Divorce - What Does God Say About it? Mark 10

Saul's Death - 2nd Samuel Chapter 1 - Reading the Bible

The Transfiguration of Jesus Christ - Mark 9

Reading the Bible - Mark Chapter 8 - Jesus Feeds 4 thousand

Demons, Dogs & Deafness - Bible Discussion Today

Jesus Walks on Water - READING THE BIBLE - Mark 6

Demon-Possessed Man Gets Healed - Mark 5 - READING THE BIBLE

Join us as we READ the Bible Today

READING THE BIBLE THIS YEAR - 1st Samuel Chapters 30 & 31

The Witch of Endor - READING THE BIBLE THIS YEAR

Spend 5-Minutes in the Bible Today - Reading the Bible

5-Minutes in the Bible - READING THE BIBLE THIS YEAR

KING DAVID escapes Saul

5-Minutes in the Bible

Jonathan Saves David - 1st Samuel Chapter 20

SAUL TRIES TO KILL DAVID (AGAIN) - READING THE BIBLE

READING THE BIBLE THIS YEAR: 1st Samuel 18

A Story About a Giant Battling a Boy - David & Goliath

Spend 5 minutes in the Bible today

TO OBEY...Reading the Bible this Year

Jonathan Attacks the Philistines-1st Samuel-READING THE BIBLE

Jesus and Beelzebub - READING THE BIBLE THIS YEAR

Mark Chapter 2 - Jesus Heals

John the Baptist Prepares the Way for Jesus

Christ's Resurrection - READING THE BIBLE THIS YEAR

The Death of Jesus and Judas Hangs Himself

THE LAST SUPPER - Matthew 26 - Reading the Bible

READING THE BIBLE THIS YEAR-1st Samuel Chptr. 13

READING THE BIBLE - 1st Samuel Chapter 12

5-Minute Bible Study

Reading the Bible this Year: Samuel Anoints Saul as King

The 7 Woes - Parable with Warnings from Jesus

The Wedding Parable-READING THE BIBLE THIS YEAR

Jesus Enters the City on a Donkey - READING THE BIBLE

DIVORCE-What does the Bible Say

The Supernatural Ark of the Covenant-READING THE BIBLE

The Ark of the Covenant-READING THE BIBLE

READING THE BIBLE-1st Samuel 3-The Lord Calls Samuel

Hannah's Prayer-READING THE BIBLE-1st Sam. Ch. 2

Reading the Bible This Year: 1st Samuel Chapter 1

READING THE BIBLE THIS YEAR-Matthew 15-Jesus Heals

Jesus Walks on Water-Matthew 14

READING THE BIBLE THIS YEAR: Matthew 13

READING RUTH CHAPTER 4

Reading the Bible this Year: Ruth Chapter 3

5-Minutes in the Bible-Ruth Chapter 1

Curious about Demons? Join us as we Read the Bible

READING THE BIBLE IN 1 YEAR: Judges 20

READING THE BIBLE IN 1 YEAR: Judges 19

Reading the Bible in 1 Year: Judges Chapter 18

READING THE BIBLE IN 1 YEAR: Matthew 10 - Jesus Sends Out the 12

What does the Bible Say About Judging Others?

READING THE BIBLE THIS YEAR: Micah's Idols

READING THE BIBLE IN 1 YEAR: Samson & Delilah

Read the Bible with Us-Matthew 5-The Beatitudes

READING THE BIBLE IN 1 YEAR-John the Baptist Prepares the Way

READING THE BIBLE THIS YEAR-The 3 Kings

Reading the Bible this Year: Judges 14-Samson's Marriage

READING THE BIBLE THIS YEAR: Judges 8

READING THE BIBLE IN 1 YEAR: Revelation Chapter 22

Forgiveness in the Bible

READING THE BIBLE - REV. 20 - SATAN'S DOOM

Hallelujah! - READING REVELATION 19

Curious What the Bible Says about Prophesy?

Reading the Bible - Revelation 17 - The Woman on the Beast

7 Angels & 7 Plagues - The Tribulation in the Bible

The Angel of the Lord at Bokim - Reading the Bible

666 - The Number of the Beast - READING THE BIBLE

Joshua's Farewell-Reading the Bible this Year

The Woman and The Dragon - READING THE BIBLE IN 1 YEAR

The Two Witnesses for God - Revelation 11

The Angel & The Little Scroll - Revelation 10

Misunderstandings Can Start Wars - Joshua Chapter 22

Cities of Refuge: Joshua Chapter 20

END of DAYS: DEMONS & DESTRUCTION

The 4 Horsemen of the Apocalypse in Revelation 5

READING THE BIBLE IN 1 YEAR: Joshua Chapter 21

Revelation Chapter 2 - Angels, Stars, & the Future

HAVE A PEACEFUL WEEKEND - Read the Bible With Us

Reading the Bible in 1 Year: Joshua 18

Revelations Chapter 1 - Hope in Crisis

Reading the Bible-The Division of land of the Children of Israel

Our Daily Reading of the Bible

CHAOTIC TIMES - READ the Bible with Us for Peace

Join Us As We Read Through the Bible This Year

READING THE BIBLE IN 1 YEAR: Lies, Trickery & Deception

Reading the Bible in 1 Year: Ai Destroyed

READING THE BIBLE IN 1 YEAR: Joshua 7 - Greed, Theft & Punishment

Reading the Bible- Talking about Atlantis, Math & More

Angels...? We're Reading the Bible Today: Joshua 5

Reading the Bible in 1 Year: The Death of Moses

Generosity and Divorce are themes as we Read the Bible this year

Reading the Bible in 1 Year: History of the Children of Israel

The Nation of Israel - Reading the Bible in 1 Year

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

BRANDING

Variety is the Spice of Life . . . right?

