I keep running into wonderful articles about what to do when my book is finished, so for now, I'm putting them in this blog so I'll know where to get to them when I'm ready. For now, I'm re-writing the beginning of my book to make a better hook before I attend my first writers' meeting next Monday, so, quickly ( so I can get back to writing), here's what I just found:
What Is a Book Proposal for Fiction Writers out at BookEnds, LLC
They talk about what to send in when you submit a proposal: The Query Letter, Chapters, Synopsis and other tidbits.
By the way, here's another article on the same subject. Can't wait until I'be submitted a few successful ones so I can share my tips and tricks with you all!
Friday, October 21, 2011
Friday, October 14, 2011
Circles of Influence: Visualizing Creative Debt Across Time
The Brain Pickings blog discusses what 48 hours of sleeplessness have to do with Kafka’s influence on Lemony Snicket.
Brain Pickings has a free weekly newsletter and people say it’s cool. It comes out on Sundays and offers the week’s best articles.
Read the whole article here
Brain Pickings has a free weekly newsletter and people say it’s cool. It comes out on Sundays and offers the week’s best articles.
Read the whole article here
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
What to Consider When Building Help for Mobile Devices for Field Workers
How timely is this? My next project is to work on training for a mobile devices in the field, so I was delighted to find this article on the TechWhirl bog:
What to Consider When Building Help for Mobile Devices for Field Workers
There’s no denying that smart devices are taking over. Everywhere we turn, people are talking about the newest app they’ve downloaded (Angry Birds anyone?). But aside from avian masochism and borderline obsessive updates on Facebook, smart phones and other mobile devices (tablets, PDAs, etc.) have proven their usefulness in the professional world, and in particular, for workers in the field. Service providers like Verizon and ATT offer multiple business solutions for field workers. AirStrip Technologies, offered by Verizon, has a product called AirStrip OB which “delivers patient data, including fetal heartbeats and maternal contraction patters, in real time to the physician’s Blackberry, Palm, or Windows Mobile device”
Click to read more . . .
What to Consider When Building Help for Mobile Devices for Field Workers
There’s no denying that smart devices are taking over. Everywhere we turn, people are talking about the newest app they’ve downloaded (Angry Birds anyone?). But aside from avian masochism and borderline obsessive updates on Facebook, smart phones and other mobile devices (tablets, PDAs, etc.) have proven their usefulness in the professional world, and in particular, for workers in the field. Service providers like Verizon and ATT offer multiple business solutions for field workers. AirStrip Technologies, offered by Verizon, has a product called AirStrip OB which “delivers patient data, including fetal heartbeats and maternal contraction patters, in real time to the physician’s Blackberry, Palm, or Windows Mobile device”
Click to read more . . .
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
Writing for a Living in the Digital Age and a Sluggish Economy
Jason Boog from GalleyCat, (probably the book industry's leading website for insider news and gossip) claims that writers can learn from the Great Depression, according to HuffPost Books. He outlines how writers suffered, then took to the streets to protest their plight in the 1930s, and how paperback books helped safe them. Can digital publishing save us during the next few, hard years, he asks?
Read more about this interview at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/06/writers-great-depression_n_998995.html
Read more about this interview at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/06/writers-great-depression_n_998995.html
Monday, October 10, 2011
Another Way for Writers to Earn Money: Whitepapers
Writers can do so many things: We can write fiction and nonfiction books. We can teach others how to write. We can be editors or marketing writers. We can be instructional designers or technical writers. Here's another opportunity for those of us who know how and love to write: Writing Whitepapers.
The bog Klariti: Small Business Tips for Smart People outlines what you need to know to get started:
"If you’ve got good writing skills and have in-depth subject matter expertise, you should be able to generate additional income by writing white papers.
I started writing them by accident when the in-house white paper writer fell ill and someone had to write it. Looking back, it wasn’t the greatest document I’ve written but the client accepted it and the customer response was positive.
Since then, I’ve managed to carve out a niche as a white paper writer, which has been very helpful when other avenues dried up. I thought I’d share a few tips on how I got started, how to build up a client list, and how much you should charge."
Click here to read tips on writing White Papers:
The bog Klariti: Small Business Tips for Smart People outlines what you need to know to get started:
"If you’ve got good writing skills and have in-depth subject matter expertise, you should be able to generate additional income by writing white papers.
I started writing them by accident when the in-house white paper writer fell ill and someone had to write it. Looking back, it wasn’t the greatest document I’ve written but the client accepted it and the customer response was positive.
Since then, I’ve managed to carve out a niche as a white paper writer, which has been very helpful when other avenues dried up. I thought I’d share a few tips on how I got started, how to build up a client list, and how much you should charge."
Click here to read tips on writing White Papers:
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Saturday, October 8, 2011
Websites to help you get published . . .
OK. I'll admit that I'm writing a book. Aren't you? Well, the following article really caught my eye. It's about two websites where you can advertise your books with the possible result of becoming published.
