Chapter One: Branding Brilliance

A highly informative and entertaining expose of how to create your public image and turn yourself into an icon.

Chaired by the wonderful Margaret Hamilton.  Here are her introductory points:

Branding is the deliberate and skillful creation of an  marketable identity

It should:

  • Create audience knowledge
  • Create a unique identity
  • Have passion
  • Have consistency
  • Be competitive – constantly strive to improve itself, need hard work
  • Get exposure, with more tools than ever before available eg social media
  • Have good leadership, whether as single individual or company
  • How does your brand measure up?

Next speaker was Holly Frendo, Publicity Manager at Harper Collins. She’s only been in this role for 8 months. Not traditional publishing background – BA in Business/Communications and PR, with clients like Cadburys! But was always an avid reader – very excited to be in this new role. Her role: To create awareness and shift perception

She employs different techniques for different genres and author histories. These include:

  1. Author tours are incredibly successful – festivals, conferences, schools etc
  2. Book sellers, signings, meet and greets. Makes a big difference when sellers meet authors – promotes sales and brand recognition
  3. Press releases – features , reviews, interviews. Finding newsworthiness. (Susanne G. one of her faves in this regard. She got Susanne onto Today Extra for the recent Action Day Against Bullying.)
  4. Think outside of box – what does the book relate to?
  5. Social media - FB, Snapchat, Instagram – inspires brand love – DYI or get help if you find it challenging.
Photo attributed to Oliver Phommavanh

Photo attributed to Oliver Phommavanh

Next came Valerie Khoo, Director of Australian Writers Centre and co-creator of ‘So you want to be a writer?’ podcast. Her points:

Get over your hesitancy and cringe re building brand – the feeling that you ‘have tickets on yourself’. Don’t think of it as promoting yourself – it’s all about making a connection with your readers, or potential readers. Making genuine connections rather than promoting yourself.

You need to go all in, not half arsed! Embrace it all. Very easily done in not a lot of time. Open yourself up to it – reach potentially millions readers for free.  Keep making connections after your initial publicity period. Pick the one or two social media channels you enjoy and can do yourself.

Can seem daunting, but follow a step by step formula.  It actually works. One hour every weekend is enough to set your foundations.

'Show elements of your personality, not your personal life.'

Scheduled presenter Sandy Fussell was ill, so joint co-founder,Jodie Wells-Slowgrove from The Story Crowd kindly filled her place. Her points:

Let people see YOU and what makes you unique. Find your niche, and branding will take care of itself.

Created Writers Unleashed Festival, a space where authors and illustrators can make lasting connections. Book sales, signings and craft activities. Making it easy for new creators, and teachers and teacher librarians. Creators paid fairly but kept busy. Networking opportunities.  They love to help book creators.

Next came Sophie Masson

‘Lots of hats’  ‘Too many balls in the air’ – writing, publishing and doing PHD, plus a lot of chairing! She’s written more than 60 books, including for adults.

She did a lot of reading before she was published, did articles, stories in School Magazine. She also interviewed people whose work she admired. All quite instinctive.

She started her publishing company Christmas Press 3 years ago – all her years’ of writing experience, networks etc came together. They’ve had fantastic support and encouragement. Small, but they do things properly, Can only afford tiny advances. Trust so important in their operations – dealing with authors fairly. Quality paramount. They have big publisher quality. Distinctive niche. All 3 directors interested in fairy tales and legends. They hold their nerve, even if one book doesn’t do well. This applies to both creators and publishers

Then came Belinda Bolliger, Managing editor of Australian Standing Orders

Iconic brand. She reiterated Margaret’s points for branding success.

She makes the selections from publisher submissions every month. Audience is schools – time poor and understaffed. Helps them with expert literature selection. Teacher notes are supplied.

