Creating Your Blog: Installing Analytics

Once you’ve got your blog set up, you can choose from all sorts of fancy and not-so-fancy “widgets” and “plugins.” They add tools and features to your blog, like search boxes, archives, search engine optimization features, and ways to “ping” your posts to social networking sites like Facebook, Twitter, Stumble Upon, and such. You can pick and choose which ones you like and use.

Widgets are easy to add and remove. I learned how to do it. You can, too. Plugins area pretty easy as well if you know what to download.

However, the main thing you want to add to your site, especially if it is a hosted blog, is an analytics program. This allows you to track your readers–or to find out if you have any! The free WordPress.com sites have basic analytics. This allows you to see how much traffic comes to your blog, what type of search terms are being used, and what pages people are visiting.

For hosted blogs, can choose from any number of free analytics out there, such as Sitemeter, Google Analytics, or Counterize II. Your hosting company may also have analytics. Sometimes I use more than one.

Once you have analytics on your blog you can tell how many people are visiting your site. It won’t be as many as you think at first. Educate yourself on the difference between a “hit,” “visitor,” “page view” and a “unique visitor.” Try out programs like Wassup, another free plugin, which will get rid of “bots,” “crawlers,” and the like, so you can tell how many actual visitors showed up to read what you wrote.

Then watch the readers arrive. Keep writing, and watch the numbers grow. If you write it, they will come.

Creating Your Blog: Purchase a Domain Name

You should purchase a domain name for your blog whether or not you plan on having a hosted blog. Should you convert from a free blog to a hosted one, you’ll need it. And if you begin with a hosted blog, obviously, you’ll need it.

Purchase the same domain name as the title of your book. (While you’re at it, purchase a domain name that reflects your own name as an author. For example, I own ninaamir.com as well as howtoblogabook.com.) If you can’t get a .com name (ex. howtoblogabook.com), get a .net name (ex. Howtoblogabook.net). If you can’t get that, pick one of the others. I typically think of .org as something for nonprofits and such, but nothing stops you from using that. Some people purchase every domain name possible so no one else will get it.

You can purchase domain names in any number of places. The cost may vary. Check them all out. Many places, like GoDaddy.com, offer cheap rates and hosting as well. You can do a Google search and then comparison shop. Or, better yet, ask someone savvy about websites for advice.

Creating Your Blog: Hosted or Self-Hosted, That’s the Question

You’re ready to begin writing and publishing the contents of your book on the Internet. First, you must create a website where your book will “live.” Don’t worry. You don’t need an actual website. All you need is a blog. Blogs serve as actual websites. Better yet, they are free and easy.

A blog functions as a system for managing your content. It’s an easy way to have control over your website. You can login and add posts, pages, images, videos, and audio on your own without the need to pay a webmaster.

Even a technical delinquent like me can create a blog. I’ve had free (hosted) blogs both on Blogger.com and on WordPress.com, and I created these blogs myself. If I can do it, anyone can do it. More free blogging companies exist, such as typepad.com; check them out as well, if you like. WordPress and Blogger are the most popular.

I prefer WordPress.com, although some people find it harder to use. In my experience, it offers more options and gives you more exposure. I immediately had more traffic to my blog when I switched to WordPress.com from Blogger.com, and I could actually find my blog when I searched for it on Google. I couldn’t find my Blogger.com blog when I searched for it, which doesn’t make a lot of sense since Blogger.com is part of Google.

I also have had a self-hosted blog with WordPress.org, which was set up for me by my webmaster. Recently she converted all my blogs to self-hosted blogs. It’s great to start out with self-hosted blogs if possible, but, if you can’t, the free hosted ones work well until you’re ready to convert. Self-hosted blogs offer you even more options and visibility.

If you don’t understand the difference between WordPress.com free hosted blogs and WordPress.org self-hosted blogs, let me explain a bit further. WordPress.com hosts your blog—almost like a hosting company hosts your website. They run the entire site, which houses blogs from lots and lots of people. You are in control of the content, but your site resides at the WordPress location. All your traffic goes to that location.

