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Self Publishing for Friends And Family
 

Recent technological innovations in online book publishing services have changed the way we publish. Now you can publish just as many copies of your book as you wish, and/or allow others to pay for their copies, too.

Self-Publishing For Profit
  Do you dream of being a best-seller? Self-publishing your work and taking charge of distribution and sales is an exciting way to get unique books to market.
Sharing Your Memoir
 

Who is your audience? Understanding the interests and needs of those who will read the book will help you to write it more effectively. Your anticipated audience determines your distribution, too.

Marketing a Self-Published Memoir
 

This article looks at the techniques of “guerilla marketing” to help you sell your self-published memoir or family history book.

 

Sharing Your Memoir

Some of our Stories To Tell “How to Create Your Personal History Book” workshops begin with a deceptively simple “Dedication Page” exercise. We ask participants to answer three questions:

  • Who is your book for?
  • Why are they special to you?
  • What do you want them to learn?

The exercise will make you think about the people who will be reading your books. Understanding the audience for your book can sharpen its focus and make it much more engaging. After some reflection, writing the book’s dedication can be very enlightening.

If you believe that you’re writing for a “general audience” or “society” or “everybody,” the tone of your book may be flat and formal. But once you decide that you are telling a story to a particular person or a specific group of people, you will use a particular way of speaking or voice. You would tell a story differently if the audience was your grandmother than if it was you boss or your bridge club or your daughter’s fourth grade class. Knowing the audience for your book will allow you to adopt the appropriate tone, vocabulary and degree of informality.

It’s important to recognize that different audiences have different frames of reference. If you are writing for your grandchildren things like phonographs, typewriters or polio might require some explanation. If you are a military veteran writing for other veterans, you may assume that they have experiences similar to yours and dispense with some of the detail you can assume is common to all of you. If you are writing a tribute for a person who is retiring after a long career you will want to emphasize accomplishments and positive traits with less focus on personal life. Awareness of audience will help you decide what your readers will want and need to know and to shape your book accordingly.

Knowing your book’s audience will also help you to frame your stories effectively. As you introduce and conclude your stories what should you emphasize? If you are writing a family history you’ll probably want to highlight shared experiences, family values and traditions. A memoir of one’s career might want to point to the professional insights and wisdom to be gained from the stories you relate. And if you see your stories in a self-help context you will want to headline the life lessons demonstrated by the incidents you recount.

One of the reasons we recommend that our clients at Stories To Tell record the stories for their books is that awareness of the audience is inherent in the process of oral storytelling. You are always telling a story to someone. And you are always trying to make sure that they get your point. Whether you decide to record or write your stories this awareness of audience will make your book much better.
 
 
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