Writers often find inspiration in their favorite authors but must differentiate between inspiration and imitation to succeed. Initially emulating others can stifle creativity, but finding one’s unique voice is essential. Embracing authenticity leads to fulfilling storytelling, allowing writers to express themselves without the burden of replicating someone else’s style.
As writers, we naturally gravitate toward particular styles that inspire us. We all have our favorites—those authors whose words resonate so deeply that we can’t help but be influenced by them. But there’s a fine line between inspiration and imitation, and learning to recognize that difference can make or break your writing career.
In the beginning, this was my struggle as I moved toward taking a more serious approach to my writing career. I attempted to become a modern-day version of Edgar Allen Poe (my absolute fave by the way). I thought, “This worked well for him-albeit posthumously-so surely this will benefit me as well. So why not give it a try?”
I’ve since learned that although emulating your favorite author is how many writers start out, it rarely works in the long run. No carbon copies allowed. I became so caught up in trying to use another writer’s formula that I became stifled and stagnant, unable to complete my own works.
In my frustration that I was doing it (writing) wrong, I almost gave up. Imitation is not the sincerest form of flattery it is a crutch.
Developing Your Voice
As aspiring writers, we must develop our own voices. In this digital age, we have tools, platforms, and exposure opportunities that our predecessors never dreamed of. But this blessing is also a curse. The waters have become muddied with self-appointed gurus and experts, making the landscape confusing and, at times, daunting.
Anyone with a laptop and internet access can post whenever and whatever they want. It’s easy to find yourself drowned out by the noise of fan fiction and poorly crafted writing. (I have nothing against fan fiction—my first online posts were Harry Potter fanfics, some of my best work, actually, though they’re in desperate need of editing.)
How I Found My Voice
So how did I find my voice?
I stopped trying to reinvent the wheel and began to write what felt natural to me. I stopped trying to get into the minds of King, Poe, and Flynn and began to write the sort of stories that I would love to read. I create the characters that I found fascinating, and every one of them embodies a bit of me.
I also stopped trying to force myself into a specific genre. Now, as someone relatively new to the writing game, I don’t know if this approach is “correct” or not, but it has worked for me thus far and allowed me to get back to what matters most: the story.
I feel I’ve freed myself and truly opened up to a world of great possibility. And that’s what finding your voice really means—giving yourself permission to write authentically, without the pressure of living up to someone else’s legacy.
Your turn. Have you struggled with finding your voice as a writer? Sound off in the comments, The Weirdo wants to know!
The book is written, cover design is done and that bad boy is published. Great sense of accomplishment. Check. Now, what’s next? Short answer…selling. In order to sell you have to market your book. Honestly, marketing and selling Taming Armand and Bloody Endings along with building a solid following has been harder than actually writing the books. Sweating it out over the keys is the easy part. Once you hit publish the real work starts.
I will go into this blog with a note to the reader. These are all actions that I have recently begun to undertake. As a green as spinach author (with the first book, I hope by now that I at least have a little seasoning, although still a bit bland, LOL) I thought if I publish the book they will come. My writing alone will bring the reader to the yard so to speak.
Arrogantly I thought I blast it out once at the onset and the buyers will come. I would gain a mass following, quit the rat race and write full time in a surf shack in Hawaii. Hmmm…not with the previous strategy which was no strategy.
Hopefully, this blog will help you and continue to aid me in this publishing journey.
I was two books in when I thought ‘hey, maybe I should market my books to increase sells.’ If you laughed, I assure you we have no qualms. At this stage of the indie publishing game, it’s very intuitive to think how do I market? How do I get my book or story out there? How do I build an email list? These were not questions that came naturally to me.
The Marketing Reality: It’s a Marathon, not a sprint.
Here’s the thing nobody tells you: marketing your indie book isn’t a one-and-done deal. It’s an ongoing relationship you build with your readers, one awkward social media post at a time. But don’t worry – we’re all figuring it out together. Your lack of sells doesn’t mean you’re a bad writer, it’s only means no one knows your product exists, and you as the producer of that product have to make people aware or else they don’t buy.
Start With Your Author Platform
Before you even think about paid ads get your foundation solid. Spend a little time and build an author website. Even a simple one-page site with your bio, books, and contact info beats having nothing. It gives people someone to go to find you.
You can do this for free. Now if you want to get fancy and have the website as your name or domain of your choosing you will have to pay, but if the budget is tight I would suggest you go with the free option. Trust me no one (aside from you) will care that your website name has something attached for instance .wordpress or the platform of your choosing.
2. Choose 2-3 social media platforms max.
Two to three social media platforms are recommended but I would say choose the number of platforms that you will realistically frequently update. If you hate a particular platform don’t use it. Although we are conducting business we still want to have a little fun and at the very least enjoy the content we make and share. Pick platforms where your readers actually hang out.
Facebook: Still huge for connecting with readers, especially in genre groups
Twitter/X: Good for connecting with other authors and industry folks
TIP: Share your writing process, not just “buy my book” posts. People love behind-the-scenes content – show your messy desk, your coffee addiction, your cat interrupting your writing sessions.
Highlight: Don’t spread yourself thin trying to be everywhere at once. This was a mistake I made and it only lead to burn out and inconsistencies all around.
3.Start collecting emails from day one.
My email list is in-progress. It can be difficult asking people to provide their emails. It seems naughty. Or we ignore the opportunity to collect that valuable and key piece of information. But it doesn’t have to be awkward nor hard. Use a free service like Mailchimp or ConvertKit to capture reader interest.
The Power of the Email List (Yes, Really)
I know, I know – email lists sound about as exciting as watching paint dry. But here’s the truth: social media platforms can disappear or change their algorithms overnight. Your email list? That’s yours forever.
