My publishing story is different, from most. I was busy
writing a story for myself. A therapy session since both my grandfathers died
before I was born. I was fascinated by the fact that one was a Cossack soldier
in Russia. I took the few facts I had and began researching and writing.
I was nearly finished when a friend contacted me to
help him with a website for a publishing company he was starting. Long story
short, during the process they uncovered the fact that I was writing a story.
They read the manuscript and asked if they could publish my story. I had not
planned on this. I agreed and we signed the contracts.
“I have a platform”, I told my publisher. I believed I
was telling the truth—I really thought I did. After all, I had been on the
internet doing business as Grampa Tom’s Timeless Treasures since 1998. Even
though I sold the site in 2005, Grampa Tom still shows up in search engine
searches on over 85,000 pages. Problem: No one knows my real name.
I did business as a financial planner from 1973 through
1995. I met thousands of people. Problem: I sold the business in 1995 and
turned all my client records over to the new owner—no names.
I have been a public speaker for forty years. Problem: where
are all those people? How do I get in touch with them? Press releases were a
possibility, but when my publisher tried to get one in my hometown newspaper,
they did not respond. I did not feel very hopeful.
I have a website that has been online since 2004 to
help those who are victims of abuse. Should I advertise my book on this site? I
decided I did not want to mix the two.
I had less than 200 friends on Facebook. I knew not all
of them would buy my novel. My platform turned out to be less than I had
thought.
I think this happens to many writers. They write a
great manuscript. They succeed in finding a publisher. Then the big questions,
“Do you have a platform?” “How are you going to sell your book if we publish
it?”
I have surmised that the time to start building a
platform is before beginning to write a story. Work on both the manuscript and
the platform as a two-part project. Develop a marketing/business plan up front.
I have been working hard at building a platform for nearly ten months. I am
just arriving at the point where I have a large following. The book reviews on
Amazon.com have pushed Night of theCossack into the top thirty in two fiction categories. This is not sales.
Night of the Cossack is still around 250,000 in sales ranking, but it is a
start. My monthly sales on Amazon.com are in double digits. I am speaking and
doing book signings. I am finally, in some measure, a successful writer.
_________________________________
Tom
Blubaugh is a freelance writer living in Southwest Missouri with Barbara, his
wife. They have six children and fourteen grandchildren. Tom has written
non-fiction most of his adult life, but has recently written a historical
fiction titled Night of the Cossack, published by Bound by Faith
Publishers. This is Tom’s first novel. He co-wrote a devotional journal in 2009
for Barbour Publishing titled The Great Adventure. His other writings
include articles for a denominational magazine and an insurance publication. He
also self-published a book, Behind the Scenes of the Bus Ministry in 1974.
Tom
started writing poetry at the age of fourteen. His vision of turning them into
lyrics for rock and roll songs for popular artists didn’t develop. He considers
writing to be a God-given talent and feels led to develop it. His first novel
was published at his age of 69. Tom says it’s never too late. He is now writing
a sequel.
Tom
spent twelve years as an insurance agent and eleven years as a financial
planner. He is the past president of Jericho Commission, Inc., and still serves
on the board of directors.
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