFunnel currently has a plan for 10 USD per month, which I use. In my two months with BookFunnel, I was able to get over 700+ of subscribers through my reader magnet. I plan to pause my use of BookFunnel. One, I need a new magnet that would suit certain promo conditions. What I learned from here is that your magnet should incorporate a number of tropes so you can freely join multiple promos. Like in romance, you have small town, billionaire, second chance, paranormal, sweet or steamy, etc. You got to combine some of these to be able to join more promos. If you’ve written small town romance, you can’t join the book promo for city romance. If you’ve written sweet romance, your magnet won’t quality for steamy reads. Some promos require certain tropes, second chances, paranormal, billionaire… that kind of thing. New adult, young adult, coming of age… there are a lot of combinations. Which is why I realized I should write another magnet.

BookSweeps is at least 50 USD per promo. This one is genre specific. Steamy romance? Sweet and clean romance? Paranormal romance? They target a particular audience with each promo, and the promo is like lottery. They offer an ereader plus 50+ books from all the authors who joined. A promo is normally participated by at least 50 authors, up to sixty, I think. That’s their limit or range. I tried one promo and got over 700 subscribers.

If I do my Math, the budget is good for five months in BookFunnel. Your friend here at BookSweeps is time. The promo runs for nine days, I think, and you get your list of subscribers a week after the promo ended.

Downside in both BookFunnel and BookSweeps is that when you send out your regular newsletter, some peeps are bound to unsubscribe. Especially the ones who joined through BookSweeps. They only subscribed for a chance to win that ereader. They didn’t actually get anything for subscribing, which is why it’s important to give them something the first time you send out your newsletter to them. That’s what I did, and even so, I still saw 60+ people unsubscribing from my list. That’s normal. That’s something you should expect.

ProlificWorks. There’s a free service. There’s a paid one. The free service doesn’t allow you to collect email addresses, which is why I didn’t bother using it any further. I saw people claiming my magnet but I don’t know who they are, no way to contact them for further freebies or something. The paid plan, I think is higher than BookFunnel. I can only afford one at a time.

StoryOrigin. I don’t have much to say because I haven’t tried it yet. Three file types! I tried, actually, but I’m not sure if it was the internet connection or something else, because it didn’t work. I wasn’t able to save my book. Try it. It’s free. That’s what I know. It’s free.

BookSprout. Mainly for romance. My first try, only one claimed. The second, which is poetry, none. The third, only one as well. I got one review from the first one. None on the third. The free service allows you to give out as many as 20 Advance Reader Copies. Meaning you can get at least twenty people, but them leaving reviews is not guaranteed. Still, I got my first review from there, so… thanks. Not part of your list, you can invite them.

Voracious Readers Only. They have free. They have paid. The free is like a trial. If you liked it, you can try their paid one. I got 30+ readers from there. But… but… but! I used my BookFunnel link here. I think it’s not required, you can send them a copy of your magnet and they will provide it to those who wanted to claim a copy and they will send you a list of those who claimed. I’m not sure. I didn’t completely read the terms because I have BookFunnel, that’s what I used.

LibraryThing. It’s previously not free, but now it is! Good news, right? The service allows you to give away up to 50 copies of your book and users will request a copy. If more than 50 requests it, they do a lottery of some sort and only 50 is selected, then you get the email addresses of those people. They are not your subscribers, but you can invite them to join your list. They only signed up for that particular giveaway you do on this platform.

I may have mixed newsletter builders and places to get reviews. The thing is, for places where you seek reviews, they technically did not sign-up to your newsletter, so be careful not to include them in your newsletter recipients. You can invite them when you send out the ARCs, but that’s it. You don’t want to get reported for sending newsletters to people who didn’t sign-up for it. That would be bad, and might lead you to be banned from using an email service, like MailChimp or ConvertKit or something else. Whatever you’re using. If you aren’t using one yet, because you’re still building up your list, and haven’t sent out a newsletter email yet… cool, my next post would be about it, then. Mainly, MailChimp, because that’s what I use.

So, there you go. Check these services out. Nope, this post isn’t sponsored. I’ve checked these myself and used them. These are my personal opinion from my experience.

Thanks. Enjoy reading. Enjoy writing. ðŸ’™

Friday, August 14, 2020

Dear Aspiring Writers (from a reader, another writer, and author)

 So, before everything else… what I want to emphasize from the beginning of this blog post is the foundation of writing. Grammar. Sentence structure. Vocabulary. Proper use of words. Paragraphs. Punctuations. Flow from one thought to another. Organization. Presentation of facts or scenarios.


