Category: Uncategorized

September Milestones

Achieving big goals starts with checking off some smaller milestones!

Scribbles and SparkBooks

For those of you who are anxiously awaiting Forever England, I promise I’m still hard at work! I have, however, taken a little time to reflect on my own writing process, identify areas where I can streamline my own routine, and hopefully–provide a resource for the broader writing community. The result of this introspection? Something

Updates!

I have had many of my Scribblers ask about Forever England, so an update is due! First of all, thank you for your interest! It’s awesome to know that many eager readers awaiting book two of the Shadows in Drab and Green series. I promise I am toiling away. My goal for this series has

The “List”… Motivator or Demoralizer?

For someone who prefers to fly by the seat of her pants, I still harbor some tendencies of a plotter. I’m not sure where I picked up these habits or the feeling that they are something that I should embrace, but I do know that some of the most basic organizing hacks that help others

On Ads, KDP, Stats…and Beyond!

As promised, I’m checking in with the takeaways from last month’s promotion. What worked? What didn’t? And how do I measure success? In January, Scribble & Spark ran a special through KDP with the “goal” of getting the 2018 release White Dove to the number one book in its genre on Amazon. To help promote the

Free eBook Day 1

Day 1 Strategy:  Ad stacks, social media, word of mouth.  Inspire people to click and see what the fuss is all about. Day 1 Results: So far, so good!  As of this afternoon, White Dove was #6 in Historical Fiction- Irish (exciting, but probably a really small niche community of interest), but #44 in Fiction-

Experiments with Ads

Back in October I ran a promo for White Dove and had unexpected success.  For five days, the eBook version was free on Amazon.  I had stacked a few ads and made a few social media posts, hoping that it would gain some attention.  What I didn’t expect was that it would rise to the

Setting the Scene for Historical Fictions

When I began writing my last novel, White Dove, my main fear was that I wouldn’t be able to set it accurately in time and place.  I agonized over it.  I lost sleep over it.  The fear of missing the mark rattled my confidence more than once.  For White Dove–and for any work that requires an author to

Outlines for People who Prefer to Shoot from the Hip

I have always admired organized people.  These are the people who always know where their car keys are, who can manage to fold and put away their laundry, and whose desks aren’t stacks of papers and disorderly sticky notes.  Amazing.  I applaud you (from behind my piles of sticky notes and index cards). My disorganization doesn’t just stop

How to Set and Meet Goals

Every year around this time, the blogosphere erupts with New Year’s resolutions, goals, objectives as well as the various claims from those who adamantly reject New Year’s resolutions, but instead find other, more nuanced ways of describing their personal goals.  Let’s face it– goals are what keep us going.  We need to have something that

1 2 3