The thing about being a blogging author is that you have three audiences with very different desires. How do you speak to all of them without alienating any of them?

Being a blogging author is like being a fish in an aquarium. You are on display. You can’t hide in the plastic treasure chest all the time. There are other fish that want to know how you survive and thrive in your medium. There’s the interested audience that wants to see a fish in its natural habitat. And then you have the people in the business of supplying pet shops.

Writers want to know about the process of the art and craft and business, how you navigate books and contracts and business issues without losing your creative mind or your shorts.

Readers want to know that you have sweated appropriately in the creation process to deserve the money they’ll plunk down to buy that book. That you are giving fair value. The recent discussion about authors taking enough time to make their books as good as they can be is a prime example. Nobody wants to hear you slapped your story together with shoddy construction tactics and shoved it out, ready or not.

Editors want to know that you can produce that well-constructed, fabulous work of art fast and meet their production schedule so they can supply book sellers.

So what do you do? Besides blow bubbles and swim slowly around.

I try to remember that I have three audiences. I know that I can say something that one group might understand and another group might take the wrong way. For instance, the last paragraph of my last blog post might be construed to imply that I don’t take craft seriously. When in fact it’s a reminder to me to keep craft in perspective in the creative process. Writing is art and craft. It takes both. To be published, you have to add business to the mix and balance all three.

So, publishing is just like blogging as an author. Balance the different demands of art, craft and business. And really, they all intersect. Writer, reader, or those involved in publishing and selling books, we are all interested in books.

At least, that’s my theory. I think it beats hiding in the plastic trunk or blowing bubbles.