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Showing posts with label #RWNZ17. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #RWNZ17. Show all posts

Friday, 25 August 2017

#RWNZ17: Kristen Lamb and Rise of the Machines

By Iola Goulton

As I mentioned in my Tuesday post, I’ve just returned from the 2017 Romance Writers of New Zealand Conference. Our Friday keynote speaker was Kristen Lamb, social media jedi, founder of #MyWANA, and bestselling author of Rise of the Machines: Human Authors in a Digital World.

Kristen is a dynamo from Texas. Being the Friday keynote speaker meant leading four consecutive sessions, broken only by meal breaks. That’s almost seven hours of teaching—and she kept us on the edge of our seats for that whole time. If that wasn’t enough of an achievement, she spoke without a PowerPoint presentation, and without notes. For seven hours.

Yes, Kristen Lamb knows her stuff.


Her first point was that we need to understand the human brain in order to work smarter, not harder. This takes us back to history and biology. Members of cultures with a strong oral culture (such as Australian Aborigines) have a brains with large memory centres. They also have long concentration spans.

Over time, the rise of the written word and technology means our memory centres and concentrations spans are smaller than ever. This rings true to me: if I want to remember something, I have to write it down. It's the rise of the machines ...

This leads to the theory of somatic markers. 


As Kristen explained it, a somatic marker is a neurological shortcut that affects our memory and our behaviour. If we see something positive, we form a positive association with that sight, sound, or smell. If we see something negative, we form a negative association.

(This has relevance to our actions as Christians. I suspect many people have negative somatic markers associated with Christians and Christianity, which is why they can be hard to convert.)

These somatic markers affect the way we need to act on social media.


Every interaction on social media creates a somatic marker that helps form an impression—helps form our online brand. We need that marker to be positive or neutral, not negative. If we form enough negative markers, we’ll learn to “unsee” that thing—our brain will blot it out as spam. This is why advertising doesn’t work—the people who aren’t interested in our products literally won’t see our advertisement.

People do business with people they know, like, and trust, so we want to create a positive emotional attachment with our prospective customers. When it comes to purchasing, we are more likely to purchase from someone we already have a positive emotional attachment with:
In a world of infinite choices, we buy what we know.
I see this at the supermarket. I know where the products I know, like, and trust are on the shelves, and I don’t even look at the other shelves. I barely look at the products surrounding whatever I want to buy.

Purchasing Behaviour


Kristen then talked about purchasing behaviour, describing low-consideration purchases, and high-consideration purchases. A low-consideration purchase is a low-cost item we purchase with little research or thought (i.e. most of what I buy at the supermarket). For the 5%–8% of the population who are booklovers (*raises hands*), a $2.99 ebook will be a low-consideration purchase.

A high-consideration purchase is one which requires more research or thought. This includes high-ticket items like a cars, computers, or iPhone. But here’s the thing:


A non-reader—one of that 92%—will consider a book a high-consideration purchase. Even a $2.99 ebook. Because they aren’t just thinking about the financial cost, but the fact it will take them ten hours or more to read that book (I read a lot faster, which could be another reason books are a low-consideration purchase).

Someone who is convinced they hate reading isn’t going to pay money to participate in an activity they think they’re not going to like. 


But if they do read and like your book, Kristen says they are more likely to review the book, and convince other people to buy and read the book.

So that’s the objective of social media: to form emotional relationships with potential purchasers. And she recommends blogging as the best way to form these relationships, to find our tribe. Kristen says:
We bond over the things we have in common.
She therefore recommends writing what she calls high concept blog posts. A high concept post is:

  • Emotional: it engages the hearts and minds of readers
  • Universal: it touches on something we can all relate to
  • Give/Take Away: it either gives the reader something (e.g. information) or offers a useful takeaway.

These high concept blog posts are the posts which are liked and shared … the post which go viral.


Kristen also recommends we always finish our posts with a call to action: ask readers what they thought, or offer them an incentive to comment (or both!). This encourages interaction, which builds relationship.

What do you think? Which authors do you think do a great job of building online relationships?


About Iola Goulton


I am a freelance editor specialising in Christian fiction. Visit my website at www.christianediting.co.nz to download a comprehensive list of publishers of Christian fiction. 