  • Consistency – chooses style and quality of book suitable for CBCA awards.
  • Uniqueness – 95% of books are Australian. This is their difference to their competitors.
  • Small team – very approachable.
  • They source books that are difficult to access – their brand is competitive and personable.
  • Very good at picking CBCA shortlist
  • Passion – Belinda’s worked for 25 yrs in the industry
  • Company owned by Scholastic with its over 45 yrs experience

Margaret Hamilton then spoke about Pinerolo Cottage, herchildren’s book cottage in Blackheath where she runs picture book courses among other things; promoting illustrators primarily.

Her father taught her that ‘Everyone is as good as you but nobody is better’

She’s always made her presence felt and has worked extremely hard. (Once had a board meeting in hospital room!) She carried this philosophy through when she started her own company. Went to Bologna every year.

And finally she’s a published author! Never had the guts to send in a manuscript before. Margrete Lamond at Little Hare got back to her with a yes 5 mins later!!

B is For Bedtime has gone ballistic – 60000 copies in US. Second book to be launched in May.

Question time:

  • Authors and illustrators should follow the same principles for branding . Great social media platform for illustrators is Instagram. Judith Rossell a great example of this. She never ‘sells’ as such – she simply makes great personality connections.
  • Stylefile incredibly helpful to illustrators, and an honour to be selected.
  • Lesley Vamos works Facebook really well.
  • Character branding vs author branding – which one to pursue? Depends. For example, Liz Pichon presents as character Tom Gates rather than herself. Her character’s brand in other words.
  • Sophie Masson did romantic fiction for YA under diff name – all the characters had social media presences – one had blog, one had YouTube etc. Extended the life of the characters. But you have to think about it carefully. Can be quite spooky!
  • Belinda was asked whether she thinks about gender diversity, cultural diversity etc. Yes, she likes to support new authors and publishers as well. But limited by what’s being published that month. Books for boys and girls. Relies on publishers to have the right agenda.

Margaret – Kids’ books now 32% of sales as distinct from 25% a few years ago – they should have equal review space.

She mentioned her next course at Pinerolo this coming Saturday on creating kids’ books with Freya Blackwood – see website.

Phew – a very full session!!

Charlotte Calder Roving Reporter

#SCBWISyd

SCBWI Victoria August Gathering

Date/Time
Date(s) - 20/Aug/2016
2:00 pm - 5:00 pm

Location

RMIT University

Corner Russel and Victoria Streets - Melbourne, VICTORIA

 

We look forward to catching up with you for our third gathering of the year on August 20.

This gathering will feature Susannah McFarlane, Cally Black and Nicky Johnston.

Susannah McFarlane is the author of some of Australia’s most successful children’s book series. She is the creator and writer of the awarding-winning EJ12 Girl Hero and EJ Spy School series; the creator and co-author of the hugely popular series for boys, Boy vs Beast; the author of the Little Mates series of the alliterative alphabet picture books for under-fives, and the series editor for Stuff Happens!, a great series for tween boys about the everyday challenges they face. Susannah was also the original concept creator of two of Australia’s leading tween fiction series—Go Girl! and Zac Power.

Susannah was previously the co-owner, managing director and publisher of Hardie Grant Egmont; the managing director of Egmont Books UK; the vice-president of the Egmont Group; contributor to the UK trade journal Publishing News; and the Convenor of the Children’s Publishing Committee and Board Director of the Australian Publishers’ Association. 

Susannah has titled her talk – ‘Oi! I’m over here!’ How to claim your space in a crowded children’s book market.

 

Cally Black, SCBWI member and author of educational fiction and Sci Fi short stories, has been on a long writing quest for that elusive thing that might make her work stand out in a marketplace full of amazing books.

As the winner of the Ampersand Prize, Cally will share her journey to her first trade novel and what she’s learned about voice, storytelling and finding personal strengths in her talk – Pushing For Something More. 

 

Nicky Johnston is an educator, speaker and author/illustrator. She is passionate about promoting resilience in children and raising awareness of mental health issues. Her book ‘Go Away, Mr Worrythoughts!’ has been produced as a theatrical production which has been touring primary schools for the past 5 years.

Nicky’s love of teaching sees her busy with school visits and presenting at workshops and conferences. Her extensive experience as an educator has provided her with valuable skills that she now utilises when visiting schools as an author/illustrator. During her talk, Picture This, Nicky will share practical hints, tips and examples to help you when presenting in schools.

