About Rachel

  • Website: http://rachelhorwitz.com
  • Email: email
  • Biography: "I want adventure in the great wide somewhere, I want it more than I can tell. And for once it might be grand, to have someone understand, I want so much more than what they've got planned."

Posts by Rachel:

2

How to Use Twitter to Your Advantage

Posted by Rachel on September 24, 2012 in current event, how-to |

There are so many writers on twitter that your first course of action should be to connect with as many of them as possible. Regardless of what route you’re taking, or where you’re located on that journey, the opportunity to build a community with likeminded people has never been easier. Now that you’re on twitter and have started following writers, review these five steps to learn how to use the 140 character platform to your advantage:

Step 1: Set A Follower Goal- I suggest taking this in baby-steps. If your goal is 50k you’re not getting there overnight. Set smaller goals to meet until you reach your ultimate number.

Step 2: Create Relationships– Don’t just talk at people, talk with them. Find out what your followers like and dislike, where they’re from, what they’re writing. That’s the fastest way to make lasting connections.

Step 3: Provide Interesting Content– Tweet things that your followers will want to read, retweet or respond to. This content could change depending on what your purpose is on twitter (ie- making friends, promoting your book, providing help to other writers, etc).

Step 4: Stay Engaged– You can’t drop the ball halfway through the game, so continue shifting and testing your content to change with seasons and current events. Keep at it and you’ll see a return.

Step 5: Develop Relationships– It’s most important that you keep in contact with the people you connect with. These people could become reviewers, beta readers, confidants, reliable go-to’s for suggestions or best friends, so invest in them.

This isn’t a foolproof plan that will work for everyone no matter what you’re saying in order to create a strong twitter presence. However, if you’re conscious about your plan and execute it in a poised manner, you’re likely to succeed. The biggest thing to remember is not to overload on any of these steps and know that twitter success comes in moderation.

I hope these are helpful tips to anyone looking to improve their experience on twitter. What have you found that’s worked for your twitter platform?

1

Circus

Posted by Rachel on September 17, 2012 in animals, writer's sketch |

It’s nothing new for an elephant to be doing a handstand. At least not around here. Nor is anyone surprised by the cats on trapeze or the dogs that juggle. It is a little strange that my great-grandmother insists on being the clown, though, but I suppose that’s fairly natural, too. If you visit our […]

6

The Importance of Food

Posted by Rachel on September 14, 2012 in description, foodie tips, musings, writing |

Mountains of mashed potatoes. Waterfalls of chocolate cascading over brownies. A steaming hot turkey leg. The sweet bite of a crisp Fall apple. Mmmm…I made sure not to write this when I was hungry. The food in your story is important. No, really, it is. For any genre. Food combines the sense of taste, smell […]

0

More GUTGAA Fun!

Posted by Rachel on September 10, 2012 in current event, discovery, writing |

GUTGAA (the “Gearing Up To Get An Agent” blogfest hosted by Deana Barnhart) has a game of tag going on. I haven’t played tag in years! I was never very good at it. I’d always fall over or run into stuff. So this is perfect. I was tagged by two other wonderful ya fantasy writers, Alexandra Alessandri, Summer Heacock and Kimberly Chase. […]

Copyright © 2010-2026 You Are What You Write All rights reserved.
This site is using the Desk Mess Mirrored theme, v2.5, from BuyNowShop.com.