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Finding Opportunity in a Teacup
by Paula Margulies
I recently read Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Relin’s Three
Cups of Tea, the fascinating non-fiction account of how
Mortenson, a mountain climber and American nurse, came to build
fifty-five schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan. In one of my
favorite parts of the book, Mortenson describes a 1998 talk he gave
in a sports shop in Apple Valley, Minnesota, where the store staff
was so busy he had to set up the seating -- over a hundred folding
chairs -- himself. After weeks of publicity, including posters at a
local college, an AM radio morning show interview, and segments in
the local papers, he faced an audience of only three people: two
store employees and a single customer, who hovered at the back of
the room. Though he was dejected at the small showing and exhausted
by his continual efforts at fundraising, Mortenson decided to give
his talk anyway and began showing slides of K2’s infamous summit and
the eighteen schools he’d built so far in Pakistan’s remote and
impoverished countryside. As he spoke, Mortenson felt a renewed
enthusiasm for his work and his devotion to the Pakistani people and
gave his all to the presentation, even though his audience was
small.

When he finished, the lone customer disappeared, but the two
employees approached him. One gave him ten dollars, while the other
offered to volunteer his construction skills in Asia. Mortenson
thanked them and then, as he picked up the brochures he’d set out on
the chairs, he noticed an envelope on the last chair in the last
row, where the customer had been sitting. In the envelope, Mortenson
found a personal check, made out to his foundation, for twenty
thousand dollars.
There is an important lesson here for all authors who initially see
very little return on investment for the hours and dollars they
spend promoting their books. Although a few lucky ones experience
instant success when their books are published, the majority do not.
Most writers, especially those who are
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publishing a book for the first time, can expect months and even
years of effort, including building websites, posting on blogsites,
giving interviews, sending out contest applications, presenting at
speaking engagements, and hosting blog and book tours that don’t pan
out to much in sales. And in our recently diminished economy, where
consumers are pulling back on their expenditures, the return on an
author’s promotional investment is lower than ever.
But, as Mortenson’s story reminds us, opportunities exist (and
sometimes abound) in every venture we undertake, and bad economy or
no, there is always the possibility that a single investment of time
and effort will somehow result in some good. Even a book signing
with only one or two attendees can turn out to be worthwhile,
especially if one of the two people there happens to be one of
Oprah’s producers, say, or a movie studio executive looking for a
new idea for a script. We never know who will see our ads, read
about us in a local newspaper article, stumble across our blog, or
sit at the back of empty rows of chairs at a bookstore or university
talk.
As another famous impoverished author, Henry David Thoreau, once
said, “In the long run, we only hit what we aim at.” Although the
results we seek may not always come as quickly as we’d like, with
persistence, patience, and good promotional guidance and execution,
they eventually appear – sometimes when we least expect them.
Aim often and high.
More Author Articles...
Paula Margulies is a book publicity and promotions expert in San
Diego, California. You can reach her at
paula@paulamargulies.com, or visit her website at
www.paulamargulies.com.
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