WordPress.org does not host your blog; you must self-host it on your own website, which is gets its hosting service from a company of your choice, such as GoDaddy.com or HostGator.com. Your blog lives at your URL.

If you don’t know anything about hosting or about html codes (and you don’t want to learn), you may want to stick with a free blog. If you are willing to learn these things or can afford a webmaster to set up a self-hosted blog for you, choose a hosted blog. You won’t be sorry.

The process of setting up a free hosted blog is fairly self-explanatory. However, I suggest if you are having trouble that you hire my webmaster, www.askmepc.com. She offers on-line tutorials for her clients.

I am not going to go into all the nitty-gritty details of blog construction here. You can find that information almost anywhere. Plus, the blog sites will lead your through the process fairly effortlessly. However, there are several steps to setting up your blog I will discuss.

The first one doesn’t need much explanation: domain name.   We’ll discuss this tomorrow.

Planning Your Posts or Screen-Sized Content

At this point in the planning process, you know what your book is about and you’ve outlined its features and benefits. You know who is going to read it and in which what markets you will promote it. You know the competition and how to differentiate your blogged book from other blogs and books on the market already. You’re ready…ready to consider the contents of your book.

However, a blogged book must follow the guidelines of a blog. No long chapters here, only short 200-500 word posts (with a few exceptions). Most blog readers only want to read approximately one computer screen’s worth of copy.

Your task now involves coming up with what in nonfiction book proposal terms is called the “List of Chapters.” This equates to the table of contents for your book and is the first of two sections included in the “Outline” of the proposal.

Once you have your table of contents, chunk the chapters down into bite-sized, or screen-sized, pieces. Each chapter must be broken down into subheads that can be written as short blog posts.

To be sure you remember exactly what you are supposed to write when the time comes to compose those posts, take the time now also to write “Chapter Summaries,” the second and last section of the nonfiction book proposal. This entails a short but detailed description of each post. This will serve not only as a reminder (It’s not unusual after a month or two to find you have forgotten what you had in mind for many of your posts.) but also as a basic outline for each post.

Wow! Great job! You are now ready to create your blog so you can start blogging your book. That’s your next task.

Creating a Platform for You and Your Book

The publishing world has changed dramatically over the last decade. No longer can you simply present an agent or a publisher with a good idea and good writing and expect to get a contract in return. You must prove that you already have people ready and waiting to purchase your book as soon as it is released. In other words, you have built a platform of prospective readers.

As I’ve mentioned before, platform equates to how many people you know or who know you who potentially will buy your book. These people can be followers on Facebook, tweeple on Twitter, blog subscribers, newsletter subscribers, podcast listeners, people reached via magazines, e-zines and on-line publications for which you write, attendees at your talks and workshops, publicity partners, and on-line and offline association memberships. You build a platform through speaking, writing, social media, networking, media gigs, etc. And you must build platform before they will come–”they” meaning agents and publishers.

In today’s publishing world the most important parts of a nonfiction book proposal are the Promotion section and the “Platform” section. Both show the publisher you will help sell your book. They want a business partner, not just a writer.

Why do you, a blogger care about platform? First, if you want your blog to be discovered and turned into a book by a publishing house, you need blog readers. Blog readers=platform (if enough of them exist). Second, if you would like to write another traditional book, or you plan on expanding your blogged book into a longer and more in-depth print version, then your blog serves as a way to promote that book and to build platform (i.e. potential buyers).

Either way, the more you build platform via guest blog posts on other blogs, articles published on your topic, news releases, press releases, media appearances, etc., the more readers will show up at your blog. All of these efforts become platform elements.

The Platform section of your nonfiction book proposal—if you were to write one—would include a list of all the things you have done to date to develop a platform. It would include statistics, such as how many unique visitors visit your blog each day, how many places you have spoken, where you have appeared as a guest blogger, and how many upcoming media appearances you have scheduled

Even if you don’t write the actual proposal, it’s a great idea to write your platform-building activities down, so you remember what you’ve done and keep track of your blog’s statistics to see if your readership is growing. Also, keep working on building your platform; don’t let a month go by when you don’t have some type of platform-building activity scheduled.

