How to Market a Book Archives

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!

Today I’m FINALLY starting this project that I’ve been thinking about forever — the “Books Every Author Needs to Read” series is going to be a list of books — great books, tremendous books, life-changing books — that will make a dramatic difference in the way you treat the business (and yes, it’s a business) of marketing your books.

Now, let me explain something right up front…

First, this list is not in order of importance. In other words, It’s not a “Top 10″ list or anything like that.

I’m going to talk about books as they occur to me to talk about them. I’m not rating or ranking these. Just so we’re clear on that.

Second, this is not going to be the kind of list that has books like John Kremer’s 1,001 Ways to Market Your Book on it.

Not that that isn’t a book you should read. It is.

But these are going to be books you may not have read, may not have heard of, or may not have thought to yourself, “Oh yeah, I should read that and apply it to the way I market myself and my books to the world.”

For those of you who don’t know me all that well, I have a kind of unique background.

Not only did I spend more than 15 years helping authors market their books, but a few years ago I got into straight-out MARKETING. I built an Internet marketing company to the point where it allowed me to quit my day job, and now I do this full time.

I also work with authors now to turn their books into online products. This is probably (no, definitely) THE MOST fulfilling thing I’m doing at the moment. But I digress…

I’m suggesting you read these books because they’re going to teach you about MARKETING.

I don’t think any of them specifically mentions book marketing. But that’s kind of the point.

What I would suggest you do is learn how real marketers, real sales pros, and real advertisers GET PEOPLE TO BUY STUFF. Because if these techniques work to sell toothbrushes, tennis rackets and, in the case of non-profit or cause-oriented concerns, IDEAS, they will work to help you sell your book.

Marketing is marketing, in other words.

So, now that I’ve thoroughly confused you, I want to get to book #1, which is Ogilvy on Advertising.

ogilvyI read this book during a week-long vacation in Canada this summer and was floored.

David Ogilvy built an empire — a true empire — by doing one thing and doing it well. Creating ad campaigns for products, businesses and causes that truly “moved the needle.”

This is a great book but it’s short on theory and long on facts.

An avid tester, Ogilvy measured results from his campaigns and recorded them meticulously.

He shares everything in this book.

Imagine, for example, if the best book marketer in the world said, “Do this in your pitch letters to book reviewers and you’ll get 63% more requests for review copies,” or “Write this sentence in your letter to TV producers and you’ll get 36% more requests for your media kit.”

Those lame examples don’t do the book justice, believe me.

But it’s filled with stuff like that — do this and you’ll get XX% more people to read your advertising copy. Use this typeface and you’ll increase response by XX%.

It’s amazing.

I took 8 pages of notes in my journal based on what I learned in this book.

As an author, you should be reading it to understand what sells “in the real world” and how true advertising professionals create campaigns that compel people to take an action.

You know I’m big on teaching authors how to create “Calls to Action” that make people buy your book.

Ogilvy is one of the best at this.

Thus, Ogilvy on Advertising makes my “Books Every Author Needs to Read” list.

Related Articles:

How to Market a Book Using Twitter

Twitter has to be one of THE BEST tools for authors to market their books to an online audience.

Problem is, most authors don’t use Twitter, or if they do, they use it inefficiently or incorrectly.

In this special report, “Sneaky Twitter Tricks for Authors: How to Legally Steal the Fans of the World’s Most Popular Authors,” I show you how to market a book using Twitter with a really simple and very quick little tactic for taking advantage of the Twitter Revolution.

Click on the graphic below to download the PDF.

Leave some comments and let me know what you think.

Sneaky Twitter Tricks for Authors

Related Articles:

How to Market a Book Online – Choosing Keywords

The biggest reason why most authors don’t have success trying to get attention for themselves and their books online starts with one very basic mistake — you aren’t choosing the right keywords that will attract people who would be interested in what you have to say.

Learning how to market a book on the Internet is different than traditional book marketing — in many ways, it’s a LOT EASIER if you just know the basics.

Here’s a short tutorial video explaining why keyword research and selection is so important, and how to do this research for your own book.

Related Articles:

This report caused a major uproar when I showed it to a small group of authors a few months ago, so I thought I’d release it here on the blog and let everyone benefit.

The full report, including the step-by-step guide to all the ways you can be making more money from your expertise, is in The Author’s Edge member’s training portal.

You can get access to this and a LOT more (like a free DVD, free training videos on how to market your books online, free audio interviews with major book marketing heavyweights, and more) for FREE today.

Click here for the full story.

Or download the special report by clicking on the pic below. (Warning: It’s a DOOZY!)

Related Articles:

Quick way to get your book on CNN

In preparing the full course for members of The Author’s Edge training program, I decided to pull back the curtain and show everyone a really sneaky backdoor tactic that is PERFECT for authors who want to get major national exposure for themselves and their books.

This video is an excerpt from an actual lesson inside the member’s area, and I think you’re going to love it.

By the way, admission to the training program is STILL on a FREE trial basis (and you also get a ton of free gifts for trying it out).

Click here to get the full story on the program.

Click below to watch the video.

Related Articles:

“Isn’t that the publisher’s job?”

I thought I’d start off the week (and the month) with a little bit of a missive. I don’t tend to “write” much here on the blog, preferring instead to post what I hope are useful and instructive videos, audio interviews, etc. But my first love is and always will be the written word. So I’m dusting off my keyboard here to write a few words about something that’s been nagging at me for a while now.