If you want to be a writer, you’re writing, you’re aspiring to publish a book one day, I believe it’s a must to nail down the basics. The foundation. We can all agree (should all agree) that it makes reading enjoyable if we follow those basic rules. Have you ever read a story or a literary piece and you were distracted by the incoherent sentence structure? The misuse of words? The illogical transition?

To be fair, there are varying levels. I can tolerate a few mistakes or errors, I can overlook them and not point them out… but if it’s on every page and is very frequent… it’s one reason for DNFs. You don’t want that. We don’t that.

And so, my dear writers…. Let us learn the basics. Learn them well. Practice writing to improve ourselves. Continue writing to hone our craft. Welcome to the writing community!

Nope. I’m not going to discuss those things here today, but I’m planning that for next month’s series. The basics of writing.

What else to I want writers to know? If you call yourself a writer, you must be writing. Right? Get off social media. Get offline. Start writing. Or start plotting. Or start reading. Maybe read a book or two. Study the writing and learn from there. Better yet, get a book or materials on writing. That is, if you need it for you to start writing. But if you already have an idea of what you want to write, you have the scenes lined up in your head or outlined in our notes, go ahead and write.

It’s acceptable to go on social media, be online, just… don’t dwell on it too much. Live your writer’s life.

Let’s stop arguing on how writing should be done. You want to sit down and write from the top of your head? Go ahead. You want to create an outline first, get the scenes in sequence? Go ahead. You want to write the latter scenes before the intro? Go ahead. Do what works for you and stop telling others to do the same thing as you. We’re all different. Each style has its own pros and cons. Not one should be considered superior over the others. That sounds terribly like racism. If you haven’t noticed it yet.

If English isn’t your native language, but you want to write in English because… you know, more readers. For us to effectively write in a language we learned on top of our native one, we should also have a good command of it. Proficient. What’s your level of proficiency? In a way, the proficiency level would also gauge how much of the basics you’ve nailed down. Do you understand the grammar rules? How wide is your vocabulary? Sentence. Paragraphs. Composition. Those are measured through proficiency. There are English proficiency tests out there. Some are free. I took a free one. If you want to check yours. https://www.efset.org/

Knowing your level of proficiency would allow you to assess yourself. Do you still need to learn more about this language? Or if you already have a good command of it, be confident in your writing.

I’ve seen people criticize non-native speakers. In a way, they have reasons… when I check the posts, the construction is messed up. But that’s why we have learning. Let’s learn. Let’s study. Let’s improve. I guess I would have preferred if the criticism could be done gentler. Just point things out. “I had a hard time reading your post. I understand English isn’t your first language. You can study it some more and improve. At your current level, it will take a while, but continue learning. You’ll get there.” Yeah?

Don’t say things that are bound to discourage them. Stop writing? Really? You can’t write? Just stick to your own language? Dude, stop.

There will be barriers. There will be challenges. If writing is your passion, continue writing. No matter what others say. No matter what happens. Do listen to feedback, though. The ones that are helpful and would most likely improve your writing style. Surround yourself with positivity. Positive individuals. Distance yourself from the toxic ones. Mute them online. Mute them offline. Block them altogether if you can.

A few things to consider before you move forward.

What’s your purpose in writing?

If you will make a career out of it, is your expectations on income realistic?

If you want to be an author, do read up on various authors’ experiences.

It won’t take one story or one book.

Do you want to be known? Or do you want your works to be known?

Do you want to reach more readers? Or do you want to make more sales?

 

Having a clear understanding of what you want helps in pushing you in a certain direction and in case you feel lost, you have those commitments to go back to.

You’ll be like… why am I even doing this? This won’t in any way help me achieve my purpose, my goals. Move on. Next project. Focus on your purpose and goals. Sometimes, we do get sidetracked. We get burned out. We lose direction. So, it’s important we set up our starting point. A place to go back to. Chill. Relax. Start over.

What else do I want to say? Self-awareness is a really good trait, no matter your profession, career, or position. Whatever you do, having self-awareness would prove useful. So, make sure you have a true understanding of yourself. You’re not in any way too proud. You’re not defensive of your flaws and faults. You own them. You take responsibility. You don’t deny the mistakes you’ve made. You correct them. You don’t hide the errors. You highlight them and learn from it.