Wrong, at least in some situations.

And, “Branding”? What does it mean?

I’ve been reading a lot about Branding. Unfortunately, that one word makes me think of cattle not writers.

I picture a cow in a field getting shoved through a gate to get a stamp burned into its butt. Is that what we writers are supposed to do?

Sort of, I guess.

I mean Nike has the Swoosh, Adidas has the triple stripe, and Converse has the Star in the circle. There must be a reason these marketing giants use one symbol to be identified with their product.

But how can we writers use this “brand” to identify ourselves? We must be able to take something away from these marketing gurus’ examples.

I did a little research and read here that the American Marketing Association (AMA) defines a brand as a name, term, sign, symbol or design, or a combination of these items to identify the goods and services of one seller to distinguish them from other sellers.

Well, how can writers use that information to make themselves “known”?

I’ve heard that once we get published in a certain genre and have some success in that area, we should stick with it. That way our readers can be sure they’ll get what they want when they buy our books. People want a sure bet. And, if we jump around from one genre to another, our readers won’t have that satisfaction and they won’t trust our name on the spine of a book.

I guess it’s like going out for a hamburger and ordering a cheeseburger, only to bite into an iguana burger when we’d been expecting beef. We might be a little disappointed, in fact we might even get mad. We writers don’t want to make readers mad. We want readers to trust us and buy our books – right?

And here’s an article about finding your focus.

Now, all I have to do is get a book published.

10 comments:

Christina Farley said...

This is a very interesting topic that I never thought of until I went to SCBWI LA last year and heard Steven Malk talk. He talked about how we see ourselves as a writer and how our audience sees us.

I do think there is some truth to this yet at the same time I find it hard to put myself in the box. I love to write adventure stories, romance and multicultural stuff.

And maybe the more I write, the more I'll which areas I'm most comfortable with.

But I think there really is something about making your name. When I pick up a particular author's book, I'm definitly picking it up because I think the novel will be similar to their last and I loved the last one.

Bish Denham said...

Hmmm. Off the top of my head I can think of two award winning children's authors who have written across genres and for more than one age group. Jane Yolen and Kate DiCamillo.

Should actors be branded? There are actors who might be quite talented but for one reason or another get type-cast which pretty much dooms their career.

Musicians have the same problem. If they made the same kind of music over and over wouldn't we get bored? It's the sound we're after. The Beatles had a distinct sound, but every album was different. Bob Dylan, John Mayall, Eric Clapton, Tina Turner, each has a distinct voice/sound, but no two albums are similar.

I keep reading (from writers in books they've written about writing and the writing process)that you/me/we should write what we want; that ultimately we should write to please ourselves else our voice/our sound/our style will sound off key, our stories will fall a little flat.

Some authors are content to write in one genre. That's because it works for them. I for one think it's not only unfair, it's not right, to be "type-booked." It's almost further evidence of our society's obsessive need to catagorize and pigeon hole, which begins the first day of school and which ultimately stifles creativity.

OK...I'll get off my soapbox now. :O

Kelly Polark said...

It is too bad if an author can't explore other genres. I read the focus article as well. I agree with it to focus on one thing at a time, but I do think the one woman could explore the romance novels, if she focused on that on not the other for a bit.
I think we can do it all! Just focus on one area at a time.
And branding? Hmmm, I'm a poet, picture book writer, word puzzle creator, who is currently writing my first chapter book.
I better focus!

Kimbra Kasch said...

I totally know what you gals are talking about.

I love to write poetry. And I've written a lot of articles for magazines for kids and women's magazines.

Right now I'm working on a MG and YA manuscript-at the same time.

But branding is what I hear people talking about-all the time.

Jean said...

Thanks for the article, Kim.

I think maybe our BRAND has to find us while we're exploring different genre. We have to be on the lookout for it when we see it, then jump on that wagon and stick with it for a while.

Hmmm.

Thought provoking.

Jean

Adrienne said...

That was an interesting article. It's harder for me to look into the future and at the big picture - I'm more inclined to concentrate on here and now. I think you do have to explore a little to know what you really enjoy doing.

Clementine said...

Sounds so simple, huh? It's like trying to tell a painter that he is only allowed to paint in red. If I didn't love to write so much, I would have chucked this a long time ago. But I do love it - even if my blogging and critique buddies are the only ones who read it.

Suzanne Casamento said...

While this is an interesting topic, I'd concentrate on writing. Good books will get published and people will find them no matter how you are or aren't branded. And even more, we may not be able to control how we're branded. As scary as it might be, other people will probably end up doing it for us, don't you think?

Kimbra Kasch said...

Suzanne: That is soooo true. I love your way of thinking.

Rena Jones said...

Interesting topic and replies here as well. I've done mostly PBs but would love to branch out into the MG market.