The sites are Pubslush (part self-publisher, part crowd-sourcing service) and Inkubate (a digital slush pile in which publishers and agents bid to negotiate terms with writers.) From what I read, I like Inkubate the best. Follow this link to read more about the services these two sites offer authors.
Click here to read article
The sites are Pubslush (part self-publisher, part crowd-sourcing service) and Inkubate (a digital slush pile in which publishers and agents bid to negotiate terms with writers.) From what I read, I like Inkubate the best. Follow this link to read more about the services these two sites offer authors.
Click here to read article
Tuesday, October 4, 2011
9 Ways to Encourage the Adult E-Learners
I love Tom's new post, over at the Rapid eLearning Blog:
9 Ways to Encourage the Adult E-Learners(click above to read it all)The core of the article is a listing of these nine points, and from my experience in the worlds of both higher education and workplace training, I can see that he's right on target. He includes some very good suggestions and comments on each: |
- Set clear expectations and objectives Let them know why they’re taking the course and what they should be learning. People like to get oriented and know what’s expected of them.
- Adult learners don’t like to fail, and they don’t like to fail publicly. Make it clear when they are being tested and when they aren't. (His article says a lot more about this, and I think it's a crucial point. Click above to read the whole thing.)
- Create an environment where they have as much freedom as possible. Let them click around and explore. I know that many customers want to lock navigation so that they “get all of the information.” This is faulty thinking. If they need to confirm their grasp of the information, then give them exercises to practice applying it so they can demonstrate their understanding in a real way. (The more a learner interacts, the more they're probably learning)
- Give them ways to collect information. This is a great way to counter the locked navigation issue. Create situations where they need to make decisions and then free up the navigation to collect the information needed to make decisions. This is a much better way to assess understanding than viewing a screen full of text. ( See above. Dito)
- Focus on relevance. I’ve worked on plenty of projects where the learners are never considered. I recall one company I worked for that wouldn’t let me talk to any potential learners, even though we were rolling the training out to 3500 people across the country. If you’re content isn’t relevant to the learners, they’ll just tune out and you’re wasting time and money. You can guarantee that little learning will happen. (So true. They have better things to do than waste their time on something that they do not think will help them do their job better.)
- Create a visual design that is friendly and inviting. This helps with the initial engagement and sets the tone of the course. I’ve had customers tell me that they can’t do that because the subject matter was real important and serious. So they needed to have a very serious tone (read boring). If it’s important, than it makes sense to create a course that’s as visually inviting as possible. (Metaphors really do help people understand complex concepts.)
- Elearning is a multimedia experience so it makes sense to leverage as much of the multimedia as you can (in context though). You don’t want to add multimedia for the sake of it, but you do want to use all of your resources to create the best course possible.
- Free Willy! People are like orcas with floppy dorsal fins. They yearn to be free. One of the worst experiences in elearning is when the course navigation is locked. There are better ways to help people learn. Focus on relevant, decision-making scenarios. And if you’re building a compliance, click-and-read course with no performance expectations, then make the course as simple as possible so that they learners can get in and out. Don’t frustrate them or waste their time with a bunch of extra branched scenarios. Tell them what they need to know and let them go. (Get them involved. Use graphical metaphors.)
- Do you need to test everything? Every day we take in all sorts of information that is critical to meeting our goals. When my boss sends an email detailing new plans, he doesn’t follow it up with a quiz. Assessing a person’s understanding is an important part of learning, but do we need to always have a test? In many ways it retards the learning process. As soon as people find out they’re being tested, they quit learning and focus on how to pass the test. If you don’t need a test, don’t include one. If you do need to assess their understanding, perhaps there’s a better way to do so. (Game Shows!! Actually, if you are required to test [often the case] little game show-like quizzes along the way will help keep them from failing and build their confidence.)
Investing in your customer's knowledge is well worth the return
All companies strive for high customer satisfaction ratings, but many fail to achieve them. Have you ever wondered why?
Kevin Oakes knows a thing or two about these things. He's the CEO of the Institute of Corporate Productivity (i4cp), the world's largest vendor-free network of corporations focused on building and sustaining highly productive, high-performance organizations.
The traditional method for achieving high satisfaction ratings is to equip employees with a set of customer service skills and hope for the best. However, research shows that best-in-class companies spend training dollars on the customers themselves to boost customer loyalty. In the following article, Kevin shares his thoughts about the all-important yet often ignored link between customer satisfaction and loyalty.
Kevin Oakes knows a thing or two about these things. He's the CEO of the Institute of Corporate Productivity (i4cp), the world's largest vendor-free network of corporations focused on building and sustaining highly productive, high-performance organizations.
The traditional method for achieving high satisfaction ratings is to equip employees with a set of customer service skills and hope for the best. However, research shows that best-in-class companies spend training dollars on the customers themselves to boost customer loyalty. In the following article, Kevin shares his thoughts about the all-important yet often ignored link between customer satisfaction and loyalty.
Download White Paper Here:
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