plat·form
/ˈplatˌfôrm/
noun
1.
a raised level surface
on which people or things can stand.
"there
are viewing platforms where visitors may gape at the chasm"
2.
the declared policy of a
political party or group.
"seeking
election on a platform of low taxes"
Well, then.
Authors, it is said, need
a platform. In authorly terms this means expertise that is already recognized
as such by (preferably) a goodly number of people. It’s that thing that makes
for a virtual “raised level” on which the author stands above the minions.
I like this post
because of its original title (later changed by Jane Friedman): “I’D
RATHER BE WRITING.”
That, precisely.
I know a prolific and
competent writer (of YA fiction) who had grown her blog to have thousands of
followers and same for her Instagram account, who has all but abandoned both.
She’d rather be writing,
and her platform never sold her books. Her books sold her books.
Adding: most good writers
are not great marketers. This is what traditional publishers are supposed to be
and do.
A writer should do what
they can, and most of that consists of writing and writing better.
Signed,
Platformless
Me
3 comments:
Platform is literally putting the cart before the horse. Writing has to come first. I'm with you.
I am so grateful I wrote and published nonfiction books when a platform wasn’t required, as it is today. I don’t do social media, so I would be out of luck. It is a certain kind of commercialization of writing/publishing that leaves me baffled as to why writing itself has become less important than marketing.
Platform building is discouraging for a lot of writers. Me included.
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