Lately, I’ve been seeing blog posts where writers are announcing that their book has just come out. They then go on to give an excerpt as to what the book is about. Whiel, this is okay, let’s not forget that some authors wait until after the book is done to announce it. For some, this is too little, too late.
Let’s review why:
When you wait until the very last minute to announce that you’ve written a book, you’ll find more chances than not that most people won’t care. Plenty of people write books and plenty more are published each year. The key is to market the book while you’re writing it.
How do you do that?
Tease your audience with Chapter excerpts, although I prefer the term-Chapter Previews. The last time I went to the movies, I spent 10 minutes watching previews, a few of those being movies that aren’t coming out until next year. The preview was so good that I can’t wait until they come out. The only problem? I need to keep coming to the movies to see the preview in order to remember those great movies. There’s no difference in book marketing.
In order for your book sales to do well, people have to remember you and be enticed by what you have to offer. You have to get your potential buyers to care, to follow, to remember, to need. If you wait until the last minute to do that, then you’ve waited too late. The truth is that when you tease people with your book, before the book comes out, they feel a bit special and honored and are more likely to buy your book because they’ve been made to feel like a part of the process. Waiting until after the book is published feels like a sales pitch, and nobody cares for a sales pitch.
Take a que from the movies industry and other famous authors. They don’t wait until the last minute to announce a new book. With online resources such as Twitter, Myspace, Facebook, Ning, Linkedin, Gather, etc., there is no reason to wait until the last minute to discuss your book. I mean you can, but just remember: Sometimes, it’s too little, too late!
Until tomorrow!
ZLS Publishing
www.zlspublishing.com
Tag Archives: sales
Bad Book Marketing-Book Covers for the Visually Interested!
By now, we should all know that book covers sell books. Sadly, most writers still don’t get this fact and because of this, I’ve decided to provide the rules of Book Cover Design. These rules will decide whether a buyer picks up your book and turns it around or even decides to buy it.
Bad Book Marketing-The Stupidity of Not Having A Newsletter!
Okay, okay, I’m back with something else to say. If you are a writer or an author who does not have one of these, you are being especially foolish and you may not like what it is I have to say.
Not apologizing!
Contrary to popular belief, having a newsletter is a very important part of your Book Marketing plan. As a matter of fact, it should be in the top five of your book marketing plan. You can visit twenty different places, do all the book signings in the world, but if people don’t remember you or talk about you to their friends, you are marketing in vain. Every time you give out a book mark, a post card, or a business card, you should have a newsletter form too. Every time you do a book signing, you should have a newsletter form.
As the old saying goes, “out of sight, out of mind.” Too many writers underestimate the value and effect of a newsletter. Sending your fans things about yourself, once a month or even once a week helps them remember you and reminds them to tell their friends. Everyone who has a newsletter will tell you that they have seen an increase in sales or in readership. As an author struggling to keep and build readership it is just not wise to not have a newsletter. Again, I will repeat the old saying, “out of sight, out of mind.”
Newsletters are the next biggest thing to word-of-mouth-marketing. People talk, they check email, and they are nosy. People like to know the latest happenings of everything that is going on. Don’t believe me? Look at Twitter and this proves my point. Keeping your fans up to date with what is going on with you makes them feel important, and it makes them feel like they are part of your process. People are busy and they have a lot going on in their lives. If you don’t make them remember you, they won’t. It’s like the old saying, “out of sight, out of mind.” Just thinking that because you wrote one book people will remember you is foolish. To think that just because you visited their city and did a book signing will make them remember you is also foolish. Without making them remember you, you will be a one-hit-wonder. Yes, those exist in the literary world.