Quick email list building tips:
Offer a free short story or chapter as a “reader magnet”
Include signup links in the back of your books
Mention your newsletter in every social media bio
4. Reviews: The Holy Grail (And How to Get Them)
Reviews are social proof that your book doesn’t completely suck. I am in need of more reviews I’m sure you are too; here’s some ways to get some or to get more.
Ask family and friends to leave honest reviews (but follow platform guidelines)
Join review exchange groups with other indie authors
Send advance reader copies (ARCs) to book bloggers and BookTubers
Follow up with readers: Include a gentle request for reviews in your book’s back matter
5. Network Like Your Career Depends on It (Because It Does)
The indie author community is incredibly supportive once you find your tribe. It is a bit ironic that what we do for the most part is a solo endeavor, but all the other parts of writing does require some interaction with community. Nobody understands nor will listen to you moan and groan about editing and cover designs like a fellow author. Trust me on this one. I would suggest:
Join Facebook groups for your genre
Attend virtual book events and author conferences
Collaborate with other authors: Cross-promotion, anthology submissions, guest blog posts
Support other indie authors: Like, share, and review their work – it often comes back around
6.Take it Easy on the Pockets
You don’t need a Hollywood budget to market effectively. Keep it simple in the early stages.
Free or Cheap Options:
BookFunnel and StoryOrigin promotions: Group giveaways and newsletter swaps
Genre-specific Facebook groups: Share when allowed, but engage genuinely first
Local opportunities: Library events, book clubs, writing groups
Podcast guesting: Many book podcasts are always looking for author interviews
Now only you can decide when and if you need to spend money on marketing. When you’re ready to spend a little here are some helpful hints:
BookBub Featured Deals: The gold standard, but competitive
Amazon ads: Start small ($5-10/day) and learn as you go
Newsletter swaps: Pay to be featured in other authors’ newsletters
Book promotion sites: Bargain Booksy, Robin Reads, Fussy Librarian
### Track What Works (And Ditch What Doesn’t)
Keep it simple but keep track:
Which social media posts get the most engagement?
Where are your sales coming from?
What promotional activities actually move the needle?
Use free tools like Google Analytics for your website and the built-in insights on social platforms to see what’s working.
The Long Game Mindset
Marketing your indie books isn’t about finding that one magic trick that makes you an overnight sensation. It’s about consistently showing up, building genuine relationships with readers, and slowly but surely growing your audience.
Some months you’ll sell three books. Some months you might sell thirty. Both are wins when you’re building something from scratch.
Remember: every bestselling author started exactly where you are now – with one book and a whole lot of hope. The difference between those who make it and those who don’t? They kept going, kept learning, and kept connecting with readers.
Be kind to yourself. If something doesn’t work adjust and try again.
Now stop reading about marketing and go do some actual marketing. Your books aren’t going to promote themselves (unfortunately).
What marketing strategies have worked best for you? What’s been your biggest challenge? Drop a comment below – the Weirdo wants to know!
Alright, taking another brief pause on the Indie Publishing Series to issue a challenge, albeit, it is for myself. But please feel free to join in and revisit this post to provide an update on your progress.
As I write this, I find myself in one of two camps:
I have officially crossed the blurred line between insanity and sanity
I have reached another level in my writing journey where I want to push myself and put out another book this year
In my twisted sense of humor, I’m good with number 1. (Remember, I’m a huge Edgar Allan Poe fan, so creeping into insanity isn’t all that unappealing—just being honest.) But I’ll believe that it’s more so number 2.
The Goal and The Why
The mission is to write a minimum of 30,000 words of a manuscript by the end of August.
Why? Honestly, I believe that I have been lazy. Coasting. Using every excuse and then some to do the bare minimum. I say I want to do this full time, and yet the amount of time I put forth in writing is less than four hours per week.
Simply put: it’s pathetic. My attempts at building my writing career into what I know it can be are laughable. I’ve been collecting excuses instead of creating content, and it’s time for that to change.
Criteria for Success
Initially the ideas was to write 30k of my latest manuscript but I did tweak things a little bit. Now, there’s no hard limit to this 30K challenge, and what I mean by that is I’m giving myself some wiggle room.
The goal is to write 30,000 words for the month of August—period.
The reason I give myself this caveat is that I have several short stories in question that will add to that collective word count. They’re already in progress and deserve to be part of this challenge. They are deserving of the same level of effort at my manuscript.
Now, The Approach
I’m treating this challenge seriously at the same time embracing the natural chaos of the creative process. I am well aware some days might produce solid material with the scenes flowing like rushing rivers. Then other days might be a bit, less say stagnant.
Mainly this challenge is about consistency showing up when there is no inspiration or motivation.
This isn’t just about hitting a word count—it’s about building sustainable writing habits and proving to myself that I can commit to the craft with the dedication it deserves.
Why This Matters
This 30K goal about more than word count—it’s about proving to myself that I can stop treating my writing like a side hobby.
Challenges that push us outside our comfort zone are usually exactly what we need. I’d rather attempt something ambitious and learn from the process than continue making excuses for why I’m not progressing. Excuses why nothing is being produced.
If I happen to lose a bit more of my sanity along the way? Well, most writers are a little eccentric anyway.
Moving Forward
So here I am, ready to commit to this challenge and see what happens. This is about more than just hitting a number—it’s about developing the discipline and consistency that a serious writing career demands.
The goal is clear: 30,000 words in 30 days. No more excuses, no more coasting. Just work that needs to be done.
Time to get started.
Sound off in the comments, will you too accept the challenge? The Weirdo wants to know.