I also write contemporary Christian romance with a Kiwi twist—find out more at www.iolagoulton.com.

You can also find me on:
Facebook (Author)
Facebook (Editing)
Instagram
Pinterest
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Tuesday, 22 August 2017

Romance Writers of New Zealand Conference Highlights

By Iola Goulton


You may have read my blog post last week, Top 10 Tips for First-Time Conference Attendees. One of those tips was not to schedule anything important for a couple of days after conference.

This blog post is me not following my own advice.


I’ve just returned from the 2017 Romance Writers of New Zealand conference, and I’m body tired and brain tired. Especially brain tired.

Narelle shared her highlights of the Romance Writers of Australia conference yesterday, including being able to meet several ACW members in person, as well as meeting with a representative of Draft2Digital. She also shared lots of fun photos, which shows she’s more organised than me—I always forget to take photos at conferences!

With Kristen Lamb
I do have a couple. When I arrived on Thursday afternoon, I met the exuberant Kristen Lamb, social media jedi, author of Rise of the Machines, and one of our keynote speakers. I also met the lovely Delwyn and Maggie from Australia. Delwyn and I found we have several writing friends in common, including ACW members Andrea Grigg and Nicki Edwards.

Me with Maggie and Delwyn

There were several Australians at the conference, both as guest speakers, and as attendees. If you can get a cheap trans-Tasman flight, the RWNZ conference works out around the same price as the Australian conference, and the conferences had different speakers this year—Delwyn attended both conferences back-to-back.

The format of RWNZ is that we have a keynote speaker who takes all four sessions on Friday—which is almost seven hours of speaking (and listening, and taking notes. Lots of notes). Our Friday speaker was Kristen Lamb. I consider myself fairly social media savvy, but I still learned a lot from Kristen’s talk. I think that’s going to be a separate post, once I’ve recovered a little more.

Saturday and Sunday was a mix of sessions from our keynote speakers, from visiting agents and editors, and elective sessions from Kiwi and Australian speakers (including yours truly). The sessions were a mix of technical (how to use Scrivener, how to keep yourself safe online), craft (writing a scene, creating reader engagement), and business (how to write a query, self-publishing advice).

My topic was Introducing Christian Romance: the biggest little genre you’ve never heard of. 


I was prompted to submit a speaker proposal after attending last year’s conference, when a lot of the people I met, even the Christians, didn’t even know Christian romance was a thing. No one told me that this year, so I guess that means everyone had read the programme. As far as I’m concerned, that’s a win.

All the sessions I attended were excellent, and there were several electives where I wanted to attend two or three of the four options. I wasn’t the only one with this problem. I had several people tell me they wanted to attend my session, but there was another session they also wanted to attend. I couldn’t blame them. So did I! The result was that my presentation was more of a discussion, as only two people attended. That didn’t bother me—we had a fabulous conversation.

I did have several authors tell me they are Christian writers, but not writing for the Christian market. Great! People who are reaching the lost with their writing—reaching people who would never walk into a Christian bookshop, or even read a Christian book.

I don’t have any of my own books to give away or sell, so I did the next best thing: I took copies of Then There Was You by Kara Isaac to give away, and Kara was kind enough to donate two copies of Can’t Help Falling. I gave copies to the ladies who attended my sessions, to a vicar from Christchurch, and to a general market author of rock chick romance who loved the cover and blurb. I doubt she’s ever read a Christian romance before, but she said she’d read it. Wonderful!

This is the third RWNZ conference I’ve attended. 


The first time, I went with Andrea Grigg and Catherine Hudson. We were impressed at the openness and friendliness of romance authors. Many of the attendees write erotica or paranormal romance, but they were universally friendly and welcomed us as fellow writers, despite the differences in our writing and personal beliefs.

I had the same experience last year and this year. Romance writing is a community that chooses to celebrate our common love of romance, rather than focusing on our differences. I love that. Yes, I’ll be back next year.


About Iola Goulton


I am a freelance editor specialising in Christian fiction. Visit my website at www.christianediting.co.nzto download a comprehensive list of publishers of Christian fiction. 

I also write contemporary Christian romance with a Kiwi twist—find out more at www.iolagoulton.com.

You can also find me on:
Facebook (Author)
Facebook (Editing)
Instagram
Pinterest
Twitter