Jan Fields ([info]cute_n_cranky) wrote,
@ 2009-06-15 11:27:00
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Platform
I've been hearing a lot about platform lately from children's writers (most of them fairly early in their careers). And I've been considering "platform" for the standard, garden variety children's writer.

Platform for a writer means the value of your name in marketing. This means do you personally have a fan base who will buy a book just because it has your name on it. James Patterson had platform (which is why someone published the blindingly bad Christmas picture book he wrote). Jan Fields does not have platform. The folks who recognize my name are not the same people who are likely to buy children's books JUST because my name is on it.

And I still firmly believe children's writers don't have to have platform to get their first book published. On top of that, I've seen not one jot of evidence to suggest that platform is necessary or even important to selling your first book.

Does this mean I think publishers don't like authors to be proactive about selling the book. Do I think this means I think your publisher would rather you DIDN'T do school visits, author talks, writing conferences, blogs, a website, etc. NO, I certainly do not believe this. I think all of those are great things to do when your book comes out. Heck, I think turning your car into a bat to sell BATS ON THE BEACH was a brilliant thing for Brian Lies to do and I think he's the cat's meow. His marketing efforts combined with a FANTASTIC picture book worked together to put him on the New York Times Bestseller lists and that does offer him some platform (though really, the bats might have more platform with actual kids.) Did he do any of this before he got published? Uh, no.

These are "after the sale" things and over time you can get some "platform" out of them. That's because platform is really all about you. Is there something about your name that sells books? If there is...sure, you're going to be that much hotter a commodity, but for a children's writer, the way to get your "name" to sell books is to write a lot of excellent books, sell them one at a time to good publishers, and then do the standard things to support each book until one day you wake up and people know your name.

People chasing platform before the sale are probably just investing time that is better used elsewhere. Children's book buyers are probably not going to know your name until you sell some books (unless you're building platform by winning American Idol or starring in the next Twilight movie).

Within a very limited sphere, I have name recognition...but that doesn't matter a scrap to children's book editors. For me to sell a book, I still have to write a good book that an editor will believe in. Same as everyone else. And from that step forward, I will be building a useful platform, not by chasing platform, but by doing what writers need to do -- write the best books they can.



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[info]teriegarrison
2009-06-17 07:16 am UTC (link)
The problem is spending a whole load of time building a platform (and we're talking about 'platform' here, not 'media presence', which some folks like to call 'platform') when that time is better spent writing. Really, platform isn't something you build to sell a book; platform is something that happens in your life that might make it easier to sell a book should you happen to write one.

In the discussion Jan is talking about, people were going on at great length about how, if you want to sell your book, you gotta build a platform. That's putting the cart before the horse. Stephen Hawking became a premier scientist, and he ended up with a platform for his scientific books written for laymen. I doubt that, as a freshly minted PhD Dr Hawking said to himself, 'Hey, I want to publish books for laymen so I'm going to build this great science platform.'

One doesn't become a recognised expert in a field in order to sell book; becoming a recognised expert has the side effect of building a platform that might well allow the expert to sell books.

When you look at some of the best-known and best-loved children's writers, not one had a platform. JK Rowling. Jacqueline Wilson. Bruce Coville. Darren Shan. RL Stine. Lemony Snicket. Barbara Danzinger. Stephanie Meyer. Philip Pullman. And so on. What they did was write books.

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