Two things spurred me to write this entry today.

The first…

…was a forum post I happened to stumble on a few weeks back. It was a “writer’s” forum where authors — published and unpublished, it seemed — could share experiences, advice, and just generally converse on what it’s like living the life of a writer.

Somewhere buried in this forum was a discussion about book marketing. This alone made the experience unique, as precious little hard drive space seems to be dedicated to actually selling a book once it has been written.

After a brief exchange related to a particular marketing strategy, one of the authors and forum members piped up to say something along the lines of: “I thought it was the author’s job to write the book, and the publisher’s job to market it.”

The second…

…is Terry Whalin’s great blog post from last week — “Find a Need and Fill it”

Funny thing is, most of Terry’s very informative post isn’t even about this particular topic. But he does touch on it right up front, and that’s what finally got me to put pen to paper here on the blog.

In commenting on a recent Twitter post from Penny Sansevieri, Whalin made a great comment about authors who expect their books to find an audience — to SUCCEED — while at the same time expecting fortune to smile on them through some unique combination of luck, divine intervention, or an Oprah invite.

Here’s the relevant portion of Whalin’s post. Tell me if it doesn’t make perfect sense…

New books are continually entering the marketplace. It is one of those realities of the market which every author needs to know about and acknowledge. There were over 400,000 new books published in 2007 which is a lot of books when you consider the typical big box bookstore only has 10,000 to 15,000 titles.

I was amused to see Internet marketing expert Penny Sansevieri’s tweet about an email from an author who proclaimed, “I don’t need to market my book because people will just find it.” Right. It’s like throwing a party when you don’t send any invitations then wondering why no one came to it. (As a complete aside, I encourage you to sign up for Penny’s free newsletter. Why? To confirm your subscription, you receive a seven-page list of Top Author Marketing Experts Confidential Contacts. A free resource for every author or would-be author.)

With the volume of books coming into the market and places like magazines and newspapers cutting back on their review space, it is increasingly difficult to get readers–and reviews of your books. Here’s where I’m going to with this post: that situation creates an opportunity or a need which you can fill–even if you’ve never been published or are much published. How are you supporting good books that you discover? Are you telling other people about these books (even if you don’t get paid for that proclamation)? It can pay off for you.

Now, far be it for me to come into a discussion like this with guns blazing, but Terry and Penny are exposing a fundamental truth that practically compelled me to start this site in the first place. You’ve probably heard the old saying that “the baker doesn’t know how to run the bakery.” It’s a shame, but in my experience most authors not only don’t know how to market themselves and their books, but THEY DON’T WANT TO.

It’s easy to get caught up in the dream — to rely on the old cliche of the writer toiling in obscurity until the world finally catches on to his or her genius, as if by accident, and elevates them to exalted status.

Here’s the reality IMHO…

No one cares about your book more than you do. Not the publisher, not your publicist, and certainly not the general public.

You have to make them care. After the writing is done, your job isn’t over. It’s just beginning. The real work is in getting people to care about what you’ve written. And that will NEVER happen without some good old-fashioned get-your-hands-dirty marketing. If you wait to be “discovered,” it won’t happen.

What Barack Obama Can Teach Authors

No matter which side of the aisle you happen to be on, no one can argue that Barack Obama was able to engineer one of the most stunning marketing campaigns in recent political history.

But how did Obama’s “movement” start? It started with grassroots campaigning — i.e. MARKETING.

How many speeches to audiences of five, 10 or 20 people in Iowa do you think Obama had to make before he was “discovered” by voters?

Obama’s remarkable fundraising base and much-coveted email list was developed first by grassroots marketing, then by word of mouth, and finally by a brilliant use of technology and social marketing run by none other than Chris Hughes, co-founder of the mega-successful “meet up” site Facebook.

Everything is Marketing

I may be running the risk of rambling here, but I want to make sure my philosophy on all this is clear, as well as why I believe I’m absolutely right on this point.

EVERYTHING IS MARKETING.

Everything.

Authors, bakers and candlestick makers ALL need to market themselves to be successful. Put yourself in your publisher’s shoes. Why would I dedicate limited time and resources to promoting your book if you haven’t first proven to me that you’re going to hold up your end of the bargain?

Prove to me first that you’re willing to work tirelessly to make your book a success. Show me — really SHOW ME — that you’re as dedicated to this process as you tell me you are, and then, maybe, we’ll talk about what I can do for you. Because the bottom line is that no publisher is going to carry you through this process. It’s your book, not theirs. They expect most of the titles they publish to die a quiet death. That’s just the law of averages.

If yours isn’t to be one of those — if yours is going to be one of the ones that breaks out, finds an audience, and beats the odds, it’s going to be 99.9% because of the work YOU did to bring it to the world.

Is it worth it? Is it worth all the work? This may not be how you imagined it would be. The reality is probably not like the dreams you had when you first sat down to write your book.

The question I would ask myself is this: If my book was worth writing, isn’t it worth doing the work required to make sure someone actually reads it? If your goal is to touch as many people as you can with your book, then no amount of effort should ever seem like too much.

This is what it’s all about, guys.

Don’t throw a party and neglect the invitations.

Related Articles: