Bitchin' Blog Posts
MySpace Author Pages as Promotional Tool, Eh?
by SB Sarah | May 22, 2007 | Tuesday at 9:25 pm | 56 CommentsCrain’s, oh, how you torment me. All these interesting bits of stuff to link to but can I link? No. Your content is locked up tighter than a widow’s virginity. PAH!
In this week’s issue is a small item in the “New York, New York” section, edited by Valerie Block (gotta cite your sources, now) that discusses using MySpace to promote books and boost their popularity. Seems MySpace is trying to parlay it’s success as a “launching pad for recording artists” by “redesign[ing] its year-old MySpace Books section…with an eye toward doing the same with authors” according to an unnamed industry insider.
The article cites the success of the book Everybody Hurts: An Essential Guide to Emo Culture as evidence of the power of MySpace. After the book was featured, the Amazon sales ranking, oh that addictive statistic, shot from 3243 to 261: “A MySpace spokeswoman says Everybody Hurts has been the most popular book on the site,” according to the article.
With an obvious tie-in to the music industry and its success using MySpace as a promotional vehicle, the agent for the book hopes to use the community-building aspect of MySpace to craft a book tour that will combine readings by the authors with performances by “emo bands.”
(Man, what a whine-fest that will be.)
Personally speaking, I’m enough of a misanthrope that I have no interest in MySpace. I attempted to enjoy Friendster and it annoyed the hell out of me; the hot-pink sparkly squee OMGBFF mania of MySpace is too much for my hermit-like tendencies. And yes, I know this here site is hot pink. Our site is hot pink because it is ironic. This is ironic hot pink. There’s not the slightest little bit of irony on MySpace.
I’m curious about using MySpace as a book promotional tool, particularly when sites like Fresh Fiction are offering a Web 2.0 package that for $229 a month (or more) will “create and/or maintain up to three (3) profiles on up to three (3) social networking sites of your choice.”
What now? Let me explain. No, there is too much. Let me sum up - from the Fresh Fiction site:
Maintaining a virtual relationship with your fans takes hours, hours you need to create and write new characters and books. Because of the time involved, many authors contract individuals to create and manage web 2.0 profiles, and maintain an overall virtual community presence. Everything from filling out the basic information, to maximizing the number of views and friends connected directly to the profile. A media specialist creates a streamlined web 2.0 profile, updates it regularly, and keeps your name active within your network. The most successful users have thousands of friends, hundreds of comments, and an active following who visits his/her profile regularly for updates.
I’m not sure that hiring someone to create a profile for you at MySpace, del.icio.us, YouTube, Flickr, Facebook, or Digg will guarantee book sales, but I have been on the wild wily internet enough lately to know that many an author keeps a MySpace page and updates it regularly. But those same authors who are on MySpace also have independent author websites and other online methods of presence aside from their networking space.
If your MySpace is kept by a publicist or by your own tappity fingers, what’s your take on MySpace as a promotional tool? Is this the best way to reach a readership? Does having a MySpace page increase book totals or are the statistics published in Crain’s somewhat unquantifiable or at the least impossible to attribute solely to MySpace?
Speaking solely for myself, MySpace does nothing for me, and knowing that an author has a page there wouldn’t influence my book buying by much, if at all. However, I realize that I’m a minority in my aversion to MySpace. What about you?
Filed: Random Musings, The Link-O-Lator

Katie Dickson said on 05.22.07 at 09:36 PM • [comment link]
No, I’m with you.
MySpace makes me want to thrash around and seize like the little kids who watch too much anime (the flashing lights, y’know).
Too many images, sparkles, squiggles, songs, OMGs and !!s.
If an author has a MySpace page, fine. I won’t see it, and I won’t care. I do have Facebook, because it’s all nice and organized on a white background with little boxes for information, but privacy settings pretty much guarantee that it won’t be useful as a marketing tool.
And my spam blocker word is “instead29.” Basically, anything instead of MySpace.
KristenMary said on 05.22.07 at 09:37 PM • [comment link]
You are not alone in your aversion to MySpace. I don’t know much about it, have only visited occasionally. I can’t get on to MySpace from work which is where I do the majority of web surfing (I know, bad employee but at home I have a 6 month old child who is much more entertaining). If an author had a MySpace page it would do nothing for me. Now if they have a blog or show up here or at Dear Author, then I note that and look for their books when next I am out and about.
Jessimuhka said on 05.22.07 at 09:54 PM • [comment link]
What kinds of sports to MySpace sportswomen play? (I kid, I’m a smartass about typos) I don’t think MySpace can work well as a promotional tool for authors because it has just about the crappiest UI I’ve ever seen. Almost every time I try to log in, it tells me I must be logged in to do that. Combine that with having to click through 3 or 4 pages to get to the one you want every time, and all the shiney crap and slow page loads, and I think you’ve got something more likely to annoy the fuck out of potential readers than to encourage them to buy.
Darlene Marshall said on 05.22.07 at 09:55 PM • [comment link]
I have a MySpace page so I can link to friends and vice versa, and people who use MySpace might find me more easily. It’s called “Darlene’s Other Digest” though ‘cause my main writing blog, “Darlene’s Digest”, is at Blogspot, and I keep a personal blog at LiveJournal.
I find what I’m usually doing is cut-and-pasting from “Darlene’s Digest” into “Darlene’s Other Digest” so it doesn’t take much of my time.
In terms of reader response, I get the most from the Blogspot site, ‘cause that one’s linked to my website.
And I loathe the MySpace interface. I’m much happier at Blogspot and LiveJournal.
SB Sarah said on 05.22.07 at 09:58 PM • [comment link]
“Sportswomen.”
Why my fingers type that by default, I will never know. Unless eating every 2 hours is a sport, I’m far, far from sporty.
Victoria Dahl said on 05.22.07 at 10:03 PM • [comment link]
I don’t understand MySpace. It doesn’t float my boat. But I’m there, because there are thousands of other romance writers and (more importantly) readers with Spaces. I’m there for networking and name recognition, pure and simple.
It’s not that hard, it doesn’t take much work, and I might sell a few (or a hundred) more books, just because someone sees my book at the store and their brain goes “Hey!”. And by definition, it’s not about reaching people who DON’T use MySpace. *shrug*
There is the added bonus, of “meeting” people you’ve been meaning to meet for a while, or reconnecting with authors you met a few years ago.
No harm, no foul.
Ms. Whiz said on 05.22.07 at 10:11 PM • [comment link]
MySpace is owned by Rupert Murdoch. Anything you post there becomes the property of Rupert Murdoch and can be used for any purpose.
Wonder why that didn’t come up?
Flo said on 05.22.07 at 10:13 PM • [comment link]
All I know is it’s opening that whole “Show people your personal bullshit to sell more books!” and it’s part of the package deal that’s blurring the line between author and the author’s books.
Take Laurell K. Hamilton for example. Her site is filled with scary and woe. Reading it’s gothy gothness makes one’s head hurt. And it doesn’t even touch on her actual BOOKS. It’s about HER. Not the stories.
I guess when I see MySpace I think “Personal promotion” not “published promotion”. But alas, I’m old school and have no desire to know what my author thinks about anything other than their stories.
I ESPECIALLY don’t want to see my author nude in a bed with 2 other men as a promotional photo. That just makes me want to toss my cookies and ban them from the “intranetz”.
Jennifer said on 05.22.07 at 10:13 PM • [comment link]
God, I just wrote a rant about MySpace this morning. The layout makes my eyes bleed, and it seems like all of the morons on the Internet are on that site. Plus it seems like MySpace pages made for corporations/organizations/groups all really suck and have no useful info on them besides “hey, here are my 6000 friends.” With large bad pictures. And lame comments.
UGH.
RandomRanter said on 05.22.07 at 10:16 PM • [comment link]
I know J A Konrath has talked on his site about how linking to similar authors and such can get you a pre-set dB of folks who might like your stuff, but beyond that, I can’t see the appeal. Myspace overcame a crappy UI to become useful for bands since it was easy for them to put up songs - something that’s a bit trickier elsewhere I don’t see between blogger and other easy web-hosting services how it would be ‘easier’ to use myspace for book marketing, than elsewhere. But I do get that if other authors have one, than everyone thinks they should have one. And if your target audience is on myspace - or even just a large enough portion, I could see how that would be useful.
Melissa said on 05.22.07 at 10:23 PM • [comment link]
I don’t like MySpace. But I’m old and irrelevant according to advertisers, now that I’m out of the 18-24 demographic. I find their layout eye-searing and confusing, plus it takes too darn long to load sometimes. After a few tries I gave up and went back to LiveJournal.
So, if Author X has a MySpace page it won’t help me find out about their latest book. But reading about Shanna Swendson’s new book on her LJ blog worked like a charm. :)
me i'm a reader said on 05.22.07 at 10:28 PM • [comment link]
I don’t like MySpace, BUT. As a reader I’d be all over it IF it could do one big, wonderful thing. I want a site where I can find my favorite authors and get a heads-up when a new book’s out.
Amazon doesn’t do it. I don’t like their recommendation based on my purchases (doh—half my purchases are for other people). Big publishers like Harper have alerts only for their authors. EarlyInk could become a place I look, but it doesn’t offer this.
I have a ton of RSS feeds to author blogs and publishers alerts but it doesn’t work that well. I want it streamlined.
MySpace isn’t like Amazon—it’s hit or miss whether an author’s there. But if MySpace turns out to be a good collector for half the authors on my list, I’m interested.
spinsterwitch said on 05.22.07 at 10:29 PM • [comment link]
I joined MySpace only because it told me I couldn’t read my friend’s blog unless I did. Now, randomly, I have these people who keep asking to be my friend. It’s very disconcerting.
Najida said on 05.22.07 at 10:30 PM • [comment link]
My Space?
Isn’t that what the media refers to when they arrest a serial killer, runaway bride, teen shootgun slayer “And on their My Space page, they said….......”
OK!
What is this!
My word is easy43 again. ;)
Kerry said on 05.22.07 at 10:37 PM • [comment link]
MySpace seems to be inherently juvenile to me, but I immediately acknowledge that to be the personal opinion of someone approaching “old-fogeyness” at a rapidly increasing speed.
Leslie Dicken said on 05.22.07 at 10:46 PM • [comment link]
I have a mySpace page. Basically because it’s free. And I’m a “free promo Ho.” However, I don’t go onto mySpace regularly and visit others’ pages, I don’t blog on it, I rarely update my own page. But if someone stumbles across my page and happens to take a look at what I’m offering—well, maybe I’ll make a sale. Maybe. Maybe not. What the hell - it’s free.
I spend most of my time updating my personal websites. But, honestly, whether it’s bookmarks, contests, webpages, or guest blogging—there is no way to guarantee that you’ll get a book sale out of it. Sigh.
Castiron said on 05.22.07 at 10:51 PM • [comment link]
Personally, I’d be a lot more inclined to check out an author’s independent blog or LiveJournal than I am to look at MySpace; the times I’ve looked at MySpace, I’ve found it too busy and annoying.
Alessia Brio said on 05.22.07 at 11:01 PM • [comment link]
Eh. It’s there. It’s free. Just another way to get my name in front of people, hopefully reader-type people. I still keep the website & the blog, though. They’re my top two. MySpace is huddled with LiveJournal, Ning, Bebo, etc. in a massive tie for third.
Stephanie said on 05.22.07 at 11:29 PM • [comment link]
So far I have resisted MySpace as a marketing tool. It hurts my eyes, and I do feel it’s outside my age demographic. Plus, it doesn’t seem the most “book oriented” of places. Though my boyfriend and I like to laugh when we heard kids talk about “my MySpace” as in, “Have you checked out my MySpace?”
spinsterwitch said on 05.22.07 at 11:55 PM • [comment link]
I am wondering if the emo book didn’t do well on MySpace because more people in the emo generation are drawn to MySpace (for their bands, etc). It may be a case of understanding the market that is MySpace if you use it for marketing.
Sybil said on 05.22.07 at 11:57 PM • [comment link]
I have great hate for all things myspace. If you have to ask is this too glitterly, the answer is yes.
And I have yet to understand how people come up with their rates. I think people either go off the fucked numbers other sites already over charge or pull them out of their ass.
But hey that 200 will be seen by more than people than if they pay AAR for an ad, I think LLB said April the ad’s saw an average of 35,000 views and Early Ink looks like it ranges from $300 to $500 to be seen by a nifty 300 people yesterday (using Site Meter which doesn’t measure unique IPs, unless that has changed).
Pretty much all the way around I think it sucks for authors. They either need to not sleep and have computer skills, have a publisher seriously behind them to pony up coin, or take a chance with the dollars they spend.
As much as I ‘hear’ people say what great ‘things’ myspaces does for authors I have never heard of WHAT those things are.
Nora Roberts said on 05.23.07 at 12:01 AM • [comment link]
No MySpace for me. I don’t want to be that intimate with readers. And, you know, I actually need time to write books.
Anyone who wants to use it, fine. But for me, it’s just One. More. Thing.
I’ve got enough to do.
Victoria Dahl said on 05.23.07 at 12:08 AM • [comment link]
MySpace is owned by Rupert Murdoch. Anything you post there becomes the property of Rupert Murdoch and can be used for any purpose.
Jeez Louise, this sounds like an urban myth to me.
The user agreement on MySpace says: MySpace.com does not claim any ownership rights in the text, files, images, photos, video, sounds, musical works, works of authorship, or any other materials (collectively, “Content”) that you post to the MySpace Services. After posting your Content to the MySpace Services, you continue to retain all ownership rights in such Content, and you continue to have the right to use your Content in any way you choose. By displaying or publishing (“posting”) any Content on or through the MySpace Services, you hereby grant to MySpace.com a limited license to use, modify, publicly perform, publicly display, reproduce, and distribute such Content solely on and through the MySpace Services. ... This license will terminate at the time you remove your Content from the MySpace Services. The license does not grant MySpace.com the right to sell your Content, nor does the license grant MySpace.com the right to distribute your Content outside of the MySpace Services.
Check it out, yo.
Shannon C. said on 05.23.07 at 12:12 AM • [comment link]
No myspace for me, either, and I’m just barely out of the 18-24 demographic. Of course, I am also totally blind, and myspace is one of the least screen-reader friendly sites on the Internet. I’m sorry, but if I go to read someone’s profile, I really don’t want to hear their favorite song of the moment. It’s not why I’m there. So I am actively turned off everytime I am told to check out someone’s myspace page.
Teddy Pig said on 05.23.07 at 12:23 AM • [comment link]
As a System Admin I block “myspace” here at work due to some very unhealthy “spyware” and other wonderful goodies it allows people to play to load with their graphics.
It is just a mess and you will get far more respect with your own blog and web page.
If you want social interaction get a “Live Journal” Blog or something.
Wendy said on 05.23.07 at 12:25 AM • [comment link]
Like (many) others have already posted - MySpace’s layout makes my eyes bleed. It just looks so flippin’ messy to me. Even the pages that are relatively simple and stripped down drive me batty. It’s like the rules of Bad Web Design don’t apply if you’re on MySpace.
As for authors doing MySpace - I don’t think it can hurt. One more way to get your name out there - but like Nora said, don’t authors already have enough to do? Certainly some promo goes with the territory, but where do you draw the line? Sooner or later a person needs to sleep.
Anya Bast said on 05.23.07 at 12:30 AM • [comment link]
It took an opportunity to bitch about Myspace to finally stop my lurk-a-thon on this blog. Not mantitty. Myspace.
I don’t get Myspace. People say it’s intimate, but to me it’s the least intimate social networking site out there with all the two line glittery fly-by postings that people make.
I do have a Myspace and I try to update it, but it’s like pulling teeth. I feel like I need to have one because it’s Myspace! But I’d rather be using my time to blog or play on my discussion loop or, oh, yeah, WRITE.
But my Myspace page gets hits. *whimper* And since I’m trying to build an audience I can’t dimiss those hits.
Now, I do have a Live Journal and I find that to be a much better social networking site. It’s just a lot more friendly in most every way than Myspace. Plus, I get to be all wordy on LJ in an informal way.
Because obviously I’m kind of wordy.
Okay, I’m done and back into lurk mode. Never miss a chance to expound on the oddities of the Myspace phenomenon!
Diana Hunter said on 05.23.07 at 12:30 AM • [comment link]
“particularly when sites…are offering a Web 2.0 package that for $229 a month (or more) will “create and/or maintain up to three (3) profiles on up to three (3) social networking sites of your choice.â€
What now? Let me explain. No, there is too much. Let me sum up -”
The entire point of Web 2.0 is to socially network. What part of “socially network” can a company do for an individual???? MySpace, et al are specifically designed to be INTERACTIVE places, not static websites one designs and walks away from for months on end!
That said, yes, I maintain a regular website and a newsletter that are one-way communication: from me to the world in general. I also maintain a MySpace page that isn’t great on graphics and all…but it IS mine, all mine! Few readers will email an author, but several think nothing of stopping by on MySpace and asking a question or making a comment. Do I ‘socially network’ with it as much as I should? Nope. I leave that for Second Life.
Yes, I am also there as well (as Diana Allandale) with several shops where you can get my excerpts for free or purchase a serial that takes place in SL and available only IN Second Life. Do I spend far too much of my time there? You betcha!
Pfft! Letting a company deal with my social interaction? No way. Now if they want to put together a booksigning tour for me…
(grin)
Diana Hunter
Victoria Dahl said on 05.23.07 at 12:35 AM • [comment link]
Well, of course an author should have her own webpage before bothering to use MySpace. It’s just one more tool. I have a website, I blog with a group of other historical writers, AND I use MySpace minimally.
Now, Teddy Pig, I want to know more about the spyware! Because I’ve got firewalls and all that crap, and I still got hit bigtime last weekend. I need a giant, extry-strong cyber condom!!!
dionne said on 05.23.07 at 12:44 AM • [comment link]
I got a myspace 2 years ago ‘cause my little sisters told me it was the cool thing to do.
dude, i’m so not cool, it’s not even funny.
my spamblocker thingey is larger47. HEH! Jumbo.
Sybil said on 05.23.07 at 01:04 AM • [comment link]
Well my question Anya would be do you get ‘hits’ or page views? And does it count for every one a person does or remember the IP?
The thing to remember (which you might know but many an author doesn’t seem to) is ‘hits’ mean nothing. On MySpace they have to mean less than nothing because it counts every pic, every link and blinky blinky thingie.
So me as one computer, one person can click on the front page of one MySpace page and be anywhere from five hits to 100+ ‘hits’ just for that one click depending on how much shit is on it.
It can be very misleading…
KellyMaher said on 05.23.07 at 01:05 AM • [comment link]
Diana hit on my main peeve about this service. I deal with “Web 2.0” and “Social Networking” at work because part of my job is teaching technology stuff to librarians. Not everything that’s out there is going to work for YOU. YOU have to explore the services and see what YOU like and what makes sense for YOUR goals.
I have a website because as an e-published author, it’s kind of de rigeur. I have a newsletter because there are a lot of people who like a nice big chunk of information from an author once a month or so. I have a blog because I’m a blog whore. Amending that to say, I have a main blog at Blogspot, an LJ blog which is more for following authors like Anya, Jennifer D., Lauren Dane and a few others, a MySpace “blog” and a Vox blog. The last three, when they get updated are just copies of what I’ve already posted on the main blog. I participate in my promo group’s blog once a week (Tuesdays!). Other “2.0” tchotchkes I use are a LibraryThing widget on my blog because I think people are interested in what I have in my book collection, Flickr for posting my book covers, and Meebo to allow people to IM me without needing the IM programs I’m using or an IM account of their own.
I play with other services in my day profession, but it’s all me. I know what I look for when evaluating a service and what’s going to be easy-ish for me to update because I sure as heck don’t have $300 a month to spend on three lousy services. And, for the same reason Nora doesn’t use a researcher, if someone else is doing the work for me, how do they really know what’s going to be important to me if I’m not sure?
Charlene said on 05.23.07 at 01:49 AM • [comment link]
My Space? Isn’t that what the media refers to when they arrest a serial killer, runaway bride, teen shootgun slayer “And on their My Space page, they said…â€
Well, the media needs something to blame in order to scare parents (and make them tune into the news again, of course).
As for it being a youth-oriented service, according to the BBC, the average age of MySpace visitors is 35! The kids have moved on to other places, I fear.
TeddyPig said on 05.23.07 at 02:11 AM • [comment link]
This is from last year when my company started blocking myspace but it explains the issue…
http://blog.washingtonpost.com/securityfix/2006/07/myspace_ad_served_adware_to_mo.html
I just use Grisoft’s AVG Anti-Malware package.
I have used Ad-Aware
I also use Firefox instead of IE.
But nothing is a sure bet but it is good to stay protected as much as you can.
TeddyPig said on 05.23.07 at 02:16 AM • [comment link]
The point of the whole matter in that article is not that it happened once and they pulled the ad it is that Myspace does business with companies that do things like that.
As an expert in this field there are known fraudulent ad companies no one in their right mind running an HONEST website would allow to buy their ad space.
