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Authors: See Gary Crush It!

Crush It! by Gary VaynerchukFrom my perspective, Gary Vaynerchuk—the boy from Belarus who grew his family’s liquor store in New Jersey into a multimillion-dollar business, and who is now teaching others to use customer service (especially via social media) to grow their businesses—has set a new standard for all authors supporting their books.

I’m piecing together a write-up of his efforts—and maybe a college course—but check out GaryVaynerchuk.com and his Twitter account to see how he spent several months engaging his audience and building anticipation for the October 2009 release of his book, Crush It!, which as Gary announced should hit #2 this Sunday in The New York Times.

For an example of Gary’s promotional efforts, consider his “experience” bundles, offered through his site: http://crushitbook.com/crush-it-the-experience/. If you buy 35, you get a personalized video; if you buy 150, you get an hour on Skype; and so on. This sets an expectation for bulk sales—which I think motivates single-copy sales—and demonstrates the way premium/ancillary offerings will help authors sell books in a world in which content is expected to be (nearly) free. [Authors: What experiences or ancillary offerings can you share?]

In line with his belief in contact and word-of-mouth promotions, Gary hosted a launch party last night at The Bell House in Brooklyn—very cool bar and performance space—exposed brick and rafters, cement floor, set in a warehouse. Gary went through the crowd, thanking everyone.

On stage, Gary said he sees himself benefiting from the “thank-you economy,” in which the people who have received his free videos and advice are purchasing his book out of gratitude. He said that his success comes from actually caring about his audience—by giving, he is getting. [Authors: How can you give to, care for, and support your audience?]

He showed a video preview of the “vook” edition of his book. The vook combines text, animation, music, voiceovers, and still photos. Then, with help from the crowd and verification from the yellow-blazered judges from the Universal Record Database—Gary set the universal record for most glasses clinked in one minute! Closing out the night, Clabo performed the “Crush It!” rap for charity—each $.99 download will feed six in Haiti. See below.

Let me round out this post—a sort of long thank-you to Gary, actually—by embedding two other videos: His powerful presentation at MediaBistro’s Circus in August 2009, and his adventurous Wine Library tasting of the best pairings for breakfast cereal.


See the full-sized version here: http://tv.winelibrary.com/2009/09/08/what-wine-pairs-with-cereal-episode-734/

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Categories: Blogging, Book Publishing, E-books, Editing, Event Summaries, Language, Viral Marketing, Writing. Tags: , , , , , , , .
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NetLingo in the WSJ: KUTGW

We had the pleasure of editing the first edition of NetLingo, Erin Jansen’s dictionary of approximately 2,500 terms related to computing and the Internet.

Today, NetLingo.com was cited in The Wall Street Journal, in an article by Stephanie Raposo on translating the abbreviations used in texting. You can read the article, “Quick! Tell Us What KUTGW Means,” online (for the next seven days) by clicking here.

Although you may not come across these acronyms and homophones at work—as you attack people or are attacked in an intergenerational one-upgeekship—texting is still growing, and not just among teens.

On the WSJ.com page, several comments dispute or diminish the presence or importance of texting abbreviations. I use them rarely but consider them useful tools for communication, like any other sort of jargon. Interestingly, the article ranks second among today’s most e-mailed articles (and ninth, oddly enough).

Bravo, Erin! Keep up the good work—I mean, KUTGW!

A sample of abbreviations cited in the article:

UG2BK     You got to be kidding
GBTW      Get back to work
FYEO      For your eyes only
DEGT      Don’t even go there
BIL       Boss is listening
PCM       Please call me
FWIW      For what it’s worth
HAND      Have a nice day
NRN       No response necessary
WRUD      What are you doing
^5        High five

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Categories: Editing, Language. Tags: , , , , .
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The Bashful Blagger, on My Benchmarks for Editing Speed

Following a discussion on LinkedIn, copywriter and editor Ragini Werner mentioned one of my articles, on her blog: http://needser.blogspot.com/2009/06/cross-word.html.

The article, “Benchmarks for Estimating Editing Speed,” presents an admittedly unscientific survey of some leading editors’ rules of thumb. It was published in Corrigo, the newsletter of the technical editing SIG of the Society for Technical Communication. (Let’s call it the STC TE SIG!) I’m gathering new data from editors (contact me with your benchmarks).

Ragini, founder of NEEDSer, is a native-English copywriter and editor who specializes in helping Dutch writers banish Dunglish (English with a Dutch accent) from their writing. Her blog, The Bashful Blagger, is a lively read, full of honest and humorous details about the wordsmith’s life, mixed with some videos and references that extend the conversation.

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