 

 

 

SHOW AND TELL 

As usual, we will have a brief Show and Tell segment, so if you have a recent publication to show us or news of a recent success to share (such as an award or grant) we’d love to hear from you.

 

MEETING DETAILS

Date: Saturday 20 August 2016
Place: RMIT University, Building 13, 379-405 Russell Street, Melbourne (corner Victoria Street). PLEASE NOTE ROOM CHANGE: The room is in the same building as our last event, but one level higher. Enter via the main Russell Street entrance and follow the SCBWI signs up the stairs to room 13.3.009 (Building 13, floor 3, room 9).
Time: 2pm—5pm (all are welcome to stay on afterwards to chat and drink downstairs)
Cost: $25 members, $30 non-members (includes afternoon tea)

 

BOOKING   DETAILS

Book here for the August 20th gathering.

 

SCBWI VICTORIA NEW MEMBERS MEET AND GREET – 13 August 2016

If you are a new SCBWI Victoria member, please come and meet the committee over a casual cup of coffee or pot of tea. We look forward to hearing about your projects and aspirations. This is a free event, but please book here so we can confirm numbers.

Date: 13 August 2016, 3pm-4:30pm

Location: Upstairs at Cafe Blac, 707 Glenferrie Road, Hawthorn, Vic, 3122. Tel: (03) 9818 8965

 

SCBWI DATES to Remember for 2016:

·      13 August: New Members Meet and Greet, Hawthorn

·      20 August: SCBWI VIC Gathering, Russell Street, Melbourne

·      4-6 September: SCBWI International Biennial Conference, Sydney

·      15 October: New Members Meet and Greet, Hawthorn

·      23 October: SCBWI VIC Sketch and Scribble, venue to be confirmed

·      12 November: SCBWI VIC Gathering, details to be confirmed

 

SCBWI VICTORIA COMMITTEE MEMBERS

 
Caz Goodwin: Assistant Regional Adviser, Victoria
Chris Bell: Assistant Coordinatorand CBCA Liaison
Serena Geddes: Illustrator Coordinator
Betty Sargeant: Technology and Social Media Coordinator
Jo Burnell: Membership Coordinator

 

On-line Critique Group Update

ON-GOING CRITIQUE GROUPS
I am pleased to report that we now have another Online Critique Group successfully up and running, bring the total number to eight, covering all genres from Picture Books to Young Adult. I continue to receive positive emails from members who find the critique feed-back extremely valuable and enjoy the support and interaction with other writers and illustrators.

PROBLEMS AND ISSUES
Unfortunately, as we all know life sometimes gets in the way of good intentions and some members have had to take leave of absence or drop out completely from their Critique Groups due to family issues, new babies or work commitments and so on.

Fortunately these critique groups are continuing but some are in desperate need of additional members to top up their numbers to form well-balanced groups offering robust critiquing.

WANTED: NEW MEMBERS
So if you have been thinking that you would like to join a Critique Group but you haven’t got around to filling in the on-line form, now is the time to do so.

We would love to have new members, published and ‘keen to be published’, in all the genres to form new groups and, in particular, to supplement the following existing groups:

  • PB Writers
  • JF
  • YA
  • PB Illustrators only
  • Illustrators

If you are interested please read the information and register On-line by 1st December 2015. PLEASE NOTE: there will be no placements into groups from Friday 4th December 1015 until 20th January 2016 when placements in groups will proceed as normal according to availability.

LOOKING FORWARD TO PUBLISHING SUCCESS
One Critique Group member has already had an offer from a publisher for her Picture Book manuscript and is waiting to see the success of on-going negotiations. Another member has had a publisher express an interest in her submission.  Both of these authors revised their manuscripts after receiving their On-line Critiques.

So sign-up and look forward to receiving constructive and useful critiques that will encourage and help you to re- shape and improve your art work or writing towards your publishing goal.

 

Margaret Roc
Critique Group Coordinator