Myspace space spent a lot of money to make sure they remained blameless even when THEY WERE AT FAULT and let that company do that to their users.
Victoria Dahl said on 05.23.07 at 02:18 AM • [comment link]
Thanks so much, Teddy Pig. We were definitely flying without security patches. *g* Won’t make that mistake again.
Victoria Dahl said on 05.23.07 at 02:20 AM • [comment link]
That sounds like a really idiotic business decision since users need to have HEALTHY computers to use MySpace and view the ads in the first place! Amazingly shortsighted.
Thanks for the heads up.
Marta Acosta said on 05.23.07 at 03:01 AM • [comment link]
An “advisor” told me how great MySpace was for publicizing books, so I toiled through all kinds of krappy templates to come up with a page that didn’t make children fall into foaming at the mouth fits, like that flashing Japanese cartoon.
After two months, I told the “advisor” that I found MySpace to be an ineffectual marketing tool and a fricking waste of time. She got all “The Secret” on me and told me it was because I didn’t BELIEVE and didn’t have the right kind of energy around the page. Yeah, right, that’s how marketing works.
Anyway, I set up a new blog (Vampire Wire, Bite into the Latest Dish on Vamp and Paranormal Fiction & Entertainment, www.vampirewire.blogspot.com) and there were no glitter graphics, no annoying ads, no ten bulletins a day from the same person, no sense of existential despair from the thousands of other writers trying to promote themselves.
Teddypig said on 05.23.07 at 03:13 AM • [comment link]
“told me it was because I didn’t BELIEVE and didn’t have the right kind of energy around the page.”
Heh…Heh
Believe in Myspace? Energy around the page?
I can see it now…
What do you think of this new web page design? Well the energy on the page does not seem right. I think we need to believe this will bring in more customers… BWAHAHAHA!
I’m sorry I have not laughed so hard since I reviewed the Web 2.0 garbage which boils down to AJAX and some content tags. That got tossed into the round file along with those old Java applets.
Anya Bast said on 05.23.07 at 03:50 AM • [comment link]
Hi Sybil—I guess I mean page views, not hits. *Goes to check* Profile Views, that’s it.
Honestly, though, I keep up my Myspace because I feel I should. I don’t really dwell overlymuch on its promotional merits. If I paid for it, I would. Mostly I just wonder about the Myspace phenonmenon and why people love it so much, because, well, I just don’t get it.
Probably I’m too old to get it. Ack.
Angela said on 05.23.07 at 06:23 AM • [comment link]
MySpace is a popularity tool and from what I’ve observed, the only authors who gets lots of hits and comments are the ones everyone already knows through websites/major blogs. If no one knows who you are or gives a shit, I’d think you’d just spend tons of time trolling the gazillion author myspace pages trying to get your name out there when you could be writing. I’m in that 18-24 age demographic and I don’t see the point in authors having myspace pages when their demographic—unless they are writing YA and paranormal fiction—leaves MySpace to their kids.
Jules Jones said on 05.23.07 at 07:10 AM • [comment link]
My opinion of MySpace is that it sucks galaxies through straws. I very occasionally look at it because people will link to stuff hosted there that sounds interesting. And every time I reel away with my eyes bleeding. Usually my ears bleeding as well, because apparently we can’t have Real Social Networking with being subjected to the owner’s taste in Muzak.
I’ve got an LJ and I’ve got my own website. I *use* those. My friends are on LJ, so it’s a place where I enjoy hanging out. MySpace would just be a deeply unpleasant chore taking up time I could be spending writing, or making a nuisance of myself on other people’s blogs.
poor35—well, I’m even older than that, so I’m *really* not the MySpace demographic. Where’s my cane, I want to shake it in the air and complain about young people today.
Jenyfer said on 05.23.07 at 08:32 AM • [comment link]
I resisted MySpace to begin with for all of the reasons stated above. I don’t really *get* the whole friend thing and I hate all the overblown, graphic intensive, music blaring, slow as molasses pages.
However, it is free.
So, I set up a MySpace page (with some help because it’s got to be to most unfriendly interface I’ve seen) I have no idea whether it’s selling books or not. I don’t spend much time there and I copy and paste content from my blog at Blogspot to my MySpace blog. One thing I have noticed is that the MySpace blog gets a lot more traffic. It doesn’t take me much additional time so I figure it can’t hurt.
