What Makes Things Work? Patreon? FreeBooks?

This is my question, how do you bridge the gap between creating, to making it work with readers?

Is it the market place you aim towards, or is it the content you create?

Does Patreon work, or is it a flash in the pan idea, that you need to be known to make work successfully?

Does any of these question bridge a gap between what one wants to do, and what one is doing right now?

How do you make a career out of something, that you don’t make money out of, and, how do you make money?

Creating content for the sake of creating, or creating to sell to a market you somehow find while creating.

What a crazy amount of questions with no real answers.

21 thoughts on “What Makes Things Work? Patreon? FreeBooks?

  1. Being genuinely interested in what others do is a start. I’ve always been curious how other people write and what motivates and inspires them. Time is a huge constraint with work and family, as well. I’m far from being an expert, but I find that if you start out small within your WordPress community and bond with a handful of people you admire and whose feedback matters to you, you’ve already come a long way. Nurture those handful of blogger friends, and consistently visit and comment on their posts. It’s like any relationship where you keep contact with close friends and associates. There’s always a give and take.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I enjoy the interaction here, and it’s interesting to see the different roads so many travel, how some people I follow don’t interact at all with the community, but constantly get praise for their work, and others who make it a point to interact with each and every person who come to their page get very little praise, some none at all. I see bloggers trying to reinvent themselves, and others doing the same thing, over and over again, with different results for each and all. But, one of the things I find most fascinating, is the feedback I can easily gain here, where, out there, away from the blog, it’s harder, and when you do get it, more morbid, and anti blogging, especially from some so called writers. Why are so many people negative towards blogging? Sigh, I’m almost too old for all this haha!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Just do what makes sense to you. There’s no set formula for blogging as there’s none for just living. You might think of contacting businesses to sponsor you. You would, in turn, mention them in your blog or have a small ad of theirs posted. There are many avenues to explore if you keep an open mind and are okay with rejections. It’s a number’s game.

        Liked by 1 person

  2. Ah, blogging is a sweet place. Feels like we’re all on the same side. Out there is a different kind of territory. I like what you’re doing with the negative reviews, stuff like that suits Twitter and Instagram if you’re not there already.
    I was reading Alexis’ reply earlier, lots of wisdom in there.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m connecting with it, I can see it, I’m just not getting feedback, it’s that uneasiness I don’t like, I want to know if they hated or liked it, which is why I pushed the bad reviews, to encourage the push for getting feedback. All in all it’s a ticking clock I just have to put up with, I guess I’m figuring out what I’m doing right now with everything I’ve done. The curse of life.

      Liked by 1 person

    1. Haha, isn’t it like that, you create content, you get people interested, but to get them involved, to get them to share, that seems to be the impossibility, and if you don’t know who’s buying, how can you communicate, if they don’t give you the opportunity?

      Liked by 1 person

    1. How do you know you are catering to the audience correctly? And is the audience following you, the audience you can sell to, or are you just surrounding yourself with like minded individuals who are trying to achieve the same end result as yourself?

      Like

      1. If you know your audience well enough, all those questions are easily answered.

        As it relates to myself, most of my clients come from my blog and social media – and by most I mean roughly 90%, with rest being from referrals that come mostly from them.

        I know I’m catering to them correctly because of sales results, data analytics, and the fact that I’ve been doing this for 11 years. I’m a publicist and the owner of a public relations firm. Because of those results I can also yes, I have an audience I can sell to.

        However, my first priority is connecting, not selling. There are many people on here I follow and keep in touch with who have no use for my services and who are in completely different fields. I follow and connect because I like them and/or I enjoy their blogs, or our conversations.

        I treat my audience as people, not potential customers. No one wants to be friends with the pushy salesman, or to feel used as a customer database.

        Liked by 2 people

      2. If your audience doesn’t want to talk it’s usually because you’re not speaking their language or communicating with them in the way they want to be connected with. And that goes back to knowing your audience.

        If you need professional assistance, you can find my firm at http://www.alexischateaupr.com. There’s also plenty of free advice on our blog.

        Good luck!

        Like

Leave a comment