HELLstalkers – The Next Phase

by Joe Nassise on October 21, 2009

Now that the Frankfurt Book Fair and the press conference announcing HELLstalkers is over, it is time for my co-writer and I to move into the next phase of the project – building up the online presence and promotion before the December 1st launch of the first book in the series, The Cerberus Protocol.

We’ve taken some definitive steps over the last week that will help us immensely in this area.  The first of which was to hire a graphic designer and an artist.

You see, both Jon and I believe that the project has legs; that it will continue to expand into other mediums if we provide the impetus it needs to do so.  While we are happy with the mobile phone publication deal, we strongly believe that there is potential for a print deal, a comic/graphic novel deal, a possible film or tv adapation, and even a video game based on the project.  While strong sales will probably net us a print deal even if we did nothing to secure it, the other mediums are more graphically oriented and we wanted to set ourselves up properly to take advantage of that as time goes by.

To do that properly, we needed someone who understood design to help us plan and create the series’ online presence and we needed an artist who could take our vision and translate it into a slick graphical content to promote that online presence.  Luckily, we found what we needed in two guys we’ve known for a while.  The fact that they also happen to work together on a daily basis simply allows us to cut down on the “feeling each other out” stage and get right down to business.

Our new teammates got right down to work, creating both a basic logo concept (the image of the Collider’s core with the word HELLstalker beneath it) and the military patch worn by the HELLstalker unit members that will be a common image in our promotional ads and displays.  For the next few weeks, we’re going to be working with them to modify our website design, look, and feel – putting in custom background images, designing the cover art for the first book in the series, preparing banner ads and promotional fliers that utilize QR codes to help spread the word about the launch.

At the same time, we haven’t simply sat back on our laurels when it comes to marketing other potentials deals to spin off this one.  We would certainly like to sell the series to a major US publisher, to begin with, and given how long it takes to bring a book to market we could sell the series today and still not interfere with the exclusivity we promised to our small screen publisher.

One of the first things we did was take advantage of the things we’ve been learning about QR codes to create a special post directed at editors on the website PublishersMarketplace. com.  As my page at PM is consistently one of the top 20 blog pages viewed on the site, we decided to embed the entire proposal for the series into a QR code and invite editors to download it with their mobile phones.  This has the added advantage of using a new and different type of technology to get the editor to give it a try and also supports what we say in the marketing section of the proposal about our intended use of cutting edge tech to promote the series once it is published.  We’ve also setup a tracking program to know who is downloading the proposal so we can gauge how effective the process might be.

If you’d like to take a look, you can see the post HERE

PM also allows you to list projects that are available for acquisition in their Rights Offering section, so I put up a post there as well that also utilizes the QR code, which you can see HERE

As time goes on, I’ll keep posted on whether or not they work the way we hope.

(To view the proposal, use your mobile phone QR code reader, take a picture of the image, and active the link.  Doing so will download the file directly to your mobile phone for easy viewing.  If you don’t have a QR reader, simply do a Google search and download one for your phone.  Most of them are either free or less than a $1.00)

Leave a Comment

CommentLuv Enabled