The Fragmented Audience
We’re wrapping up a two-week concentration on staying true
to yourself and your audience here on the YA Muses blog, and this is something
that I’ve battled with for the last few years as I’ve actively pursued
publication in the children’s book industry...
The truth is that I want to write everything, in every genre of children’s literature, and to
have audiences of varied ages and interests. But for the last decade, I’ve
worked hard to cultivate a “brand” as a particular type of professional writer
(travel, wildlife, adventure), while typing away on children’s book manuscripts
that sometimes (but don’t always) have anything to do with the other slice of my
writing life. Someone once told me to capitalize on my existing brand and write
books that fit in with it, because I already have a little niche and audience
and people who might potentially buy my book(s). If I want to sell a book, not just write a book, than
I should use what I’ve already written as a springboard. From a sales &
marketing standpoint, I can understand that perspective... Does my ambition to write all sorts of things for all ages fragment my so-called audience? Writing a chapter book
adventure series about a young traveling girl who studies animals in the wild could be fun, and perhaps more fitting with my little identity – but right now, that idea doesn’t feel fresh to me. I’m not inspired
to write it. Maybe it would sell, maybe it wouldn’t, and maybe it would, in theory, be a better match for my career than some other things I’m working on right now. But I
write from a place of passion and at this time in my life, I want to purse
other ideas in my manuscripts. Sometimes animals find their way onto the page,
but it’s not because I’ve forced them – It’s because they were prowling
along the escape key, or sniffing at the power cord, and suddenly they’ve pounced
into the narrative by their own doing.
But I can't help but wonder sometimes if I’m stretching myself too thin (or too big?) with these life goals and not
only confusing myself and potential agents or publishers, but my (hopefully)
one-day audience. If I’m one type of writer, can I successfully be another?
Why am I fragmenting my audience into little slices of readership – Should
I be attempting to grow a particular fan base or something? Is it too ambitious
to want to publish a picture book and a middle grade and a YA novel – from thrillers to fantasies to contemporary
to horror? Who exactly is my audience then? And if, God-willing, I debut with
one thing, will anyone want to buy my next thing, even if it’s completely
different? All my readers won't – or might not? – fit into the smooth skin of this whole career pomegranate. WHO IS MY AUDIENCE? Help!
I find comfort in the fact that countless successful writers
have pursued their own topics of passion and wrote books that spanned genres
and audiences. It’s okay to want to write lots of different things and reach
different kinds of people. Maybe I won’t achieve this overnight (or, let’s be
real, get published at all), but I
can try. I loved how Bret phrased it in his blog post this week: “Forget all but one person... and whisper
your story to them. Urgently.” I’m one of five kids – number four
– and that person I write for has always been my younger sister. No matter
what creative project I’m working on the time, she’s always that person at her
varying stages of youth.
Who is my audience?
I don’t really know – That audience shifts, and grows, and changes with
each project I’m working on. In reality, today it might be one person, and tomorrow
another, but in my head, it’s always my little sister, at age five, and age
ten, and age sixteen, while I’m putting pen to page.
Here’s what I hope for: That as I’m writing, I stay true to
the fabric of each character and his or her particular story, and that that is what fuses a connection with a
reader. Will I ever truly have a collective readership for my published work
one day? Is it okay to have a fragmented audience? I think so… I think it’s
about tapping into the truth of the specific work and considering the audience
in each respective creative piece. The same argument could be made not only in terms of audience and genre, but for craft technique and execution. When I heard that writer Stephanie Perkins was writing a slasher novel – not a light, funny, contemporary YA romance – my first emotion wasn't disappointment, but intrigue. I thought, "Whoa! I can't wait to see what she does with that!" Sure, not every reader is going to enjoy every book written by an author… But a book's audience isn't always the same as a writer's fan base. A writer's passion and authenticity must be at the project's core – That’ll be what speaks to readers, not a stale piece written because we thought "they" (readers, editors, agents, other writers, family) expected
it. So maybe one day I’ll write a book that is more quote-unquote “in-line” with what
people might expect of me, but right now I’m challenging myself with totally
different ideas. So I’m giving myself the permission to stretch beyond my comfort zone, and the
challenge to dream big, and hopefully there’s a reader (or two… or three…) out
there who will join me for the ride.
6 comments
Love this! I've definitely been thinking about my "brand" and my audience as I deal with revising my debut while slowly finding my way into the book I hope will be next... Interestingly—and maybe this will resonate with you, Jodi, as an oft-published freelancer—my debut has nothing to do with my "brand" as a freelance writer (all dance publications), whereas the new book I'm working on IS a dance book. I think your instinct to follow your passion is the right way to go. And maybe, in the future, you will come up with the perfect book that ties into all the nonfiction writing you've done!
I love this, Jodi. As writers, we can be authentic - unlike many other career pursuits. We get to write the rules or break them if we wish. Follow your heart and passion.
Have enjoyed this series of being true to oneself as a writer. Thanks.
An interesting, and generous, post, Jodi. Love the quotes from other Muses. My take on this question? We hopefully have long and exciting writing careers ahead of us, I would hate to be restricted to repeating myself.
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I am often questioning what I write, and whether I want to keep writing the same thing. My writing heroes are the ones who break out of their routines and try new genres & approaches.
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