How to Find Those Comparative Titles

How to Find Those Comparative Titles

Proposals can daunt just about any writer. But throw in comparative titles into the mix, and we may have made the process ten times harder on ourselves.

Comparative Titles: Recently published titles, in your book’s genre, that share similarities in theme, tone, or style.

It sounds simple enough, but when you have to come up with 3-5 titles, published by B-list authors, within the past five years, it makes the search all the harder. In this article, we’ll explore ways to find your book’s comparative titles, so you can wow publishers and agents.

Follow the Footnotes

You may know that your book shares similarities with another one.

For instance, my spooky MG shares similarities with Kristiana Sfirlea’s Legend of the Storm Sneezer. If I plug the title into Amazon, it shows me results of other books bought that are similar to this. I peruse the blurbs and the first pages of those books. If they seem to match mine, I buy them.

“Wait a minute!” You may say. “Why do I have to buy them?” First of all, you support authors, yay! Second of all, you want to make sure that you didn’t just choose a book simply by the back cover copy alone. As we’ve learned the BCC doesn’t always tell us the truth about the book’s contents. Better safe than sorry.

Goodreads Lists

So you have to find a book published within the last five years.

No problem. Goodreads has lists of books in specific genres, published in specific years. Peruse the lists and find books that seem to match the tones or themes of yours.

You can find plenty of books in Paranormal MG published in 2020. Believe me, once you find these lists, you’ll have no problem finding books that are similar to yours.

Ask Reader’s Groups

Facebook has PLENTY of readers groups. Ask them in threads if they have any recs. of books, that are recently published, like yours.

It will surprise you how many recommendations you’ll receive. I’m part of a Christian readers group, and readers have obscure requests all the time. On average, these requests receive 30-100 responses.

Ask Authors in the Genre

Want to know comp. titles for your books? Ask authors who have published similar books in your genre. Odds are they have plenty of ideas for you to read.

After all, if we want to be good writers, we have to read lots of books in our genre, so we can understand the trends, the vogue voices, and of course, because we have loads of fun doing it.

Resources

Write a Winning Query – Serious Writer Academy

Book Proposals: Mastering the Comparative Section – Writers Chat

Book Proposals and One Sheets – Writers Chat

9 Ways to Squeeze More Writing into Your Day – Almost an Author

The Cover Letter – Almost an Author

How to Attract Publishers When you Have a Small Social Media Presence

How to Attract Publishers When you Have a Small Social Media Presence

It can be difficult to attract publishers when you have a small social media presence. No matter whether our age, our ailments, or our life circumstances have gotten in the way, at times writers need to take a step back from growing their platform. This may mean that the platform will diminish or lose followers because they haven’t kept up with it as much.

We’ve know writers who have developed vision problems and where staring at a social media scheduler simply isn’t conducive to their health.

With all this in mind, can we still woo a publisher, especially when our platform has taken a hit? If so, let’s dive into the ways to snag that publisher even when experiencing diminishing returns.

Do what you can

If we’ve learned anything about social media, it’s that once you have it figured out, it changes again. Sometimes people do better with a sporadic posting schedule or they must scale back a significant amount.

Find what works for you and your health. No, you won’t have tens or hundreds of thousands of followers. But you prioritize yourself. After all, you can have millions of followers, but if you don’t write well, a publisher will not want your book.

Publishers care about writing first, speaking of:

Continue to read and write

If you can’t work on platform, continue to write.

And if you cannot write, continue to read.

Publishers do care about platform, but they want, most of all, good writing. So practice and hone those craft skills. You will need those the most.

Explain what happened

Many publishers, having experienced tragedy themselves, will understand your situation. Provide a paragraph of explanation about the dip in platform if they ask.

At the same time, show them how you’ve grown platform before in the past, prior to when you needed to step back. This can show them that you have an entrepreneurial and marketing spirit, even if you can’t exercise it now.

Hire an assistant

Can’t do the work yourself? No worries, hire an assistant to schedule posts for you. We highly recommend reaching out to local colleges for students who are savvy with technology and work for reasonable rates.

That way you can show publishers you still intend to build platform, but may need a little extra help to do it. Don’t worry. Best selling authors hire assistants all the time.

Resources

Explode Your Instagram Growth – Serious Writer Academy

We all start somewhere – Writers Chat

Filling the Writer’s Well – Writers Chat

Break Through the Fog – Almost an Author

Platform Starts with Your Mindset – Almost an Author

Query Letters: Don’t Do This

Query Letters: Don’t Do This

Several don’t exist for query letters, and entire books have been dedicating to perfecting the art of querying agents and editors. That being said, as I am a literary agent writing this blog post, I have several examples of things that would fit in that don’t category that I see most often.

We’ve already covered a post on what to DO. Let’s dive into those DON’T categories.