Kerry Allen said on 05.23.07 at 09:29 AM • [comment link]
I’ve signed up for a MySpace account twice and both times un-signed up within an hour because there is no way to make the page look less cheap. (No, flashing lights and obnoxious music do not actually help.) Even the most boring Blogger template is better looking.
As the constant “be my friend” crap makes me want to break out the pepper spray, I don’t think MySpace would be a terribly effective marketing tool for me. But that’s obviously my negative energy talking…
*increase55* Pleasegodno. An extra 55 puts us into bariatric surgery territory.
taybug said on 05.23.07 at 10:33 AM • [comment link]
I have two MySpace accounts…one for my “non-author” life and all the friends I actually know who live scattered about this lovely planet, and one for my “writing” life where I will allow just about anyone to be my friend simply knowing that it will get my name out there.
I have a few people on the author site that have become “web-friends” and we write, edit and critique for each other.
The good thing about MySpace, is that it is FREE advertising. I set up my author page after a couple of hours of searching for backgrounds that I liked, and since then I check it once a day. Any writing I do I simply copy and paste over. I can post bulletins about my short stories that are available online.
The best part is, you can track how many people are hitting your page and decide if it’s worth the time you spend on it or not.
The demographic is admittedly young, but I see more and more people in their 30s, 40s and 50s every week. A lot of parents are online just to spy on their kids, but that doesn’t mean you can’t convince them to read your book as well.
I think MySpace is worth it simply due to the fact that there are a gajillion people on it, and it’s free. I love free stuff.
And I’m not sure if I’m being proprositioned or questioned “about69”
Mrs Giggles said on 05.23.07 at 10:38 AM • [comment link]
I only use MySpace when I need to check out AI contestants’ music.
I can’t imagine how authors are going to use MySpace but then again, I don’t see the point of “book trailers” either, which is what most authors seem to use MySpace for.
Mari Mancusi said on 05.23.07 at 03:55 PM • [comment link]
I am a young adult author and MySpace has proved a fabulous tool for me to promote to my target audience.
I put my MySpace address at the back of my books and get friended by readers constantly - don’t have to go look for them at all.
The kids love the interactivity of MySpace and get so excited when I “comment” back on their page. They often say things like they feel like they “know” me. I encourage this by posting video blogs on the site where I talk directly to them. And I always take time to answer their emailed questions.
I had a fancy, beautiful website set up for my YA books originally but no one ever visits it. However, I have over 3,000 MySpace friends (and no, the majority are NOT other authors!) and I get emails and comments on a daily basis from my readers. I also get lots of kids who write in and say they bought my book BECAUSE they heard about me from MySpace.
I experimented a bit with my adult books, but did not find that I had the same success in finding an audience. But for YA it’s been a brilliant marketing tool.
MARI
Raina_Dayz said on 05.23.07 at 05:03 PM • [comment link]
Well I use myspace in a very limited way. I have two sisters who live on another coast from me who are 18 and 21, so it is just another way for me to stay in touch with what is going on in their lives.
Anyway, my experience with authors and myspace; I friended one, I don’t remember why, several months ago. Since then I have gotten like 50 random friend requests from other authors I have never heard of. I deleted the original friend, but I am now on some kind of list for this and still get the requests every day. I would never add someone again unless *I* actively sought to promote them.
Jess said on 05.23.07 at 05:24 PM • [comment link]
I have to agree with Sarah, the whole OMGBFF nauseating attitude of MySpace makes me cringe. I escaped from that attitude when I graduated from HS and I have no desire to repeat the experience.
Perhaps because it seems to overrun with teenagers angsting about their life that I can’t take any MySpace page seriously. I always feel like the pages should open to the sound of Cher and Dionne (of Clueless) SQUEEing in the background.
As a reader, I’m much happier with an author having an independent page where I can check up on the latest news.
Mechele Armstrong & Melany Logen said on 05.23.07 at 05:55 PM • [comment link]
I’m at MySpace for the same reasons that Anya and others cited so I won’t repeat.
I went for a very simple profile for myself. And I hate when it takes five minutes to load a profile because of all the pictures and when it finally loads, music is blaring at me. And I’m not even on dialup.
However, the only reason I had to post on this thread was the line from the Princess Bride LOL. Gosh, I love that movie.
