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As for Twitter, I just mess with those hashtags because I can. The important ones, to us anyway, are #amreading, #amwriting, #amediting, etc. There are a few others that link your tweets to groups that might be beneficial to you. Make note of what your Tweeps are using. Type the hashtag into the search bar and it'll pull up all tweets using those hashtags.
Oh and to increase your followers, #WW (writer Wednesday) and #FF (follow friday). I like the tweets that only list one Tweep and say something funny or personal. These are to tell other Tweeps who you feel is worth following. Also it puts you out there b/c those who are mentioned will retweet your twitter name to them.
What the fuck? I'll explain. Say I tweet "WOnderful writer and cake baker extraordinaire @Nikki #WW" So you're like "Renee, I don't bake cakes. Jeepers." and I'm like "Who cares. My 700+ followers just saw that and some checked out your profile and followed you. You, as a thanks to me for mentioning you will RT the entire tweet maybe with a "thanks" in front of it, and so your followers see my awesomeness and check out my profile and follow.
Make sense?
I didnt' think so.

I did get a professional editor before I embarked on this self-publishing thing--and now I'm going through the 2nd book and making my husband read it over and over for line editing...unbelievable amount of work... and the 3rd book is even longer and now that I've added so much to book 2 I have tons to edit in book 3!!!maybe there's some trade you can do since you're connected with several publishers for your short works...or how is your husband for reading your work?

My husband only reads a gunpoint. I'm lucky to have awesome writer friends though, many will some mad editing skills.

Tomorrow I may see you on Twitter! (if I remember the #ww thingy)


When I've finished an anthology of linked short stories called 'The 'Erebus Chronicles' I plan to publish via Lulu or Smashwords. Under a nom-de-plume of course, because revealign you're self published is likely to cause agents and publishers to ditch your stuff without even reading it.
Meanwhile, I plan to submit novels under my own name to agents and wait.
If I'm traditionally published, I can reveal my secret identity and watch sales of e-books soar. If the e-books do really well, I can just toss that casually into the covering letter to an agent - 'author of the 50K selling e-book...'.
A sort of cross pollination. Or is that self fertilization?
Renee, I haven't got 300 rejections yet. Still 250 to go. It does suck, I agree, but hang in there. You will make it.

Thanks, Paul. I like your plan. I've started looking at small presses and there is some hope there. I also submitted Dirty Truths into a Harlequin Romance contest. It's likely to be rejected because while in my opinion it's romance, I don't think it's what a romance publisher is looking for. But I won't know unless I try, right?

Just consider: your manuscript, plus forty others, lands on the desk of an intern reader. (Intern = less than minimum wage.) They have to read it and like it, so it has to be a genre they are familiar with, in a tone they find agreeable, with a POV they can relate to. It has to reach them when they aren't in a hurry to get away for the weekend, and when they aren't hung over from the weekend. Then they have to have the balls to pass it up the food chain for consideration. Since they are only one bad recommendation away from severance, it takes some doing. Then the deputy-assistant-under-vice-editor has to like it...
But it does happen, and it will happen for us.
Eventually.
In the meantime, if you want any editing or beta reading or whatever, feel free. I always enjoy reading your stuff. I'll be advertising fee paying services on OFW, but for you it will be free.
Forever.

So I say explore EVERY avenue right now and experiment a bit--it sounds like you have a wealth of work that is complete. And don't let a bunch of farging iceholes get you down! You know your writing is good!
According to Ron social media promotion is completely doable, expecially for one as savvy as you are--I'm still struggling with Twitter but I have more followers now and I think I understand hashtags finally, although I'm still not sure how to use them within tweets...