If it's January it must be time... by Cally Phillips
If it’s January it
must be time to think about summer.
It’s that time of year when the turkey has been well and
truly stuffed and the banging headache of Hogmanay parties has more or less
subsided and so we turn our thoughts to summer.
Oh yes, summer. I believe we will have one this year. I live in hope, though they do appear to be rationed in this time of economic doom.
Still, I ask you to turn your minds to the 2nd
Edinburgh eBook Festival which will be held online (virtually) between August
12th and August 24th.
It was a last minute ‘good idea’ of mine in 2012 where I managed (only
just) to deliver a programme of 50 writers and 100 events over 17 long days in
August. If you missed out on the whole
experience you can have a look at last year’s site here.
But this year, well, it’s going to be different. It’s going
to be planned well in advance. It’s going (of course) to be bigger and better
in oh so many ways. And those ways are down to you and the likes of you! It’s
going to be more focused, more reader friendly and more ‘out there’ in every
respect. It’s still going to primarily
promote ‘indie’ writing but we are coming of age and will be working to reach
readers as well as writers. The tagline might be ‘anyone who has a Kindle (or
other ereader) can come to the festival. For free. For a fortnight.’
So, today I can announce the opening of submissions for
participation in the festival. It's going to be a much more collaborative event (I hope) and this is your chance to be part of it!
The face of the festival - cool Kobo |
What are we looking
for?
Residencies. We
are looking for virtual ‘in residence’ roles. These are people who are prepared
to promote a genre or specific ‘theme’ such as ‘Thriller writer in residence’
or ‘Romantic writer in residence’ or ‘Poet in Residence’ ‘Mid-lister in residence’ or the like. The resident writer will be knowledgeable
about others in their field, presenting a range of writing, not just promoting their own work.
something for everyone |
Proposals for events
and series of events. Whether you’re
keen to talk about advocacy or what makes a great book, or setting up a reading
group or how to review effectively, or an expose/round up of great blog sites, we’re looking for interesting and challenging events
(particularly series of events) that will open up the world of epublishing to
the public. This could include virtual ‘readings’ linked to YouTube or the like
– anything you think we can feature via our wordpress site, give us your
proposal and we’ll give it serious consideration!
turning kindle on its head |
Workshop ideas –
for more technical things. The festival this year will focus more on readers
and less on writers but there is still space for authored pieces on aspects of
epublishing. A series showing people how
to engage with Sigil for example. Or how
to write enhanced ebooks. Your idea
should have an appeal to writers and/or readers.
What we are NOT
looking for.
If you are going to be part of the festival we expect you to
be working on behalf of others in your chosen field not just promoting yourself
or your business. We are not interested
in publishers (or writers) looking for a free way to get exposure or visibility.
Our watchword is reciprocity. We could charge people to promote their work and
ask people to pay for slots but we’re not going down that route. This is a free
festival but not a ‘free for all’ festival in terms of individuals promoting
themselves and nothing else. We want to present a festival which is full of
work that really enthuses people, where writers and publishers are prepared to
put themselves on the spot and promote others for the love of the work NOT for
the hope of personal gain. We want to work to promote and feature work that
otherwise might not gain visibility.
Chris Longmuir enjoying her interactive experience at 1st ebook Festival. |
We will showcase individual writers/publishers by invitation
only. We are not short of people whose work we’d like to showcase and we will
be approaching them directly. What we are actively recruiting for now is
writers who can think outside of the box and share with a virtual public things
about their own specialism or area of interest.
get on your horse and read your ebook. |
There will not be a children’s festival. (But if someone
wants to run one, feel free to go ahead and we’ll be happy to talk
co-promotion) This is only because a lot of the content at our festival will NOT be
appropriate for children. Young adults, yes, but not children. It’s nothing
against children or children’s ebooks, simply a recognition that there is a
divide and that much of what we offer is not suitable for the engagement of the
young and impressionable! We are providing adult content for adult readers over
the age of 14.
What to submit?
You are invited to put in a submission which outlines the
event/s or ‘slots’ or residency you would like to promote – with as much detail
about the writers or ebooks you would be showcasing in your event/residency as
possible.
Give us an indication of how many ‘slots’ (effectively these
are blog posts/pages) you would take and what the content would be.
If you are suggesting a residency then give us a good idea
of the scope and content of the work you will promote.
If you are suggesting an event/series of events give us a
good idea of the theme, participants, style and the like.
Tell us about any interactivity you can offer such as YouTube,
social media tie ins etc.
Your commitment?
We will require the chosen participants to deliver on time
and in appropriate format all content for their proposed idea. We will then
‘build’ the festival site round that.
We also require that you illustrate your commitment to take
an active part in the promoting of the festival by telling us what you propose
to ‘bring to the party.’ Give us your
ideas and outline your skills – are you a twitter whizz, do you have social
networking skills, PR skills, marketing skills? Show us your commitment to
promote the festival BEYOND your own participation.
spread the word |
The festival will reach more people the more people are
actively working to promote it. And as a participant we expect that you be
prepared to put in a regular commitment (before and during the festival)
promoting the FESTIVAL itself NOT just the work that you have submitted
yourself. You will be expected to commit to having a regular virtual presence
during the duration of the festival. But this can be from anywhere in the world
of course! (And a lot of it scheduled in advance!) If you’re planning 2 weeks in a remote place without internet access
for August – don’t apply. If you can’t spare at least 10-15 minutes a day to do
some promotion for the festival (or schedule the same)– don’t apply. Otherwise, feel free. What we
need is people who will spread the word constantly as far and wide as we
can. We want to be a good viral
experience, reaching as many people as possible. We can only do this with
everyone pulling hard and working together.
Deadlines: Closing date for submissions is 1st
March 2013.
You will be notified whether you are to be included in the
programme by 30th March 2013.
We will make our inclusion selection based on the quality of
the proposed idea and how well it fits in with the general aims and ‘look’ of
the festival and on your personal commitment to promote the festival. We don’t carry passengers. This is a
collaborative effort with everyone playing a part in the team. If you’re not a
team player – don’t apply.
If you are a participant you will be expected to deliver
your programme by 30th June 2013. (This gives time to build the site
and tweak out the gremlins in advance of the ‘action.’)
Please submit your proposal as a word document attachment to
ebookfest@btinternet.com to whom
any further correspondence should be directed.
This information is also available on the website http://www.edebookfest.co.uk and please feel free to pass this on to people you think
might be interested in taking part.
We think the 2nd Edinburgh eBook Festival will be
an exciting event on the virtual calendar and are looking forward to working
together with participants to promote as wide a range of writers as possible to
make this an outstanding festival.
Comments
VEry best with a wonderful event
Well, folks, get thinking caps on, spread the word and here's looking forward to some great ideas from all over the place. As Brendan Gisby McStoryteller in residence said last year 'summer will never be the same again' (I think he meant the ebook festival NOT the lack of sun!)