***I have a number of writing deadlines coming up over the next couple of months so I have decided instead of stepping away from my blog completely to concentrate solely on my writing, I will bring back an encore performance of my WRITERLY WISDOM series from three years ago. WW is 52 glorious posts by authors, agents, and editors from around the country providing writerly wisdom in categories from why even become a writer all the way to how to publish and market your books.
There
will be two posts loaded per week...Mondays & Wednesdays...so be
sure to stop by and check out all the encouraging information given by
my lovely writerly friends! I hope you enjoy the encore presentation of
my WRITERLY WISDOM series and I will return with shiny, new posts in the
fall!***
Social Networking Enough Already…When It Hinders Your
Writing
By Donna M. McDine
As a society we are bombarded with technology at every
angle. Often times overloading our brains with too much information. No matter
what type of business world you travel in, it has become a constant buzz of
checking our email and voice mail at a frantic pace, and hanging out on social
media networks to the point that our face-to-face communication suffers.
Personally, I’ve come to the decision I need to turn off the
technology to rejuvenate my creative juices for my writing. When I say
turn-off, I don’t mean completely, but with limitations. I always write my
first draft of an article or new manuscript long hand with my favorite pen. In
my case, my Graf Von Faber-Castell pen. Yes an indulgence but oh so worth it!
Using this method to write away from my computer greatly reduces my temptation
to check email every 30 seconds and surf various social media networks.
Over the years I have forced myself to get to the task at
hand and write first, marketing second (yes, I know many feel social networking
is a form of marketing, but when you spend the majority of your time
socializing with peers and not connecting with your readers what’s the point?),
researching publishing markets and blogging (which is a form of social
networking) and in my opinion instrumental in developing one’s platform. How to
build your platform is a topic for another day.
It’s wonderful to connect with people through social
networking whom you most likely would have never met otherwise, however if you
allow social networking to become your “job” you risk valuable writing time
that could result in the next “big” book!
Yes, utilize social networking but with responsibility. Do
you want to concentrate on honing your writing skills and writing the best
manuscript possible or have hundreds of thousands followers on your social
networks with no concrete publishing credits to show for your efforts? You
decide what’s important to you. I made my decision to get out from behind my
computer and engage in-person with members of my community who are instrumental
in getting the books in to the children’s hands, librarians, teachers, parents,
after school program directors, etc. The end and continued result is my
business relationships have soared.
Good luck and expand your outreach beyond your computer!
About Donna M. McDine: Donna McDine is an award-winning
children's author, Honorable Mention in the 77th and two Honorable Mentions in
the 78th Annual Writer’s Digest Writing
Competitions, Literary
Classics Silver Award & Seal of Approval Recipient Picture Book Early Reader, Global eBook Awards
Finalist Children’s Picture Book
Fiction, and Preditors & Editors Readers Poll 2010 Top Ten
Children’s Books ~ The Golden Pathway.
Her interest in American History
resulted in writing and publishing The Golden Pathway. Donna
has four more books under contract with Guardian Angel Publishing, Hockey
Agony, Powder Monkey, A
Sandy Grave, and Dee and Deb, Off They Go. She
writes, moms and is a personal assistant from her home in the historical hamlet
Tappan, NY. McDine is a member of the SCBWI, Children’s Literature Network, and
Family Reading Partnership. Visit www.donnamcdine.com.
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