DON’T: Be Demanding

I was in the querying trenches a few years back, I understand. You’ve sent hundreds of submissions, and you want:

  • Answers as to why people have turned you down
  • Referrals to other agents if this one will turn you down
  • And most important: an agent or a book deal

But you do have to keep in mind that we get literally thousands of submissions each year. If we provide any feedback or referrals, it’s on our own unpaid time.

Don’t ask for referrals or extensive feedback. The agent or editor will provide it if they see promise in your manuscript.

(You can put Ms. Bolinger if you want, but really make sure to research someone’s preferred pronouns before putting a Mr. or Ms. It’s often simpler just to do their name).

DON’T: Be Unrealistic

Who wouldn’t love for their book to be picked up by Netflix or Disney+. But we have to be realistic. Unless you have to have connections someone who already secured a Netflix deal for you don’t say, “This is going to be the next Netflix hit.”

Be realistic with social media numbers too. I may have 30,000 followers, but let me tell you, I did not have 30,000 of my followers buy my book when I released in June 2019. Talk about platform, but don’t say that that alone will get you sales.

It won’t.

DON’T: Be Rude

This should go without saying, but you’d be surprised at how poorly people take rejections. As someone who has been rejected literally hundreds (if not thousands at this point) of times, I know how to take a punch.

Don’t ask them to reconsider. Don’t say, “Well, J.K. Rowling got rejected XYZ times, and those publishers sure were sorry.” Don’t insult their agency, their position, or their publishing house.

Simply say, “Thank you for your time,” when they reject you. Believe me, you don’t want to burn bridges in this industry. And industry members do talk.

I have rejected people previously because I’ve heard from others that they were too hard to work with or badgered them constantly on social media for updates. While we’re at it …

DON’T: Pitch Them on Social Media

There is one exception: If they are participating in a Twitter Pitch Party. But even then, they require you to submit via email or Submittable if they like your pitch.

I have a rule of thumb (especially on LinkedIn). If I connect or friend someone and they message me a pitch, I immediately unconnected or unfriend them.

When you pitch someone on social media you not only invade their personal DMs, but you tell them that you only see them as someone you can get something from.

No one likes to feel used.

What other tips have you heard when it comes to queries? We’d love to hear them in the comments.

Resources

39 Queries that Worked | Writer’s Digest

Kids Lit | Writers Chat

Writing Queries like a Professional Resume Writer | Serious Writer Academy

Query with Confidence | Almost an Author

Query Letter to Submit a Novel to a Publisher | Almost an Author

Brew & Ink Podcast – s 5 ep 12 – Singularity Ch. 12 Kepler

Brew & Ink Podcast – s 5 ep 12 – Singularity Ch. 12 Kepler

Why are there deadlines? Are they good or bad? Britt Mooney and Steven Faletti discuss the reality of deadlines in traditional publishing, the positives and negatives of them, and how we can set deadlines and goals for ourselves in different ways. Then author MB Mooney shares Kepler, chapter 12 of the Singularity storyline. Listen and vote!

Listen here:

In this episode:

Why are deadlines important?

Are they good or bad for the creative process?

How can a self-published or unpublished author set deadlines?

How can goals be good?

Britt shares Singularity Ch. 12 – Kepler.

Links:

www.brewandink.com

www.mbmooney.com

www.facebook.com/brewandink

www.instagram.com/brewandink

www.instagram.com/authormbmooney

Brew & Ink Podcast – s5 ep9 – Parleys

Brew & Ink Podcast – s5 ep9 – Parleys

What is a Multi Author Project? With the success of Marvel and other extended universes, more authors are writing books together or in the same story. Join author MB Mooney as he interviews Author Lynn Donovan and Tom Elsa Bruno, two of the authors in the new series, Beyond the VEIL. They discuss the new series and what it’s like writing and working together. Then Steven Faletti writes Parleys, the next chapter in the Singularity story. Listen and vote!

Listen here:

In this episode:

What is a multi author project?

How does it work? How does it not work?

What is the Beyond the VEIL series about?

When is the first book coming out?

What is the mashup of romance and fantasy like?

How did Lynn get into writing?

How did Tom get into writing?

How can we find their works?

Links:

https://www.facebook.com/dumvivamus

www.brewandink.com

www.mbmooney.com

www.facebook.com/brewandink

www.instagram.com/brewandink

www.instagram.com/authormbmooney

https://www.facebook.com/LynnDonovanFGG/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/1375224292632276/
Genre Chat – Self Publishing, Marketing and Mystery Location Novels with Molly Jo Realy

Genre Chat – Self Publishing, Marketing and Mystery Location Novels with Molly Jo Realy

Molly Jo Realy is an award-winning writer, editor, social media ninja and author coach. Nicknamed the Bohemian Hurricane, she encourages people to embrace their unique talents and gifts to come alive and celebrate life every day. Recently rooted in South Carolina, she celebrates with her family, her cats, a good cup of coffee, and an addiction to pens. Visit her blog and author website!

Click here to find NOLA on Amazon!