Saturday, March 28, 2009

The Writer Mama Two-Year Anniversary Blog Tour Giveaway!


Christina Katz, The Writer Mama, is one busy woman. I met her for the first time last month at the AWP conference in Chicago. While some of us were trying to figure out where to eat lunch between panels, she came to say a gracious hello, and then excused herself, I expect to go write a book or coach a student or develop a new publicity plan. She's got ideas and she wants to share them; she wants mothers who write to get their work published and read by the broadest possible audience. And although I think Elrena and I have done pretty well spreading the word about Mama, PhD (have you watched our trailer? joined our Facebook group? how about bought yourself a t-shirt at our store?) there's always something more a writer can learn about every step of the process, and I've learned from Christina's work. So I'm happy to help celebrate the two-year anniversary of her book by having Christina Katz guest blog here today.

Post #29: Your Book’s Benefits
The features of your book are nice. You need to know what they are.

But the benefits of your book, not the features, will determine if your book is going to sell.

Your book’s benefits will motivate a potential reader to seek your book out and buy it…or not. For example, here are some of Writer Mama’s benefits described:

As a mom, you want to spend as much time with your children as possible. But you’d also like to make some money doing something you enjoy. How do you get the best of both worlds? Writer Mama, How to Raise a Writing Career Alongside Your Kids by experienced freelancer Christina Katz tells you how. You can start a stay-at-home freelance writing career tailored to fit your family and lifestyle.

Writer Mama will answer all your questions about how to get started, in realistic, easy-to-follow steps. While conversational and easy-to-read, this book also does a lot of hard work for you. It gives you practical advice and exercises that help you get started in a matter of weeks.

Writer Mama is a reference book, so notice that most of the benefits described above relate to how informative it is. Since it’ a how-to book, the benefits relate back to how helpful and handy it is. They describe how the book walks the reader through a process step-by-step.

Remember, all you former students out there, the emphasis on forms in my Writing and Publishing the Short Stuff class? Well, when it's time to describe your book's benefits your understanding of writing forms will prove helpful once again. Different forms accomplish different things. Fiction takes the reader away and offers entertainment. Memoir typically offers a heartwarming, inspirational or humorous slice of life. But nonfiction books are very practical. Nonfiction forms accomplish their mission by informing the reader through a list of tips, a how-to process, or a cataloging of relevant facts and information, or all of the above.

The promotional material for Writer Mama weaves together features and benefits, since thought and consideration went into both:

You’ll love the short chapters, sidebars, and exercises that let you get the information you need in small doses that fit into your busy schedule. Plus this book was written to grow with you. Once you master the skills of being an article writer, it teaches you how to pitch a nonfiction book idea and explore other areas of writing—advice you won’t find presented like this anywhere else.

So if you want to get started writing for publication, let writer mama Christina Katz help. If she and countless other moms can do it, so can you!

Nonfiction books make the reader’s life easier by gathering and compressing information the reader wants and needs into tight writing. Nonfiction books are typically focused on an outcome and chug toward that outcome purposefully like a train. A nonfiction book written for traditional publication never rambles or loses its way. The sense of purpose is clear from the moment you set your eyes on the book’s cover, as you crack the book open, start scanning the table of contents and reading a chapter or the introduction.

Books have been informing, inspiring and entertaining people for many years, so the fact that your book does one or all of these things is just the beginning of describing the benefits of your book for readers. In order to offer value to your intended reader, your book must make a promise and deliver on that promise.

The promise you made when you pitched your book will be re-summarized once your book is complete as the benefits that will sell, or not sell, your book.

Today's Book Drawing: To enter to win a signed, numbered copy of Writer Mama, answer the following question in this blog's comments:
What unique benefits will your book have for your readers? Can you offer any specifics on how your book will inform, entertain or inspire readers?

Thanks for participating! Only US residents, or folks with a US mailing address can participate in the drawing. Please only enter once per day.

Where will the drawing be tomorrow? Visit The Writer Mama to continue reading the rest of the Writer Mama story throughout March 2009!

Writer Mama, How to Raise a Writing Career Alongside Your Kids by Christina Katz (Writer's Digest Books 2007)
Kids change your life, but they don't necessarily have to end your career. Stay-at-home moms will love this handy guide to rearing a successful writing career while raising their children. The busy mom's guide to writing life, this book gives stay-at-moms the encouragement and advice they need including everything from getting started and finding ideas to actually finding time to do the work - something not easy to do with the pitter-patter of little feet. With advice on how to network and form a a business, this nurturing guide covers everything a writer mama needs to succeed at her second job. Christina Katz is also the author of the newly released Get Known Before the Book Deal, Use Your Personal Strengths to Grow an Author Platform (Writer's Digest Books 2008).

