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"Words are only postage stamps delivering the object for you to unwrap."
~George Bernard Shaw

Melissa's Portfolio

Writing in the Shadows: 15 Competencies of a Good Ghostwriter

2/25/2014

22 Comments

 
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By Melissa Walsh

“A little talent is a good thing to have if you want to be a writer. But the only real requirement is the ability to remember every scar.” 
― Stephen King

So you have a story to tell and you’re confident that you have an audience waiting to hear your tale in the form of a book, essay or script. The problem is that you need help capturing your memories and knowledge into the written word.

You’re considering hiring a ghostwriter (ghost).

In French, “ghostwriter” is translated as écrivain dans l’ombre, literally “writer in the shadows.” A ghost writes a work on another’s behalf, or for another person who is presumed to be the author of the work. The actual writer is a phantom to the readership. 

So then, as you enter the shadows of writers to interview candidates for ghosting your story into publication, consider the following essential ghostwriting competencies:

1.  Subject-matter Competency
Choose a ghost who has a solid understanding in, or at least a strong aptitude for learning about, the topic or topics that have driven your life’s ambitions and generated your life’s story. For example, if you’re a professional athlete, choose a ghost with interest and knowledge about your sport.

2.  Editorial Competency
Publishers and critics expect authors to develop nonfiction prose according to prescribed publishing industry style and format. Your ghostwriter should be proficient in various writing styles and formats and know how to discern specifications for your market.

3.  Target Readership Familiarity
Ideally your ghost should be familiar with your audience. Commission a writer who is close to your fanbase or market.

4.  Publishing Biz Finesse
Choose a ghost who understands the bottom-line concerns and motivation of publishers. In today’s market, your ghost should also have a working knowledge of writing for the structured-authoring environment, ensuring your manuscript can be published concurrently for print and digital platforms.

5.  Listening Power
Employing excellence in listening, a good ghost discovers the client’s story and presents it in the client’s voice. When interviewing writers to ghost your story, dismiss those with alligator qualities: invisible ears, large mouth.

6.  Research Integrity
Your ghost must approach research professionally, including focus, commitment and accountability to discovering truth. You want a ghost who is a magnet for truth, an objective, scholarly type who relies on credible sources and who will be able to link every important factual detail in your manuscript to a verifiable source.

7.  Sense of Team
The craft of ghostwriting is much more than telling; it’s observing, discovering, documenting and communicating. When the aim is telling someone else’s great story, these activities cannot be done well in isolation. Commission a ghost who works well with others, who is candid but not offensive, friendly but not phoney, polite but not distant.

8.  Collaboration
Find a ghost who not only is adept in writing, but who knows how to ghostwrite. There’s a difference. Ghostwriting is collaborating with you the storyteller, not controlling your story. The ghost is invisible in your story, with no trace of his or her voice, opinions, desires or goals ― only yours.

9.  Adaptation
The ghost does not have the freedom of the writer to create. He or she doesn’t build the story, but carefully packages the story. The ghost gathers the details of the story and projects them in the storyteller’s voice and organizes them properly for the readership to receive the fully projected story. What’s more, the ghost does not market the story, but rather covertly delivers it to the storyteller’s target audience.

10. Time Management
Your ghost must work to a publication schedule. Project your publication date and work backwards, determining when the manuscript must be completed and delivered to the publisher. Work back further to determine deadlines for segmented deliverables beginning with the summary and outline of your story. Though your ghost may take the lead on scheduling deliverables, you must remain at the helm as the storyteller. Together, you and your ghosting partner must adhere to critical time management principles for completing the project.

11. Humility
The ghostwriter is hidden from the work’s publicity and promotion, out of the limelight. The professional writer serving as a ghostwriter knows that it’s not his or her story to tell; it’s not his or her voice the audience wants to hear. It is your, the client’s, story and your voice. The ghostwriter is merely the hidden microphone projecting your story to your audience. 

12. Assertiveness
Humility is strength. It is not equal to passivity and not mutually exclusive to assertiveness. Commission a writer with a professional confidence that is neither aggressive nor arrogant, but rather assertive.

13. Reliability
Seek a reliable ghost, a writer who consistently delivers quality content and is someone you can  trust with projecting your story in your voice. In addition to the interview, thoroughly review the candidate’s portfolio and contact his or her references.

14. Experience
Seek a ghost with some miles on his or her moccasins, so to speak. Commission a writer who has experienced challenges in life. Essentially, you want a ghost who has lived enough to carry patience and wisdom into executing your storytelling project.

