Thursday 5 May 2011

Getting Noticed (Not!)

Marketing and promotion are clearly essential for any author. So, what lengths would I go to, to get noticed? Hmm.
Obviously, like all authors, I want my work to get noticed, but as for me as an individual... It might be more appropriate for me to rephrase the question and ask what lengths would I go to, not to get noticed!
For example, my first foray into marketing was as a children’s author promoting a book based loosely on my own daughter’s first year at school. Naturally, I took all the steps to ensure characters and names did not correspond to individuals and I adopted a pseudonym, Anne Pugh, which was my maternal grandmother’s maiden name. However, what I didn’t anticipate was the level of interest from the local press when the (paperback) book was published. Indeed, I was quickly propelled into panic mode at the prospect of photographers trooping to the house.
My daughter was, by then, a teenager and I was eager to avoid the risk of embarrassment. Moreover, I am essentially a private person and I simply didn’t want the world at large to know my personal identity.
So what did I do? Well, my first port of call was a wig shop. However, the cost of a real hair wig was prohibitive and I ended up in a fancy dress outfitters. The resultant mass of red curls would have done Red Riding Hood justice, but in the cold light of day I had to concede it looked hideous. A trip to the pharmacy was more productive and a spray-on hair colour proved a much better solution. Also, I was able to procure an old pair of oversized glasses (Deirdre Barlow style) which all but covered my face, and then I sat in front of a mirror and practised arranging my lips into a smile which was nothing like my normal facial expression.
Did I pull it off? Not quite. The resultant photographs looked a reasonable camouflage, but not sufficient to fool those who knew me well. My hopes were quickly shattered by a call from a neighbour who had been examining one of the photographs carefully and could not make up her mind. I could hardly tell a bare-faced lie. Then a few friends phoned...
I really don’t know how successful I was in escaping the radar of the majority. And was the whole pursuit of anonymity folly, anyway? To that, I will say a categorical NO.
It is my contention that a professional writer adopting a pen name is creating a brand, a product. We cease to be ourselves as individuals and become a marketing entity.
Writers may have many perfectly valid reasons for wishing to protect their identity. I know that my pursuit of anonymity is not exclusive from the number of websites to omit author photographs. Thankfully, epublishing has made life much easier in this respect and has facilitated the ability to divorce one’s personal persona from a professional identity/ brand.
After all, it is our work that we want to get noticed!

6 comments:

  1. Thanks for this perspective. I'm have a couple of works in progress for which I've considered using a pen name. I'm fascinated by your comment about how epublishing changes the relationship of personal and professional selves. I shall give this some thought.
    http://anneejohnson.blogspot.com

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  2. I understand what you mean! I don't mind if everyone know about the book I wrote, it's the short erotica stories I don't want the neighbors to know about. :)

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  3. ROFL, Megan. Thanks for sharing that wonderful story. I so hate the promo and publicity side of an author's world. Couple that with a debilitating lack of technical savy and it simply adds to the frustration.
    That said, without the internet and all the technology that goes with it, I doubt I would have published three books within five months, so I try to look on the bright side.
    But buying a wig? Don't think so. The spray on hair colour? Tell me the brand and I'll go searching!!

    http://sherrygloagtheheartofromance.blogspot.com/

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  4. Gotta love those Deirdre Barlow glasses :) LOL how could that get up NOT fool anyone :)

    Good points about anonymity, but I am still laughing at the disguise and it's something i'll think about should I start signing my books in shops...

    May I borrow your glasses?

    Hugs

    Angel
    X

    Here's my Extreme Blog Hopping post!!

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  5. Your words make a lot of sense to me.

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  6. Too funny! Sounds like quite an ordeal, lol. I've never considered a disguise, I just hide behind my pen name!

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