Sonja Foust said on 05.23.07 at 06:52 PM • [comment link]
OMG how can u diss Myspace, yo? It is tewtally kewl. lol lol lol
(Note to self: Remove tongue from cheek, THEN post.)
fiveandfour said on 05.23.07 at 09:49 PM • [comment link]
What I find interesting is the sheer number of people who seem to feel they *have* to have a presence on MySpace, but don’t necessarily *want* to have a presence on MySpace. It reminds me (brace yourself - old person reference coming up) of the old Beta vs. VHS thing where everyone agreed that Beta was the better format, yet thanks to marketing VHS became more popular and eventually the default style.
Mari Mancusi seems to have related the only positive experience there, which I suspect is tied to the fact that her target audience is MySpace’s (original) target audience. Which says something about marketing and target audiences, I’m sure, but not something I’d care to articulate. Mari, I’m also curious to know: on books before you set up a MySpace page, did you list your web address yet not get reader feedback/website visits like you do now?
My current level of interaction with MySpace is to have blogs located there that I want to read fed into LiveJournal so that I can catch postings when they’re made, but not have to check in directly to see when things are updated. It’s the ADHD, party-line phone call version of blogging, which isn’t appealing to me, though I can see how it could be appealing to a certain kind of person.
Bella said on 05.23.07 at 10:05 PM • [comment link]
the sheer commerciality and enormousness of myspace irritates me. i rarely willingly violate itsspace, but will go over there sometimes (read: almost never) to visit Sherrilyn Kenyon - it’s cute, she put up a page for Acheron.
i’d link for you, but my work computer restricts the whole domain for “explicit content”. you can jump from her Dark Hunter site, if you want.
Trix said on 05.24.07 at 06:06 AM • [comment link]
One of my favourite authors, Lois McMaster Bujold, recently started a MySpace page, and I was frankly shocked. She certainly seems to be well up on the social networking side of things as a promotional tool, and those of us on sites like L/J are encouraged to pimp her upcoming stuff on the comms there and in our own blogs.
But I don’t know what kind of marketing spiel people are being fed regarding MySpace, because to me it’s pretty much directed at the under-25 group who like garish crap to look at. They may look at the raw numbers and be bowled over by that, but don’t seem to consider the signal to noise ratio. It’s certainly not the natural home of LMB or any other author I can think of.
I was pleased that LMB got a blog - I love author blogs - but I wish it were hosted on her own domain, or somewhere decent like Wordpress. What I like to see is a bit of chat about an author’s work, info on upcoming author events/publications, and an RSS feed so I don’t miss anything. Laurie R King has recently migrated from Blogger to a WP blog on her own domain, and it’s great. Blogger was fine too, because it provided what I like to see as a reader.
With LMB, I can’t even get a proper RSS feed from her Myspace - it’s one of those annoying doohickeys that give you the first X characters and then you have to click through. Myspace certainly doesn’t provide any special tools for locating authors you might be interested in, so really, there’s nothing useful to balance out the annoyance factor of going there.
Jules Jones said on 05.24.07 at 06:34 AM • [comment link]
Trix, LMB may have gone to MySpace at the behest of one of her publishers. I know several science fiction authors who say they’ve been told by their publishers that they have to get a MySpace page, and the reaction amongst the ones who didn’t already have one has been almost universally “Oh well, if you insist, I’ll cross-post from my existing blog”, when it isn’t outright refusal. They don’t want to do it for all the reasons people have talked about in this thread, but the marketing departments have seized upon it as the new Holy Grail of publicity.
Jeri said on 05.25.07 at 03:50 AM • [comment link]
I was really skeptical about MySpace at first. Now, even though most of the layouts make my eyes bleed, I’m a convert.
MySpace offers extremely targeted marketing. People on MySpace list their interests, some of which might coincide with the content of an author’s books.
I can search for and friend people who, for instance, dig crows (or the movie The Crow), or are into shamanism or vampires—anything that would indicate a potential for interest in my books.
It does takes time to carefully search out people who I genuinely believe would enjoy my books. I don’t randomly add people just for the sake of upping my friend count.
To me it makes a lot more sense to do MySpace than taking out a several hundred dollar ad, 99% of whose viewers won’t even be likely readers in the first place. For someone like me with more time than money (which isn’t saying much), I believe it’s a great opportunity.
But maybe it’s because it wasn’t too long ago (well, half a lifetime) that I was a mopey Goth/emo kid myself.
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