Zinovy's Journey has been published for a year now and I
still haven't figured out who it was published for. I guess it's because the story hooked me
before the idea of audience did. I had
no idea who I was writing for, way back then. I just
knew I had to write.
I still don't know who it's for. I'm getting great reader reviews from men and
women, young and old, Christian and non-Christian.
I know it's probably a cop-out to say Zinovy's Journey is a
mainstream novel, but I'm beginning to think it might be (And, yes, I am aware
of all the hedge words in that sentence).
Zinovy's Journey has a universal hook (the world is
destroyed at the beginning of the book); a universal storyline (the hero's
journey); a universal internal conflict (the search for meaningful
relationships in life); a universally appealing external conflict (an innocent
child in danger). All this should lead
to a universal appeal, right?
So why aren't people flocking to my website to buy it?
I know the answer.
It's marketing. That's where I'm
at right now. I'm using a shot-gun
approach. Probably not the best
idea. Instead I should be taking aim at
a number of specific targets. But the
number of possibilities is playing Russian roulette with my mind.
This article by Randy Ingermannson is helpful, however. Randy gives us a new way to look at
"targets." He borrows an idea
from John Locke, who says our target audience can be more accurately determined
by what emotions our story evokes. Interesting
thought. Encouraging.
Now if I could just figure out an effective way to hit the
readers' emotions in that big, crazy world of bulls eyes out there.
1 comment:
This is such a difficult question but so basic when it comes to marketing. I am struggling with it as well. thanks for the good links you shared.
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