By the way, the platform section of a proposal can make or break an aspiring author’s chance of getting a publishing deal. It’s that important. As for having your blog discovered, don’t think the exposure you get for your blogged book via platform-building activities won’t be taking into consideration by an agent or acquisitions editor trolling around the Internet.

At this point, I’ve covered all the sections included in the Introduction of a nonfiction proposal. Next, we move on to the “Outline.”

Are You on a Mission?

I’d just like to mention today that if you are writing a proposal, you want to include a mission statement after your author’s bio. You’ve already worked on that. Remember this post?

Not every book on writing a book proposal includes the “Mission Statement” section; in fact, most don’t. It’s a fairly new section. However, my former agent, Mike Larsen, who wrote How to Write a Book Proposal, asks his authors to include a mission statement. I’m sure this will be in the upcoming new edition of his book as well, although I haven’t seen it yet.

I’ll reiterate: Knowing why you must write this book will help you focus your energy on this project. It will help you clarify your reasons for writing your book. It will help you decide if you must write this book, and it will help the people considering purchasing your book (publishers and readers) decide if they want to do so.

Why You Are the Best Person to Write Your Book

Are you the type of writer who feels sure you possess the expertise to write your book or are you the type of writer who questions whether you are good enough to do so? Do you know you are the best person to author the book you have in mind, or do you wonder if someone better exists?

Either way, you must convince your readers you are the expert on your subject. Indeed, you must tell the world you are the only person who should write this particular book.

And now you must write down all the reasons why you, indeed, are the best person to write your blogged book. In a nonfiction book proposal, this section is called “About the Author.” Sounds pretty simply, right?

It can prove simple—or hard. That depends upon you. You write a biography of your expertise and experience, and you do this using the third person tense. You include the most important facts first, such as anything that makes you the expert on your topic, your educational degrees (if they apply to the topic), work experience, etc. Include all your achievements. See this as your resume in prose but written specifically for your book.

Obviously, an aspiring author who wants a deal with a traditional publisher needs to create an “About the Author” section for inclusion in a nonfiction proposal; the proposal is necessary to sell the book. However, a blogger needs a biography (bio) as well. Every blog should include an “About” or “About the Author” page. This allows readers to find out who you are and why you have the expertise to write your blog. This information gives your blog credibility.

So, write your bio and pace it on the “About” page of your blog. If you prefer to use a less formal bio for your blog, write it in the first person tense using “I.” If you write your blog in a more formal voice, though, stick to third person for your bio as well.

What Do You Need to Complete Your Book?

As you get closer to beginning to blog your book, consider this question: What resources do you need to complete your book? The answer to this question completes the section of a book proposal actually called “Resources Needed to Complete the Book.”

This section may not pertain to many blogged books. You, the blogger, may find that you need very little besides your mind, your fingers, a computer, and an Internet connection to write your book. Well…every blogger needs a little bit of money to pay for an Internet connection and a hosted website (since you hopefully will eventually pay for a hosted blog). You also need a computer.

Primarily this section does, indeed, cover costs. Here are the types of costs that might be included in this section of a nonfiction proposal and which you might want to consider as well:

  • Photos—You might want to purchase a subscription to stock photo provider, for example or you might need a photographer for special needs.
  • Art—You might need a logo designed or a series of cartoons to illustrate your book, or you might want to purchase a subscription to a clip art service.)
  • Permissions—If you reproduce large sections of an exiting book, you must purchase the rights from the publisher.

In this section of a nonfiction book proposal an aspiring author also declares how long it will take them to complete their book. So, take a moment—or a few—to give yourself some deadlines. How much will you write each day, week, or month, and when will you “turn in” your finished book? In other words, how many blog posts will you commit to writing each week, and how many will it take you to compete your book? Given those figures, when will you complete your blogged book? Write that down. Make that part of your business plan.

(I covered this topic from another angle in this post.)

Know Your Competition to Angle for Success

Picking up where I left off, you now need to take long hard look at any other blogs that might compete with your blogged book. You do this to ensure not that you are the only one blogging on your topic but that you are blogging on the topic from a unique angle. You want to be different from the other blogs.