15. Interviewing Sharpness
Through a process of interviews, your ghost will need to first discover your story before projecting it into publication. As interviewer, your ghost should be narrowly focused on you and your story. The right ghost to write your story will understand your need to tell it; he or she will zoom in on discovering details that define your story. He or she will be prepared for each interview and ensure that you are also prepared to discuss the particular story subtopic or time frame to be discussed. Your ghost should have done some background research in advance of each interview. And the interview should flow as a conversation, rather than a clinical note-taking session. 

Your ghost will have a way of helping you feel comfortable telling your story. Though your ghost should be a well-prepared professional, he or she should not control the process. You must ultimately own your story’s discovery as its genuine author.

© 2014, Powerplay Communications
In French, “ghostwriter” is translated as écrivain dans l’ombre, literally “writer in the shadows." A ghost writes a work on another’s behalf, or for another person who is presumed to be the author of the work. The actual writer is a phantom to the readership. 


If you’re a celebrity, own your story. Tell your story via a ghostwriter. Write your autobiography so that the biographer doesn’t tell your story for you.

A celebrity may be able to secure a deal with a publisher by having a professional ghostwriter. The publisher will have the confidence that the ghostwriter is deadline driven as a professional writer. The publisher will also want to work with the ghostwriter as the go-between between the owner of the story and the delivery of the story to market.

Ghostwriting service terms should include agreed upon duties and responsibilities of the ghostwriter, compensation terms, credit annotation and copyright ownership.


― Melissa Walsh


Season of Love

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22 Comments

Got a Cool Book Idea? Get It Out of Park & Into Drive

3/14/2013

52 Comments

 
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By Melissa Walsh

As an independent writer and publisher, people often tell me that they have a cool book idea. I say, “Great. You should get started on it.” They ask, “How?” I offer them some tips and suggest they contact me for support if they want help developing the proposal, writing or editing the manuscript, or self-publishing the book. 

Book ideas come easily, but crafting an idea into a reader-friendly narrative does not. My experience chatting with folks about books tells me that just about everyone has at least one amazing book concept simmering in their brain. The problem is getting the concept out of their head and onto the page. Because authoring a book is tedious, requiring discipline and focus, and because the publishing process demands attention to detail and new technologies, too many cool book ideas never enter the market.

For those serious about developing their cool book idea into a real book, here are the steps to making it happen:

1- Get the concept on paper.
Go crazy brainstorming your cool book idea on paper in the form of an outline and clusters of rough prose. For now, don’t sweat the mechanics of writing. The concept or story is what sells. Get it out of your head and slap it into text that you, or a commissioned editor, can later reshape, enhance, and fine-tune. 

Don’t worry about someone stealing your cool book idea. Once you have written a draft of your concept, you automatically hold exclusive rights to the work. But to be safe, you can register your manuscript with the U.S. Copyright Office for a $65 fee.

2- Identify your target audience and get to know them as readers.
Become more familiar with the books your target market consumes. See what these folks are recommending on blogs and chats. Analyze book sales rankings in your genre for your market, entering data into a spreadsheet. Draw conclusions about what hooks and entertains your target audience. Figure out what they want to read more about. What are they curious about? Look for voids in current book listings. Can your book idea fill the gaps?

3- Roll up your sleeves and build the manuscript.
Go as far as you can in developing your book’s content. Stick to your outline and focus on your reader prospect as your write. Carve out time in your schedule at least several times each week to fill those journal pages or type on that laptop. Don’t let anything aside from life’s emergencies get in the way of the authoring time you’ve carved out of your have-to schedule. 

You can’t steer a parked car, and you can’t sell an unwritten manuscript. Like a mechanic building an engine, get going building the manuscript ― the book’s engine ― so you can drive your book to an audience. If you get stuck, and you can’t get that engine to turn, commission a professional writer, or ghostwriter, to build the manuscript (your book’s engine) for you.

4- Investigate your publishing options.
Should you self-publish? Should you work on getting an agent? Should you find a publisher who accepts unagented manuscript? 

Use the Writer’s Market to investigate which agents or publishers you’d like to contact with your book proposal. Create a list of agents/publishers, noting their specialties, proposal requirements, royalty rates, whether or not they accept simultaneous submissions, etc. Identify which agent or publisher you’d like to contact first about your cool book idea.

5- Develop and submit the book proposal.
As you’re actively building your manuscript, you should also develop the business proposal for your book. The proposal is your sales pitch to a publisher, convincing an acquisitions editor that your cool book idea will earn the publisher a financial return. You’re negotiating a business deal; visualize your concept in terms of business value, in addition to stepping into the shoes of your intended readership. 

Developing a solid proposal will do more than convince potential stakeholders that your book idea is truly a cool book idea. It will serve as an important reference in guiding your activities as the project manager of your book’s development. Even if you’re planning to self-publish the book, you ought to draft a well-thought-out proposal for successfully publishing and promoting your book on schedule and with attention to content quality and market appeal. Writing the proposal forces you to research your target readership, any competing works currently listed, and promotional techniques to win market share for your book. You’ll also prescribe for yourself a chapter outline and summary with a schedule for manuscript completion. 

