Waving or drowning? Ali Bacon reviews her social media situation
I don’t know what it takes to fall in love with social media
(warped personality? lack of real social life?) but for a while I was head over
heels, first of all with my blog and then with Twitter.
Behind the blog |
Blogging came about because of a work remit (I must be one
of the few members of the human race who did a course on it!) and shortly after
I was offered a paid blogging opportunity on behalf of a golf marketing
company. Since I played golf, this was fun, and as long as I churned out a
couple of posts a week I was sent a modest but satisfying cheque at the end of
each month.
Nice work if you can get it.
And by the time the Rather-Be-Golfing goose had stopped laying its golden eggs, I had put together my own writing website using the free Wordpress facility which I knew would provide ‘static’ website pages as well as a blog, enabling me to feel like a) an IT whiz-kid and b) a proper author with a proper website.
Nice work if you can get it.
And by the time the Rather-Be-Golfing goose had stopped laying its golden eggs, I had put together my own writing website using the free Wordpress facility which I knew would provide ‘static’ website pages as well as a blog, enabling me to feel like a) an IT whiz-kid and b) a proper author with a proper website.
Let me say again, all of this was fun, and for a good three
years I blogged every week without fail. I made connections with a quite a few other
bloggers (not all writers, just anyone who liked taking their thoughts to the
world without having an axe to grind). As time went on my occasional book
reviews attracted the attention of publishers and book marketers who offered
free review copies – more fun!
By this time Facebook had emerged from its academic and yoof
origins but although I signed up (purposes of research, obviously) I steered
clear – mere chitchat and gossip – not for me! Twitter on the other hand approached me by stealth. After I signed up (research ..!) it cheekily searched
my email. The only two people it came up with already on Twitter (a local
author and my niece’s husband) happened to be people I considered to be Quite
Interesting - as they did turn out to be. A few followers and followings later I
was chatting with a collection of people – a few of whom I knew in real
life or had met on my blogging travels – on a regular basis and in a most
diverting way. I crafted my tweets to fit the 140 characters and comforted
myself with the thought that surely this was a good writing skill.
So what went wrong? Well nothing really because I had a
novel published and my group of chatty friends turned into my social media
platform – just what I needed! Or was
it?
Sell, sell, sell! |
In what seemed like a piece of good timing, I had come
across an authors’ collective (not this one) intent on (amongst other things)
harnessing the power of social media to sell books. I applied, I was accepted. Result. I now had
a bigger band of followers/friends (FB could no longer be ignored) to have fun
with. The only thing was that I was also duty bound to tweet and share on their
behalves. No problem – a bit of time management was all that was required. I
joined Linked In and discovered Hootsuite – a platform which will post for you
across social media and schedule posts for different times of day. I dabbled in
Triber too. Magic!
Hootsuit: notification, notification, notification! |
Great, why read all that when it’s the mentions that count? But the overall result was that I lost interest in my old love, using it as a publicising tool rather than a chat room and transferring real socialising into Facebook. Of course the other reason I lost interest was that I was mostly reading other people’s publicity. I began to wonder if I was as annoying as they were!
Twitter - who's out there? |
Help – or sanity – arrived in an unexpected form. I took on
the role of blogging and tweeting on behalf of my writing group (as no one else
had the time or interest) and to save myself from confusion I restricted that activity to
the original Twitter interface. After initial annoyance at its comparative
clunkiness, I realised I was forming more interesting connections there than in
my own account. By starting afresh I remembered Twitter could be fun.
Of course in the meantime there were notifications and new interfaces on phones
and tablets just to add to life’s rich social media tapestry, but by then I had left the writers’ collective for other reasons and I’ve now divested
myself of my Writers Unchained tweeting at least for a while. I’ve also for the
most part ditched Hootsuite and returned to my spiritual Twitter home where I
am assiduously unfollowing (sorry guys) anyone who throws out only promo
material. And I am congratulating myself on never having taken up Pinterest –
yes I know it’s great but I’d never be off it - although I am a little curious
about Instagram …!
And my old friend the blog? I joined Authors Electric because I like the company – and could
see that a shared blog makes far more sense. I use my old place for the
occasional update or venting opportunity, but it’s due for a makeover of a
fairly radical kind, and with so many other places to scatter my writerly seed, it may become what it was always meant to be – just an author website.
Still afloat - just! |
One or two things I have learned: - social media involves many things, including discipline, but
also being yourself, whichever profile or identity you are using.
So how are the rest of you coping? Probably better than I
am!
Fee free to wave to me as I keep afloat
on Twitter @Alibacon
at alibacon.com
or at Writers Unchained
And of course I also have a story in Another Flash in the Pen anthology.
Don't miss the 0.99 p introductory offer!
Comments
And yes, thanks Chris for the excellent research idea.
But yes, followers pop up from nowhere (you can always block them) and I only follow back if I have some specific reason for doing so. I think I was lucky to find some good companions when I started out but many of those have been swallowed up in the sheer magnitude of the thing. Use with caution I would say. And if you don't fancy it, give it a wide berth.
As to sales, I have sometimes bought a book after reading a tweet but only because I already had some knowledge of the author. It's just one of many ways we can make connections, but the secret is to make the connection not browbeat the the other party. If sales are a result it will be in an indirect way. A.
Deeply into the latest Flash in the Pen anthology - these just get better and better.