by p.m. terrell, @BookEmNC
I’ve wondered lately why I’ve had no time to blog. Then the reason occurred to me: I’m organizing a Writer’s Conference and Book Fair.
The Book ‘Em conference scheduled for February 25, 2012 is the tenth one and the first to be held in Lumberton, North Carolina. It’s shaping up to be our largest, most successful one to date. And that isn’t by accident. It’s the result of hundreds of hours by dozens of volunteers.
Laying the Groundwork: I began lining up community support several years ago for Book ‘Em North Carolina, an event to raise funds for literacy programs in Robeson County. We gathered support from the City of Lumberton (always important to get local leaders involved), the Lumberton Area Visitors Bureau (instrumental for publicity efforts), area businesses (sponsorships), civic groups (volunteers), schools (school-age attendance and volunteers with boundless energy), non-profits (to whom the literacy funds will go), among others. When we were offered Robeson Community College for the location, we were ready to get started.
Lining Up the Authors: We began contacting authors in March 2011. Two librarians, Katie Huneycutt and Lisa Matthews, helped me email authors and post blogs to raise awareness of the Book ‘Em event. Thanks to Katie, we lined up two New York Times best-selling authors as headliners: Carla Neggers and Michael Palmer (necessary to attract large crowds). I developed our website, posting every author’s picture, bio and links as they registered. Over time, I added dozens of informational pages.
Sponsorships: We solicited businesses for sponsorships, instrumental for promoting and marketing the event. We lined up pillars of the community, including University of North Carolina, Southeastern Regional Medical Center, BB&T and a host of businesses who donated $250 to $2,000 apiece. We secured grants from the Lumberton Area Visitor’s Center to cover promotional efforts and Kiwanis Club of Lumberton, who provided money to buy children’s books to give away.
Publicity: We began periodic press releases in the spring, which were picked up by mainstream and Internet media. We obtained media sponsors, including Lumberton Magazine and Robeson Living Magazine, and have been working steadily with newspapers, television and radio stations. We secured billboards around the state, which will roll out after the holidays. Our big promotional campaign begins January 2. Brochures are in all the NC Welcome Centers on I-95 and with local businesses; flyers will be distributed with all Lumberton utility bills; and our full Talks Schedule will be published in the January edition of Lumberton Magazine.
Logistics: The conference and book fair features more than 75 authors selling and signing their books, which means we must have tables and adequate space not only for the authors but for traffic flow. We’ve divided two buildings into fiction, non-fiction, young adult and a special Children’s Corner, meticulously measuring hallways and classrooms. We will have five sets of talks going on simultaneously: five publishers have joined us for the Writer’s Conference, and there will be panel discussions and solo talks for every genre – plus readings for small children. Each talk requires a moderator; each hallway and conference room requires a Team Captain and host of volunteers. There will be an Author’s Lounge and the college cafeteria will be open for attendees, requiring a Food Committee. We’ll have greeters, music in the cafeteria, events in the Children’s Corner, raffle tickets, and centralized cash registers, each requiring a team of volunteers.
Contests: We kicked off short story contests throughout the Robeson County Public School System and Robeson Community College. Entries will be judged by faculty and finalists will be decided by published authors. Winners will be announced at Book ‘Em.
Afterward: When the event is over, our work is not: we’ll clean up the space used, reconcile all the funds received, pay authors and publishers their portion of the book sales, award the non-profits funding for literacy efforts, and donate remaining books to literacy groups.
Then we start the whole process over.
Book ‘Em North Carolina will be held on the last Saturday of each February in Lumberton, NC. The event is FREE and open to the public; doors open at 9:30 am on February 25, 2012. A portion of every book sale will be donated to the Dolly Parton Imagination Library of Robeson County, Communities In Schools, and Friends of the Robeson County Public Library for literacy campaigns for all ages. The Book ‘Em Foundation was founded by author p.m.terrell, who wrote this blog, and Police Officer Mark Kearney, to raise awareness of the link between high crime rates and high illiteracy rates.
Thanks, p.m.! I’m going to be at the Book ‘Em, North Carolina conference, too—along with L. Diane Wolfe and Alex Cavanaugh. If you’re in the area, hope you’ll drop by. :) ~~Elizabeth
Elizabeth – Thanks for hosting Trish.
Trish – Thanks for your insights on pulling together a conference like this. Definitely not for the squeamish! I’m sure this’ll be a terrific conference.
Thanks so much for coming by today, Trish, and giving us an inside look at what goes into setting up a conference! Looking forward to going to this one.
Trish has been working SO hard on this! I’ve been coordinating the school visits and contest, but I can’t imagine the amount of work she’s put into it. She told me yesterday that it’s been a full time job since last spring.
It’s going to be big. And scary.
Thanks for allowing me to guest blog for you today, Elizabeth! I’m looking forward to seeing you at Book ‘Em North Carolina.
Margot, you’re absolutely right – this is not for the squeamish. I sometimes wonder if anyone who hasn’t done a book event like this realizes just how much is involved.
Diane, it’s volunteers like you who are making my work easier. You’ve taken a lot off my shoulders by handling the school contests and appearances there!
And Alex, it is going to be big but only scary in the horror section!
Wow – this really sounds like a great event. I wish I had heard about it earlier as i would have tried to be an author with ya’ll, especially since I’m trying to get my state series in schools to supplement social studies curricula. I also write YA and short stories so would fit in several categories. Trish, would you please consider having me as an author next year? I can be reached at eeldering (at) gmail (dot) com. Elizabeth, thanks for postng this. I probably won’t be able to attend this year but hopefully next year as an exhibitor. E :)
Elysabeth Eldering
Author of Finally Home, a YA paranormal mystery
“The Proposal” (an April Fools Day story), a humorous romance ebook
“The Tulip Kiss”, a paranormal romance ebook
“Bride-and-Seek”, a paranormal romance ebook
“Butterfly Halves”, a YA fantasy ebook
http://elysabethsstories.blogspot.com
http://eeldering.weebly.com
Ma America, The Travelin’ Maven
Author of the JGDS, 50-state, mystery, trivia series and “Train of Clues” (a mystery destination story and predecessor to the JGDS state series)
Where will the adventure take you next?
http://jgdsseries.blogspot.com
http://jgdsseries.weebly.com
Hey Trish! This is a must-save, step-by-step. Thanks for the tips!
Thanks for the comments! Elysabeth, that would be awesome if you could participate in the 2013 event. We’ll open it up for registration by April 1. We’d originally planned to take author registrations through 12/31/11 for the 2012 event but we received such an overwhelming response that we had to start turning authors away in early September. That bodes very well for how successful we expect this event to be!
Karen, perhaps in the future, you’ll want to travel eastward for a bit of spring-like weather in February – though I hear parts around you were warmer than Miami this week?
Visiting from WU. So many interesting links. I hardly know where to start.