16 08 2013
Behind every good web page are codes only the search engines read. These codes help the search engines match your page with requests from their searchers.
A weblog by Simon Kolz
16 08 2013
Behind every good web page are codes only the search engines read. These codes help the search engines match your page with requests from their searchers.
14 08 2013
Whenever someone suggests you do a book signing and you do not want to, here are five reasons you can give them:
4 08 2013
Play a bigger game with your book sales by expanding your audiences at local or nonlocal book fairs, festivals or trade shows. Can’t afford a booth or table, rent a space on someone else’s table and volunteer to be back for their book. In fact, rent a corner at various different tables in the same […]
21 07 2013
A clever title is great if it is clear, but a clear title is always preferable. The best? A clear and clever title. A shorter title is better than a longer one. Your reader will spend only four seconds on the cover. While some long titles have succeeded, usually the shorter, the better.
18 07 2013
David Conlin McLeod will soon release his fourth book, the prequel to the Dragon’s Tear Chronicle that began with Dancing With The Moon. David has also published Two Past Twilight and The Audition. I’m a reviewer and fan of David’s books, Two Past Twilight, http://www.myshelf.com/horror/04/twopasttwilight.htm, Dancing With The Moon, http://www.myshelf.com/horror/03/dancingwiththemoon.htm, and The Audition.
17 07 2013
“Society is always taken by surprise at any new example of common sense.”
11 07 2013
Imagine cuddling up with your small child to look at a picture book together that is interactive, musical, responsive and talks to you?
27 06 2013
Does your online marketing campaign have a flat tire? Or is it more like a slow leak?
22 06 2013
If you haven’t realized the success you wanted last year, here’s a way to reap the harvest with 86% improvement!
22 06 2013
We all know the familiar adage “if it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck…” it’s nearly always a duck.