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10 Comments:

At 9:27 AM, Blogger Kimberly Zook said...

What unique benefits will your book have for your readers? Can you offer any specifics on how your book will inform, entertain or inspire readers?

The young adult fiction book I am working on is aimed at male teenagers, specifically hispanic male teenagers, but I am hoping that both genders and all ethnic groups will find it interesting. Unique benefits of my book might be that I am weaving scientific information about the rainforest (based on experiences I had while living there) with cultural insight into life in a Latin American country as a boy and a girl. If the publisher is interested, I'd like to include sketches/drawings of certain flora and fauna of the rainforest that might appeal visually to the reader as an exotic captivating image.

In an environment so rich in diversity that it can be overwhelming, the character discovers simple truths that I hope will inspire the reader.

 
At 9:28 AM, Blogger Kimberly Zook said...

Oops, I forgot to say that I won a copy of Christina's book in the tour already, so please don't include me in the drawing. Thanks!

 
At 10:25 AM, Blogger Just A Girl said...

My thoughts about my book are still forming. I have written a novel (fiction) for young adults. The goal is to develop a series that takes you down the unspoken road of depression and recovery. But, a nonfiction idea keeps resurfacing. During this month of following this blog, I have a nagging need to share the ups and downs of ER nursing with the general public. The more I think about it, the more I can see that my knowledge can "inform" so many people with a natural and "inspiring" voice. I now have a place to start, the very reason I have not moved forward with this. Thank you, Christina!

Loretta

 
At 12:35 PM, Blogger Deb said...

I've been pondering a nonfiction book for a couple of years now, about the early "intimate" (I'll keep a "g" rating here) experiences of girls, with the aim of both parents and their children being able to read and discuss it. I think by sharing actual stories from girls/women about their first experiences, the book would inform by showing the emotional issues involved instead of the standard facts and statistics, and the hope is to inspire girls to wait until they are more emotionally mature before engaging in these intimate experiences.

 
At 8:45 PM, Blogger Mitch said...

I would hope to entertain with my stories, and also create characters that resonate with the audience. As a reader, that's what I look for as a "benefit" - so it's my goal as a writer as well.

thanks for a fun month of visiting interesting blogs!

 
At 8:50 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

What unique benefits will your book have for your readers? Can you offer any specifics on how your book will inform, entertain or inspire readers?

My book is geared around the consumer mentality. Too often in this economy I see things about living frugally or below your means. It's like a financial diet. Whether a diet to lose weight or one to get your financial house in order, I what to inform and inspire readers with attainable goals. The concept isn't to do without but to do the most with what you have. You might not be able to have it all; but if you prioritize what is important to you and define your goals, you can really have the kind of life you want.

kiwi2704@yahoo.com

Thanks,
Anna

 
At 12:39 AM, Blogger kerribuckley said...

"What unique benefits will your book have for your readers? Can you offer any specifics on how your book will inform, entertain or inspire readers?"

I'd like to take my eight-week class which has helped many people get published in places such as "Mothering Magazine" and "The Oregonian" and condense it into chapters, just as the class is laid out with inspiring tips and quotes from seasoned journalists and new freelancers throughout the book. It will inform through a fool-proof plan, entertain and inspire through the gold gleaned from interviews, fun and quirky exercises, and a way to organize ideas, diagram an article that makes writing it a piece of cake, and how to incorporate art and creativity into your freelancing career, Interviews from my students and my radio show guests will be the frosting on this cake. Adaptable to any topic or market, this book will lead anyone wanting to write for a living by the hand, step by step, to learn the language of freelancing, organization of articles and research, and use of creative methods that may be unconventional, and how to deal with editors and rejections with a smile and renewed enthusiasm! It will be an "Artist's Way" meets "The Writer's Digest Guide to Freelance Writing" meets "He's Just Not That Into You".

Kerri Buckley
goldenwordsmith@yahoo.com

 
At 8:58 AM, Blogger Kristi Nommensen Dorson said...

"What unique benefits will your book have for your readers? Can you offer any specifics on how your book will inform, entertain or inspire readers?"

I am hoping my book will open people's eyes to the issue of teen pregnancy; that it will help to humanize the teens that are going through this. That they won't be as stigmatized as they are today. I am also hopeful that the book will give some comfort to teens that are experiencing an abusive relationship and/or teen pregnancy.

 
At 8:55 PM, OpenID thewritermama said...

Great answers, everyone. Come join for the final day tomorrow! And thanks so much for participating!

 
At 10:00 AM, OpenID thewritermama said...

Today's the last day of the blog tour and the hostess gifts are in! Come on over to Robin Mizell's blog and chime in if you have time!

And thanks again for hosting!

 

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