Reference the publisher’s proposal-submission guidelines. Most nonfiction publishers require the following rubrics:

Background ― Tell the publisher why you want to write this book. Why must this information/story be delivered to the target market?

Market ― Tell the publisher about your audience. To whom are you writing this book? What is this market reading these days? What’s special about this market?

Rationale ― Convince the publisher that the intended market needs this book? Why will the target market embrace your proposed book?

Market Analysis ― Show the publisher the numbers. Present a table with sales figures on titles overlapping your proposed book’s topic and target readership. Provide your analysis of how and why currently listed titles seem to be attracting or repelling the readership. Based on book rankings, explain how your proposed book will fill a hole in current listings or meet a need or desire of the market.

About the Author ― In one to two short paragraphs, tell the publisher a little bit about yourself and your credentials for writing this book.

Table of Contents ― Decide on chapter titles and list them for the publisher with a one- to two-sentence description of the scope for each chapter.

Sample Chapter(s) ― Submit clean (copyedited and proofed) copy of one or two sample chapters with the proposal.

Submit the proposal to to your number-one publisher prospect or agent and hope for a positive response within one to three months.

6- Be patient. Stay positive.
Every author experiences rejection. Just about every book proposal is rejected at least once. The manuscripts of Stephen King and J.K. Rowling were rejected. Rejection is a normal part of the process in the book-publishing biz. If (when) you receive a rejection letter, simply file the rejection notice, cross that prospect of your list of publishers/agents, and press on with your cool book idea by preparing your proposal for the next prospect.

7- Rely on your “book mechanic.”
Once you have a plan in place for publishing the book, you’ll charge forward in completing and perfecting the manuscript. To achieve optimal market mileage for your book, rely on an editor, or “book mechanic.” You wouldn’t diagnose and repair an engine without the help of a trained and experienced mechanic, right? So don’t try to fix your book manuscript without professional help either. Whether your publisher assigns you an editor or you have to commission an editor yourself, it’s a good idea to incorporate the recommendations of experienced book mechanics, who’ve honed skills in wordsmithing and cultivated a savvy for the book biz. 

Your book mechanic may suggest minor tweaks or recommend a major overhaul of your manuscript. Don’t take it personal. All authors require a degree of help in crafting manuscript into smooth-running prose. The objective, trained eye of an experienced copyeditor assesses the manuscript for readability and adherence to the prescribed editorial standard. Just as a skilled mechanic can make an engine purr, so can a skilled editor develop a manuscript for the proper rhythm and tone of the market.  

8- Promote your book.
You’ll get to know your target readership better by developing the marketing sections of your proposal. You’ll also learn more about your market during the course of researching the subject of your book. A few months before your target publication date, you’ll want to begin promoting your book. Generate buzz for the upcoming release of your book. Get creative with memorable YouTube videos and clever tweeting. Launch buzz that is amazing or funny enough to go viral. Send out a press release to get reporters and reviewers interested in the book’s release. Start a blog on your book’s topic to build readership interest. Develop a book website with a POS link. Introduce yourself to area libraries and book stores, requesting a meet-the-author/book-signing event. Prepare posters and handouts for these events. Your publisher my offer you complete support in these promotional activities, or you may have to execute them on your own. Either way, make sure you have a promotional plan in place well in advance of your book’s pub date.

Need Help Getting Out of Park, Into Drive?

If you’re serious about getting your cool book idea to an audience, contact Powerplay Communications for a free consultation. We offer professional support for all stages of book development. Request an appointment by calling 248-650-2995 or submitting a request online.

You can’t steer a parked car, and you can’t sell an undeveloped manuscript. Like a mechanic building an engine, get going building the manuscript ― the book’s engine ― so you can drive your book to an audience. If you get stuck, and you can’t get that engine to turn over, commission a professional.


Don’t worry about someone stealing your cool book idea. Once you have written a draft of your concept, you automatically hold exclusive rights to the work. But to be safe, you can register your manuscript with the U.S. Copyright Office for a $65 fee.


To achieve optimal market mileage for your book, rely on an editor, or “book mechanic.” You wouldn’t diagnose and repair an engine without the help of a trained and experienced mechanic, right? So don’t try to fix your book manuscript without professional help either. 

Products for Writers by Powerplay Communications

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    Author

    Raised in the Motor City, Melissa Walsh is a writer and editorial guru with a background in book publishing, journalism, teaching, and applied engineering. Her identity is shared as a writer, mom,  history nerd, and hockey player. She also knows how to turn a wrench and use a scantool.

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