There’s some interesting conversation going on for and about YA writers at Carol’s Prints and Invincible Summer. If you write YA, I suggest you check them out because they bring up some very valid points about writing YA. I don’t write YA, but one of the issues brought up has made me go “Hmm…”
It’s the point about who we blog for. Do we blog for other writers? For readers? For agents or editors we hope might be checking us out? Personal friends and family? After all, as I’ve said in this Marketing Monday post and will come back to in future marketing-related posts, we need to know who our target audience is and write for them.
Which brings me to my own blog. I originally started this blog, called A Mused Writer, mostly to ramble and make sense of my writing, whine about the challenges of getting published and, I hoped, to mix and mingle with other writers. I planned to share what I’ve learned and my experiences in exchange for all the great knowledge writers share on their own blogs.
When I switched over my URL, www.KristieCook.com, to the blog, though, it also became my communication tool to reach out to readers. I’d read somewhere about how our blogs’ audiences change over time, depending where we are in the publishing spectrum – from newbie and unagented to agented but unpublished to published to bestseller. It made sense and I knew my messages would have to evolve with my audience.
After reading the two blogs above, though, and giving it some serious consideration, my publishing team and I agreed that www.KristieCook.com should be for the author communicating with readers – about my books, my characters, the series, special events and appearances, etc., as well as a way for readers to get to know me on a more personal level. The book sites are all about the books, creating questions. The author site should be about answering questions and making a connection with the reader.
But what about my writer friends? I love you all. I’ve learned so much from you and I’d still like to share the little bit that I know, too. One of my goals in going indie is to be able to help other new writers achieve their goals. So I’m not about to give you up.
So, a bunch of words to basically say that I’ll be doing some renovations here. I don’t know the logistics yet, but I’m pretty sure that the end result will be either a new author’s site or a new writer’s blog. I don’t want to lose archives relevant to either side, though, so I still have to figure it all out. Wish me luck!
What do you think? Have you thought about what you’ll do with your blog as your career evolves? Anyone interested in doing a writing blog with me? 🙂 And any thoughts about those other two posts for YA writers?