Promotion:
Business or Hobby
By M. E. Wood
Do you
treat your writing like a business or like a hobby? Promotion
is no hobby. If you want your book to sell, you have to get
out there and sell it. It won’t sell itself.
Relying on your
publisher to promote your book? If your publisher is aiding
promotion, great! But think about how many books your publisher
has to promote besides yours? You have a greater chance of
success because you can focus on the promotion of one book
unlike your publisher.
How to make the
shift from hobby to business?
1. Realize that
success will not occur overnight. Promotion is an ongoing
business and doesn’t stop after a couple weeks or a
couple months.
2. Set realistic
goals. Start small, think big. Setting the goal of being on
the top ten best sellers list is aspiring but may not be realistic,
at least not right now. “In the next six months I want
to increase sales by 100 books.”
3. Be willing to
travel outside of your town. Yes this can be a great expense.
Or you can be frugal. This is the perfect time to call all
your friends in different regions of the country and ask a
favour, “Can I stay with you while I’m in town
promoting my book?”
Have them do some
groundwork for you before you arrive. Where are the local
bookstores? Libraries? Ask for feedback on the ones to hit
up for a booksigning (booksigning may not always produce great
sales but they help with face and name recognition). Don’t
have any friends that live across the continent. What about
your online friends? You might be surprised at the response
you get from them. And you might have a cheering section waiting
for you. If all else fails pack a tent and live out of your
car. Yes, I’m serious!
“Well what
about my day job?” Then make day trips on your days
off. If you’re serious about being a writer you need
to get serious about promotion. You are going to be tired.
But the long term results will be worth it. Be sure to let
your publisher know where you are going to be and what you
will be doing. They might be more inclined to kick in some
help if they see the extra effort you are applying. But don’t
count on this. Expect this to be a lonely job. Your job. The
first three months of your books release are the most important.
4. Use every opportunity
out there to speak or set up a display table of your books.
Church groups, women’s groups and writing groups are
always looking for guest speakers. Ask to attend bazaars,
craft fairs, train fairs. Scour the newspaper for announcements
of this kind. There is usually a contact number. Give them
a call. Any place with a gathering of people is a potential
opportunity to promote yourself and your book.
If you have a children’s
book, approach guide and scout groups. Talk to regional leaders
so you will have access to numerous groups in the area. Don’t
forget to approach schools. Offer to read your book and do
a workshop with the kids. Make some kind of craft that would
compliment the book. Have bookmarks with details on where
to get your book, to hand out to the kids to take home with
their craft.
5. Ask your physician,
doctor, dentist, massage therapist, gynaecologist and hairstylist
if you can leave a copy of your book in the waiting room along
with a few bookmarks. If you build a rapport with the receptionist
she may even offer to retain a few copies to sell for you
6. Have book parties.
Call up your friends and let them know you are trying to promote
your book. Offer them a free copy and a special gift if they
will get together 10-20 of their friends for a book party.
Plan a few games and definitely have a draw for one of your
books and few little gifts. Have a table setup displaying
your book with attractive bookmarks and a vase of flowers.
Read an excerpt. At the end of the night with the hostess’s
encouragement hopefully you will have a few sales. If not
that is ok too. Think name recognition. They may not have
bought that night but they might the next time they see you
or your book again. At the very least they will tell one other
person how they spent their night and that they met an author.
Make it a fun experience to encourage positive word of mouth.
7. Websites, newsletter
etc are great promotion tools if you use them. But be consistent.
Update your website at a minimum of once per month, ideally
once a week. If you have no new content to add, switch around
one or two items already present. This also lets the WebCrawler’s
know your site is not stagnant. If you distribute a newsletter
don’t be sporadic in sending it. You want to portray
a reliable, consistent image. Pretend your subscribers are
publishers waiting to review your latest book. Set a time
and date for sending out your newsletter and stick too it.
It’s that important! Once a month is the ideal. Even
if it’s only a couple paragraph’s. You don’t
want your readers to forget about you which is a definite
possibility when you only send out a newsletter a couple times
per year. Respond to emails within 24-48 hours. That means
you must check your email more than once a week.
8. Keep track of
everything you do and spend towards promoting your book. Keep
meticulous notes as if you were researching one of your characters.
This will help you see the vastness of your promotion and
give you a map to follow for your next book.
9. Approach your
areas radio/TV station to announce the release of your book.
Offer to read and excerpt. Some areas also have student TV
and they would love the opportunity to interview local authors.
10. Send messages
to lists you belong to daily with a detailed 3-4 line Signature.
Don’t only join writer’s groups. Join readers
groups and other interest groups. Don’t overload yourself
with this. It is easy to get carried away. Focus on 10 groups
with high subscriber numbers rather than 50 groups with a
small subscriber list. Lists are constantly changing. After
8-9 months drop a few of your groups and add some new ones.
Digest is a handy feature if your e-box is overloaded with
messages. Be a participant and don’t spam them. If you
have an announcement, request permission from the list owner
to post it to the group. Be sure to include a copy of the
announcement in your email. If they say ‘no’ --
DON’T POST IT! Most will respect the request and allow
you to post or they may offer suggestions to make it an acceptable
post. Don’t leave the group because they say ‘no’
that just makes you look like a spammer. Continue to participate,
keep your signature line and when you have another announcement
ask again.
11. Join Professional
sales groups. Offer to be a guest speaker. Introduce yourself
as a published author/writer. Always carry a few copies of
your book in your bag to show people who ask questions. It’s
your best visual aide. Donate a book as a doorprize. Offer
to write content for the newsletter in exchange for advertising
space.
12. Use the FREE
websites to your advantage. Here is a URL to a site that reviews
free web hosters: www.free-webhosts.com. Pick five and set
up a one page website at each of them. Be sure to have a link
directing them to your main site if you have one. Don’t
just set it up and forget about it. Take 30 seconds and check
it each month to be sure it is functioning properly and update
as necessary. Most will delete you if you are inactive with
the upkeep of your site.
Patience is vital.
Give it your all for at least three months then look at your
stats. Look at your techniques. Look at what you’ve
accomplished. After a year of promoting you’ll be better
able to see the long term effects. Don’t give up your
promoting. You can cut back but don’t fall off the wagon.
When you cut back, do at least one promotional event a week.
Never assume that
someone else can promote your book better than you can. Readers
love to be able to put a face to the author. Get out there
and meet your readers. Let them get to know you. There are
millions of bookshelves out there waiting to house your book.
It is your responsibility to let the readers know what you
have to offer. Make the shift from hobby to business. You
can only benefit.
***
M. E. Wood http://www.m-e-wood.com is an
editor of two newsletters for WordMuseum.com and a reviewer
for LinearReflections.com . She has been published online
and in print.
*published
National Association
of Women Writers Weekly Newsletter / April 2004
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