Skip to main content

About Me

My photo
Tereza
Hello! Thank you for visiting my blog! My name is Tereza and I am a fifth year MSPC student at Clark University. I completed my undergraduate degree in English and History with a minor in creative writing. Outside of school, I enjoy reading, crocheting, playing with my kitten, and working on next steps for my novel!

#PitMad: Tradition Publishing Meets Twitter

Have you ever seen #PitMad on your Twitter feed?

We all find ourselves scrolling through social media at times. And then we are bombarded by various messages from companies, celebrities, and our friends at every turn. And on Twitter those messages only have so many characters to grasp your attention. They cannot ramble on and on like they can on a blog, which can lead to us tuning out the messages we don't want to hear. I am extremely guilty of this. However, every once in awhile I stumble across something that piques my interest. In this case it was #PitMad.

Our twitter feeds are full of the content we decide to follow. We pick topics and Twitter gives us recommendations. My personal twitter account follows publishing companies, editors, literary agents, and fellow writers. You could say that Twitter is the LinkedIn of my writing career. When I stumbled across #PitMad I was immediately intrigued. I saw multiple posts with variations of the phrase "are you doing PitMad this year, let me know!" So, like all of us, I wanted to be involved.

I clicked here to find out more about it, to find out what it is. According to the organization's website "Pitch Wars is a volunteer-run mentoring program where published/agented authors, editors, or industry interns choose one writer each to mentor. Mentors read the entire manuscript and offer suggestions on how to make the manuscript shine for the agent showcase." This organization prepares new authors who want to break into the book world by preparing and leading them through the process. And the best part, this all happens on Twitter. In a short tweet you describe your book and you see what happens.

Why are we talking about Pitch Wars? We are talking about Pitch Wars because someone out there was listening, talking, helping, energizing, and embracing the individuals on Twitter and created this organization. This is the main topic of Chapter Ten "Tapping the groundswell with twitter", of the Groundswell: winning in a world transformed by social technologies by Charlene Li and Josh Bernoff. The chapter goes on to discuss the importance of five key strategies to engage with the groundswell on Twitter and all other social media platforms. #PitMad seems to be how the publishing world is tapping into the groundswell using Twitter.

Listening: "Unless you listen to Twitter, you won't know what you're getting into" (Groundswell, 202). Pitch Wars listened to Twitter through the creation of their organization to give users the ability to connect with fellow writers and receive a mentor from a social media platform! Talk about breaking down barriers!

Talking: Pitch Wars has it's own Twitter page were all questions can be directed to: @pitchwars and individuals receive responses on comments from the organization.

Energizing: Pitch Wars has a blog! Pitch Wars has a Twitter! Pitch Wars has events! Pitch Wars has people talking about it and promoting it and submitting to it because they believe in the process and the organization. Pitch Wars created sub hashtags for easier organization of work! Pitch Wars does whatever it needs to to support its consumers and make them happier to be part of the organization.


This directly leads into helping because Pitch Wars engaged with its users directly where they were because why recreate the wheel if you can just join your community! Pitch Wars engages with its community by taking in new ideas and criticism and updating. One of the most recent updates was a way to uplift Black voices, which they described on their website.



Li and Bernoff understood the importance of Twitter, meeting consumers where they were at, and engaging with them on social media platforms. #PitWar may have been created a year after Groundswell: winning in a world transformed by social technologies was published, but I still believe Li and Bernoff would be impressed with the work they have done. As Li and Bernoff said "Twitter may well be among the simplest, most powerful social tools you can use". What an interesting application to find of our learning after fifteen minutes of scrolling online.

Have any organizations listened to you on Twitter? Energized you?
Please tell me in the comments! I want to hear your stories too!

Comments

  1. Hi, Tereza. I'm glad to hear that you like writing and contact your favorite writers through social media such as Twitter. I also like writing very much, but I don't write now. I hope we can have a chance to discuss literature together. This semester, I was able to browse Twitter, YouTube, Facebook and other social media by taking this course. Twitter brings all kinds of voices together and makes them heard. As you said, people listen, talk, help, inspire, embrace and create organizations on Twitter. People listen to and accept new ideas, criticize and update by interacting on Twitter. But I think there is also a disadvantage. For example, a writer who writes on Twitter, his original thinking is like this, but many people leave messages to him saying that they want to see the ending they want, and he will probably change his original thinking for the purpose of making others like him more. We may not see his original thinking.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Amount of Money I Have Spent on Books Since the Pandemic Started is Astronomical

Warning: Reading this blog may make you spent an absurd amount of money on books, just so you can try to read them before they are spoiled for you by Tik Tok users Additional side effects may include buying an author's entire bibliography This is the  God Tier Book  Tag. It may only be used for your finest, your freshest, your most scrumdidiliumptious books. Many users who find themselves on the Book side of the Tik Tok algorithm, or BookTok as it has become known, may be quite used to this sound, and sounds like it, popping up all over their For You Pages. These popular sounds include voice overs of someone asking for people to show their "most underrated book" or a book "they would love to read again for the first time". Or my personal favorite "the book that made you cry" which, more often than not, ends up being The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller. BookTok started off as a place for individuals to come together to talk about the books they enjo...

Ben and Jerry's: Into the World of Ice Cream

Do you still like eating ice cream in the fall or winter?   Every time of the year is time for ice cream, even with fall upon us. Its a nice frozen treat that we can put on top of all of our favorite fall sweets, like apple crisp, pumpkin pie, or maybe even in a nice cup of hot chocolate. Yum! My favorite flavor is Ben and Jerry's mint chocolate cookie. There is nothing wrong with a nice pint of ice cream, is there? Well there might be. Ben and Jerry's social media presence disappeared for two months. On Instagram Ben and Jerry's posted a reel of their new vegan thumbprint cookies on May 18, 2021. The company then was silent, completely inactive, until July 19, 2021. The first post upon the company's return was simple, here it is: Ben and Jerry's was founded in 1978 in a renovated gas station in Burlington, Vermont. The ice cream shop grew in popularity, spreading to more cities and being distributed in mom and pop shops in pints. Now it is the large brand we know ...