Battery Operated – An Enemies-to-Lovers Read Online Stephanie Brother

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Erotic, Romance Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 64
Estimated words: 60905 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 305(@200wpm)___ 244(@250wpm)___ 203(@300wpm)
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Cole pushed back his plate. “Before we do dishes, I thought we could have a strategy meeting.”

It took me a moment to process his words as I stared at the piece of blueberry waffle I’d speared with my fork. “Strategy?”

“For the rest of the week.”

“What’s there to go over? You’re making me stay here. I don’t want to be here. End of story.”

“Are you always this cheerful in the morning?” Brady asked with a sunny smile. I was beginning to see why so many of my friends hated morning people.

“This isn’t a prison sentence, Lila. If we work together, we can increase the visibility of the inn and get you some good content for your social media channels.” Cole said that in a perfectly reasonable voice, but I didn’t buy it. Not for one second.

“No way. You’re rewriting history. We didn’t come here to help each other out and sing kumbaya. You tricked me, challenged me, and forced me to be here.” With my fork, I smashed the end of a sausage link, wishing I could grind a certain pair of innkeepers into mush instead.

“Wow, we sound like real assholes when you put it that way.” As always, Brady’s voice was good-natured. “Seems surprising that we’d do that to a completely innocent young woman, doesn’t it, Cole?”

“Yeah. Seems like we’d save that kind of thing for someone who wronged us first.”

Penny put her hand on my arm as I prepared to frisbee my waffle at the nearest male target. “It might be a good idea to talk about how the week’s going to go. If we’re all on the same page, it might cut down on the hostility.”

Easy for her to say. Hostility was all I had going for me today. That and caffeine. Thank god for coffee.

“Thank you,” Cole said to Penny. “So, Lila, how often would you normally post something new online in a week’s time?”

“Every day,” I mumbled. My head ached, almost like I was hungover. It was always like that after I had a nightmare.

“She chats live with her audience a half-dozen times a day,” Penny elaborated. “But at least four or five times a week, we record, edit, and post longer, more elaborate videos.”

“Like when you unveil a new tech product?”

“It's called unboxing,” I grumbled. “But that’s not all we do.” I gave Penny a pleading look and she took over, explaining how we sometimes went to businesses to try out products, or how I sometimes showed how I used technology to streamline my life.

“And three times a week, viewers send their questions to Lila, and she answers them live on air,” Penny concluded.

Cole frowned. “Like an advice columnist?”

“Sort of like that,” I confirmed.

“Exactly like that,” Penny insisted. “Don’t you still write a monthly column for one of the tech websites?”

“Yes. And I write reviews for them, too.”

Cole shook his head. “And that earns you a living and lets you hire an assistant?”

“Yes.” God, my head hurt. But I was proud of the career I’d made and couldn’t resist telling them about it. “It’s all about the number of followers you have. The bigger your audience, the easier it is to monetize your content. Well… not exactly easy. But having a big audience makes it possible.”

“How many views do you usually get on your videos?” Penny asked the guys. She was doing a good job keeping things going, which was strange, because normally, I was the assertive one. Perhaps she sensed how rotten I felt right now.

“You’ll have to ask Gideon,” Brady said. “He’s the numbers guy. I get the sense that our audience is increasing, but not to the point that we’re making much money.”

“Yet,” Cole added. “But our real goal is to drum up business for the inn, not to make a fortune.”

I nearly snorted. If only they knew how few influencers were making a fortune from this kind of thing.

“The basic plan is that the videos lead to the classes. The classes—hopefully—lead to people booking stays here,” Brady said.

“Classes?” Penny asked.

“Yeah,” Brady said. “What we’ll do is we’ll make a few videos on a certain topic, like how to grill or how to repair drywall. Then we’ll offer an in-person class on the subject. Like a workshop.”

That was news to me. “There wasn’t any mention of classes on your website.”

“The inn’s website?” Cole asked. “No, we put the announcement at the end of our videos.”

“And only there?” Their lack of strategy was making the pounding in my head worse.

“Yeah, why?”

“Because no one’s going to see it there. Few people watch videos all the way through.”

“They do when it’s a how-to video. Otherwise, they’d never know how to finish the project,” Brady argued.

I cupped my forehead in my hands. “What do the metrics say?”

“Metrics?” Cole echoed.

God, these guys were amateurs. “You should be able to see exactly how long people watch your videos and at which point they stop watching.”


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