Tips

Hello, and welcome. I'm Ivory Madison, the founder and CEO of redroom.com. I've taught writing for years at the Red Room Writers Society, which provided the luxurious surroundings seen in this video. Please watch and enjoy as our Editor Huntington Sharp offers tongue-in-cheek advice on writing, getting published, and gay cats.
Many redroom.com authors and members have discovered the benefits of being part of our online literary community. According to Red Room author Jessica Barksdale Inclán:
"What Red Room has done for me is remind me that writers—in slightly different ways—think about the same things. We have idea issues, editing issues, reading issues. We all must face the market out there, those who buy our work. No matter if we write children's books or nonfiction journalism, we have to find our way to the public. We have to all sit down one morning and start."
In addition to camaraderie, redroom.com can provide you with the resources you need to grow your personal audience—whether you're looking for an audience of readers or book buyers.
Redroom.com offers a wealth of tips and tricks from your fellow authors and members. Following are just some of the resources available on redroom.com.
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Marketing and Promotions
The Literary Industry
Education and MFA Programs
The Literary Community
The Life of a Writer
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Writers market thyself!: An Exclusive Article for Red Room and Lessons I Learned From the Lama: The Art of the Press Kit
Danny Donovan offers tips and best practices for marketing yourself as a writer. Two must-reads.
101 Ways to Promote Your Online Home
There are many ways to promote your online home at Red Room. While we haven't actually built out the full list of 101 yet, here are a few things you can do:
- Tell Your Friends, Family, and Colleagues About Red Room - See Sample Emails
- Ask People to "Visit Me in the Red Room" - Add a Graphic to your Webpage or Email Signature Line
- Add Us as a Friend on MySpaceand Join the Red Room Facebook Group
- Blog Your Way to the Top of the Red Room List
Promoting Yourself
Josie Brown says that "publishers are numbers crunchers. They applaud authors with audiences and promotional savvy," and offers tips on how to promote yourself.
Book Marketing from the Ground Up
Read tips from Mary Lynn I. Archibald, an author who understands that promotion is often a full-time job.
The Fiction Author's Platform
Karen Dionne explains why authors have to set themselves and their books apart from the crowd.
Using Viral Marketing to Make Your Book an International Bestseller and Working on my Squidoo Lenses to Market My Books
Ernie Zelinski shares tricks he's using to market his own book about retirement using viral marketing and social networking.
Musings on Marketing
Natasha Bauman's been a professional writer for twenty years, but still considers herself a "newbie" at self-promotion.
Peaks and Troughs—It’s A Numbers Game
Chris G. Wright shows that slow but steady wins the race.
What Can You Do With A Book Trailer?
Karen Dionne on what a video can do for your book.
Red Room Success Stories
Red Room writers have used many methods to market their way to success:
- Craft a Great Query Letter - Wendy Nelson Tokunaga shares her query letter that elicited a lot of requests from agents to look at the manuscript.
- Hold a Comment Contest -See Julie Anne Long's "virtual party" on her blog that generated a record amount of comments and endless views of her new book at Red Room.
- Create a Viral Video - Tim Wise has generated phenomenal traffic to his Red Room page because he's gotten some key endorsements for his extremely thought-provoking content on rating sites like Digg and Stumbleupon.
He has his own site, too, but uploads his incendiary videos to redroom.com and generates dozens of comments and thousands of pageviews. - Try a Book Trailer - Sometimes complimenting a fellow author on their own trailer can lead to them creating one for you, as Rosemary Jones shows.
- Use a Raffle Prize - Lisa McMann's bookstore signings in March included a gift-bag raffle.
Books About Marketing
Take a look at books about marketing written by Red Room authors:
- Release Your Writing: Book Publishing Your Way by Helen Gallagher
- 1001 Ways to Market Your Books by John F Kremer
- The Frugal Editor: Put your best book forward to avoid humilation and ensure success (How to Do It Frugally) by Carolyn Howard-Johnson
What Do Editors Do?
The job entails many different roles, as John Elder Robison found out firsthand.
That Magic Moment and How to Avoid Scams
JT Ellison describes deciding whether or not to listen to her editor, and warns that not all "publishers" and "publicists" are what they seem.
What Else is New?
Carolyn McTighe faces the age-old dilemma: when writing, do you follow your heart, or the market?
The Gag Rule and Reviews
Natasha Bauman wonders about how much sense the author-reviewer-reader dance actually makes.
Review This!
Victoria Zackheim shows the even iconic authors had to deal with bad reviews
To MFA or Not To MFA?
Recent MFA graduate Wendy Nelson Tokunaga tells what you can get from an advanced degree ... and what you can't.
Letter to a Student About to Enter the Queens University Low-Residency MFA Program
Pinckney Benedict gives some dos and don'ts about MFA programs.
Shirley Jackson Novels vs. MFA Writing Programs
Helen Oyeyemi tells why she dropped out of the MFA writing program at Columbia and moved to Paris instead.
Writing Programs and Group Minds
Thaisa Frank discusses "groupthink" in writing programs.
Authors Who Blog Come Together to Help One of Their Own
Red Room members held Patry Francis Day on January 29th, 2008, showing how the literary community can come together.
Writing Communities
Jessica Barksdale Inclán writes about what Red Room has done for her need for community.
A Long-Winded and Somewhat Reluctant Do & Don't List For Newbies Wanting to Reach Out to Authors
JT Ellison learned this practical advice for meeting your favorite author the hard way.
Travel Writing: It's a Tough Gig
Robert Todd Felton discusses what he sees as the "three paths to a travel writing life."
Depressed Thinking Distortions for Writers
Ericka Lutz shares a list of traps into which writers can fall.
Writing and Procrastination Rituals
The first step is acknowledging the problem, says San Francisco poet devorah major.
My Companion and My Silent Partner
Two blog entries by Jessica Barksdale Inclán personify her writing process as a faithful companion and her writing career as a "partner" with many moods.
The Writer's Middle Finger (How to grow it, groom it, love it, and stretch it)
A.S. King on how she lost her groove and then got it back.
Novel 101 Prep Work
Judy Merrill Larsen shares what she does before she sits down with a new pen and stack of crisp, fresh, yellow legal pads.
Characters and Click Moments
Romance Novelist Terry Odell blogs about the moment when the story suddenly takes off.
Grammarphobe Lessons: Vivid Verbs! Avoiding Adverbs!
Jennifer Gibbons, gets verbal.
Perky Peppy Prepositional Phrases!
Learn to write elegant, simple sentences.
I've Got The Rejection Slip Blues
Jennifer Gibbons sings a familiar song, beautifully.
Writing a Sex Scene
A romance writer tackles a delicate subject.
Write What You Know
The oldest piece of writing advice may not mean what you think it means.
The Math Equation that Determines Success as a Writer
Kemble Scott proposes a simple, hilarious formula.
Craig's Nine Rules of Writing
Craig Clevenger has some useful advice about how to grow as a writer.