Something else we should say to fellow writers? Do comment them below.

Thank you for reading. Enjoy writing. ðŸ’™

Friday, August 7, 2020

Dear Authors (from a reader and another author)

First off, we should understand that we are humans. We have our differences. Each of us has our own unique traits. We are in different situations. And depending on a lot of things, we can never make general statements about everyone. So, dear authors...

I understand you’re most likely busy writing. Been there. Sometimes, it does get hard to put down the pen (figuratively, so to speak).

Mystery and intriguing stuff. If your book or written work contains mystery or something intriguing, which could confuse readers and might make them misunderstand the purpose of the book, you might want to leave a message at the end of the book or something. Maybe not explain, because that would defeat the purpose of wanting your readers to think and demystify things by themselves, but for those who are seriously curious about what happened in the book, invite them to contact you and let them know you’re more than willing to answer or confirm their queries.

Social interaction. My minimum is liking posts, commenting, congratulating people on their milestones, or if there’s something I want to say on the topic, answer random questions… that kind of thing.

If you figure out a way to interact with others by posting topical questions, go ahead. Be sure to have time for it.

You’re also a reader, right? Most authors are. It’s rare for an author to not be an avid reader before they started writing. I understand exceptions, but they’re a small portion of the whole writing community.

Please don’t treat other authors and writers as competition. Even if they are. Technically. Especially the ones in the same genre. But it’s actually good to connect with them instead, and do swaps. Reading is much easier than writing. By the time you write another book, your reader would have read more books than you can count. Why not give another author a chance and introduce them to your readers? See if they would like to read the other author’s books while waiting for your next one.

Find one, two, three, or more authors and build rapport. Start a professional-personal relationship. Offer to review their books, or feature them and their works on your blog or website, do an author interview, complete with links to their books and author page.

I know, I know. Sometimes, as much as we want to do something good, there’s that underlying feeling of… envy? What if they benefit from this more than I would? For reasons such as their writing is better, their genre is more popular, what if my readers read theirs and lose interest in mine? Those kinds of thoughts.

We have to defeat that before we can enjoy helping out others, without thought to whoever will do better. I’ll be better than who I was yesterday.

I’ve seen a number of authors attacking others for no good reason. I understand they could be experienced and they’re imparting the lessons they learned, but it’s not a reason to do it in a rude way. Some writers may be young, but if they have a story to tell, who are you to say they will surely fail? Granted, I understand there are a lot of “aspiring” writers who haven’t nailed the basics yet, but don’t lump everyone in the same category. Give everyone a chance. Maybe they can do it. Maybe they have the skills. Don’t judge even before you read their output. Yeah?

And if you ever receive a critical comment, don’t be defensive or take offense. Digest it. Maybe there’s some truth in it. If you want to reply, craft a gentle explanation. Maybe admit what’s wrong. Ask for input. It could turn out to be helpful. I’ve experienced such things. I actually prefer them because it makes me think and evaluate my writings. If all you hear are praises, you could get lost in it. Sometimes, someone has to play the bad guy for you.

Other things.

If you ask for reviews, at least provide a free copy of the book. E-book is fine. As one article I’ve read stated: no reader owes us to read our book, just because you’re new and you can use the support. I’m at a point where I admit that if you want to build a following, and spread the reach of your name and titles to more people, you gotta offer them something. Maybe a sample, a free book, etc.

Newsletter. Please limit to once a week. I definitely unsubscribe if I get more than that. You’re not the only person I’m subscribed to. There are like 20+ others. Maybe more. Definitely more. Although your purpose is to build a community, connect with a reader, it does come across as a bit forced. I do feel like I’m going to run out of content if I do more than once a week. And I could also use that time to hone my craft in writing. Just saying.

Respect the work/s of others. Yes, you may be better than others, but you don’t have to treat them with contempt or disdain. Don’t squash their hopes. Be kind. Be a pillar of hope. Be supportive. Impart knowledge. Share your experiences. But kindly do so in a kind manner.

Be kind.

Alright, enjoy writing. Enjoy reading.

P.S. There’s more to say, but only this for now. Maybe another next month. Let me know your thoughts in the comments.

Dear Writing Community, What do you think about Reading Apps?

Reading apps? These are starting to proliferate. I see a lot of ads on Facebook and Instagram about them. I lost count. The companies mostly...