Actually, it’s great if lots of bloggers have chosen to write about your book’s topic. That means readers find it interesting. Just like a regular book, if publishers keep publishing books on a topic, that means they feel a market exists for books on that subject.

Of course, you may find that no one else is blogging on your subject matter. That might prove a good thing—if anyone really has an interest in reading about it. You can make a name for yourself as the first and only one in that particular market. However, there may be no other blogs for a reason; no one may care about your topic.

It’s possible, though, that no one has yet thought of your topic besides you. If so, that’s great! Buy a domain name that relates to your topic, set up your blog, and start writing and publishing fast!

This exercise of looking for competing blogs relates to two sections of a book proposal:  Competing and Complementary Titles. Since you are blogging a book, it behooves you to also look at what books have been written on your topic. Make sure the book you are writing is different and adds something new to existing titles on bookstore shelves.

Also look at complementary titles. These are the related books someone interested in your book might purchase as well; however, these books do not represent competition per se. If there are many books on one complementary topic, you might want to see if your book fits nicely with, or parallels, these books, since obviously a readership exists for those books.

You can look at complementary blogs as well. These blogs might be great ones to try and develop reciprocal links with at some point. The readers on a complementary blog might be just as likely to read your blog as the other—or to purchase your books, products or services.

It’s easy to find information on competing and complementary blogs. Simply go to blog catalogues like Technorati.com or blogcatalog.com. Sometimes you can find a directory related to a certain subject area. Try doing a Google search for web or blog rings, blog networks, or blog directories on your topic. For instance, my blog, My Son Can Dance, is listed at DanceBloggers.com. If your blogged book involved a subject related to dance, you’d want to explore the blogs listed there. Another blog of mine, As the Spirit Moves Me, deals with both Jewish and secular spirituality as well as human potential and personal growth issues; it is listed at JewPI.Com under the Blogs category. If you were writing about Judaism, you’d want to check out the blogs at JewPI.com or at Jewishblogging.com. (As the Spirit Moves Me used to be listed there as well; for some reason, they dropped it, and I can’t get it back on the site—I’m not sure why.)

Look at the ranking of the blogs you find in the catalogues. Each catalogue will offer information on the popularity of a blog. You’ll want to examine the highest-ranked blogs as well as those lower down in the rankings.

Take all the information you gain from your research and take a second look at your blogged book idea. Does it still hold up? Does it need to be re-angled? Do you need to rethink the content to make it stand out from the pack of other blogs or books? Will you choose to compete with the top ranked blogs already being published or to compete with the ones ranked fifth or sixth or even tenth. (You might find those lower down the scale an easier niche to break into.)

Be really honest. Refocus your idea now—before you start blogging—for success in both the cyber and the traditional publishing marketplace.

New & Improved How to Blog a Book Blog!

If you think I’ve forgotten about this blog, you’re wrong. As mentioned in my last post, I was away for a week at a writing retreat. After I returned, my webmaster said she’d convert my free WordPress blog to a hosted one. She got started and then didn’t actually finish up until Friday night. So…I was waiting…and waiting…to post something.

Anyway, now the blog is up and improved, as you can see! I’m very excited. And starting tomorrow, I’m back to blogging the book about how to blog a book.

In the meantime, I’ll just mention that I’ve come across at least two new blogged books. One is a self-published book; a man blogged about his struggles with cancer and then turned those posts into a book called The Cancer Chronicles. That just goes to show you how you can repurpose your blog or actually begin blogging with the intent of self-publishing all or some of your posts. Second, I ran across an article about a man who decided to turn the worst time of his life into a better time by finding something awesome every day and blogging about it–something that most people overlook, like putting on underwear warm out of the drier, finding spare change in your pocket, and having an extra check-out lane open up at the grocery store. His blog, 1000awesomethings.com, was discovered and turned into a book called The Book of Awesome. Pretty neat, huh?

I hope that bit of news inspired you. Remember…everyone has a story to tell and some wisdom they’ve gained from their experience.–and someone out there will feel inspired, enlightened, educated, or transformed by what you write.  Or maybe you have some expertise you want to share. A blog provides a great forum from which to offer your knowledge.

That’s it for now. More tomorrow.