Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Make the Grade in the Homeschool Market



 
The academic market is an opportune segment for publishers because it uses books as a foundation for its existence. It includes, but is not limited to schools, foundations, research organizations, professional associations, libraries, students, and individual educators. This marketplace impacts people of all ages, from preschoolers to professionals. Regardless of grade, age, major, and choice of home, public, or private education, people’s need for books is ubiquitous.
 
But, you say, “Public schools are closed, and no one is sure when they will reopen. How can this be an opportune time to sell to them?” The answer is to sell to the homeschool sub-segment of the academic market. 
 
There are over two million homeschooled students in the United States, and the homeschooling trend is expanding as parents are looking more closely at the quality of education their children are receiving, as well as at the environment in which it is being administered.
 
Homeschooling is not one, homogenous market, but is a market comprised of manageable segments, each with diverse buying needs. The following is a partial list of several of these smaller, homeschool market segments. 
  • Online Directories. There are online directories that serve as homeschooling resource guides. They offer newsletters, support groups, message boards, tips-of- the-week, products, and online courses. Use these directories such as Homeschool.com (www.homeschool.com) to bring exposure to you and your book, which will bring you one step closer to another sale.
  • Publications. The media also serves this market segment. For example, there is the Home Education Magazine, the LINK Homeschool Newspaper www.homeschoolnewslink.com), and Homeschooling Today (www.homeschooltoday.com). Additionally, the Old Schoolhouse Magazine (www.thehomeschoolmagazine.com) provides many ways to reach homeschooling families. It has a store, a print magazine with a circulation of 40,000, and three websites, including homeschoolblogger.com, which boasts 10 million page views.
  • State, National, and International Associations. There are many sales opportunities at state-level homeschool associations. Most states have a parent-educator association, or a homeschool association, network, or organization. Examples include:
Additionally, there are national homeschooling organizations such as the National Homeschool Association (https://nationalhomeschoolassociation.com), the Association for Experiential Education (www.aee.org). You may be able to utilize NHA’s free email newsletter and discussion list to spread the word about your books to homeschoolers, media contacts, and education officials. He also used NHA’s list of support groups and organizations as a resource for setting up personal presentations, when appropriate.
 
Finally, there are also international homeschooling associations. The following are a sampling of such organizations around the world:
  • Book Fairs and Conventions. When the market for trade shows and conventions reopens, homeschooling book fairs and conventions will present excellent opportunities to sell books, and they occur annually across the country. For example, the Homeschool Fair (www.homeschoolfair.com ) occurs each Memorial Day in Ontario, California.
If you look diligently and strategically you may find a great source of revenue in non-traditional segments of the academic market, like homeschools. Remember to break the mass market down into manageable sub-groups and keep looking for new places in which you can sell your books.
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Brian Jud is the author of How to Make Real Money Selling Books, the Executive Director of the Association of Publishers for Special Sales (APSS – www.bookapss.org), and the administrator of Book Selling University (www.booksellinguniversity.com) Contact Brian at brianjud@bookmarketing.com or www.premiumbookcompany.com.
 

Saturday, June 13, 2020

Neither... or?

From: Daily Writing Tips

 
Because I was taught a long time ago that either is used with or, and neither is used with nor, constructions like these bother me:
“Neither Mrs Thatcher or I, would have any time for the sisterhood approach” says Ann Widdecombe
No further details have been released, and neither Kim or Kanye have mentioned any engagement on Twitter.
Even though this is a rule of which I am absolutely certain, I did my usual warm-up research before writing about the errors in these quotations. I discovered that not everyone who writes about usage agrees on the immutability of this rule.
First I looked up neither in the OED. There I found an entry for neither...or. All it says is:
Numerous grammarians from the mid-18th century onwards criticize the use of or rather than nor as ungrammatical and improper.”
This note is followed by twelve examples of the use of neither...or from 1395 to 1997.
Next stop, Merriam-Webster:
neither: used as a function word before two or more words, phrases, or clauses joined by nor or sometimes by or...
In addition to allowing or in the regular definition, M-W gives a further nod to the neither...or usage in a note:
Although use with or is neither archaic nor wrong, the conjunction neither is usually followed by nor.
Leaving the dictionaries, I looked in at the Columbia Journalism Review where I found an article by Merrill Perlman which quotes various authorities and concludes with a litany of contradictory advice as to what is correct or incorrect usage with neither certain to leave any reader confused.
So, is “neither...or” all right to use? No, not in modern usage.
People who have the leisure and inclination to argue about such things are free to do so. Those who just want to write inoffensive standard English are advised to go with the conventional rule that either is used with or and neither is used with nor.
You don’t have to take my word for it:
If two or more particular things or people are being mentioned, neither is followed by nor, not by or...--Penguin Writer’s Manual (2002)
Saguaro Books LLC sides with Penguin Writer's Manual