In 2007, America’s Publicist Rick Frishman invited me to participate on the faculty of MegaBook Marketing University in Los Angeles, California. At that time, I was running a small literary agency and representing authors in Scottsdale, Arizona. Mark Victor Hansen, co-author of Chicken Soup for the Soul was leading this event. Besides meeting with authors who pitched their books, I attended every single session of the event and took notes. Throughout these sessions, I learned that traditional publishers are skilled at making beautiful books with well-designed covers and interiors. Book publishers also know how to get the books inside the bookstore and available to the public.
My first book, a children’s picture book for David C. Cook, was published in 1992. Since then I had written over 50 books with traditional publishers, received a couple of six-figure advances yet most of my books had negative royalty statements. A little known but important publishing fact is ninety percent of nonfiction books never earn back their advance. All my books are nonfiction.
While I loved writing books, I did very little promotion for my work. I had a small website (www.terrywhalin.com) but I had not blogged and had no social media presence or email list or consistent and on-going connections to my readers. I believed because I was working with traditional publishers, receiving an advance against my royalties (sometimes thousands of dollars) that my books were going to be selling. I had fallen for the myth that my publisher was going to promote and sell my book.
During MegaBook Marketing University, I learned a key truth about publishing: publishers know how to make beautiful books and get them into bookstores, yet these actions are only one part of the process. The other key element (mostly up to the author) is actually selling the book to the consumer. Attending MegaBook Marketing University transformed my life. I could no longer assume the responsibility for selling my books would be in the hands of the publisher (or someone else besides me). I made a decision to change and take action.
Every writer needs to be able to tell stories and create an excellent book manuscript. The writing is a foundational skill for every writer. If you don’t have this writing skill, a developmental editor, ghostwriter, co-author or any other person in this role can help you create an engaging book. But marketing and selling yoiur book requires a different set of skills. . The good news is: every writer can learn to market their book.
Writers are looking for a simple formula to sell books. If such a formula existed, then publishers would use this method and every book would make a lot of money. In fact, some unexpected books are hits while some well-written books do not get purchased. One of the keys to selling books is building relationships. John Kremer, the author of 1001 Ways to Market Your Book says marketing is about building relationships with your readers.
Consider your reader or target audience. How much detail do you know about them? Where do they live? Where do they shop? What other books do they read? Are they active in book clubs? What are their needs and how can you write material that will meet those needs? Can you answer these and other audience questions?
One of the most effective tools for every book author is to create their own email list. As an author, you control your email list including what you say and how often you use the list. While not everyone looks at Facebook or a website or Twitter, most people open and read their email. If you email too frequently, they might not open your email or they might unsubscribe. When an author has an email list and uses it properly, it is the best way for them to reach their readers. If you are a brand-new author, how to you start a list and use it effectively?
As an author, you take control of what you can for your book. You cannot depend on your publisher to sell your book. You have the greatest passion for your book, so you need to show that passion and create an email list and different ways to connect with your readers.
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7 comments:
Terry, thanks for the book marketing insight from years of experience. And nicely put as to why an email list is important: "While not everyone looks at Facebook or a website or Twitter, most people open and read their email."
Karen,
It sounds old fashion to emphasize email. Other new fangled things come and go but email remain the main way to effectively reach our audience--and it is something under our control as authors.
Terry
So glad you mentioned that list thing. It’s at the root of most everything we do for our writing careers and right now I am rewriting a chapter for the 2nd edition of my How to Get Great Book Reviews Frugally and Ethically. I call it a master list because we can make one list do the job of many and do it more effectively. Many programs like Excel do a magical job of merging, selecting, printing labels and more but we have to input the information it needs to do so.
And, Terry. I want the name of that children’s book, please!
Hugs,
Carolyn Howard-Johnson
Carolyn,
Thank you for this comment affirming the importance of an email list.
As for the title of my first book, it has been long out of print but was called WHEN I GROW UP, I CAN GO ANYWHERE FOR JESUS. The book covers different occupations and uses a cartoon character combined with real pictures from Wycliffe Bible Translators (where I was working in 1992) to show children they can go anywhere in the world.
Terry
It’s probably still available on Amazon’s Used book feature, Terry, though I don’t think they call it that anymore!
Best,
Carolyn
Carolyn,
The used version of my book is still available and I emailed you the link--and it's the same title.
Terry
LOL. Terry, I have been all over Amazon these days, to see your new books, etc. And then I found the link to this article. There you are showing us that the best of authors have had problems overcoming misinformation . Much of it is based on old ideas that might have once been (mostly) true, like the idea that an author can avoid marketing if they have a traditional publisher. I have been fighting that one for more than three decades. With my consulting. With my books. With my teaching. The comfort here is that you overcame it--saw the light so to speak.
Just before I read this article I had been zipping around Amazon and other places because of a very nice email I received from you. So, though we’ve known each other a long time, I figured it was time to get to know you better.
I learned that another lesson you ably project to new authors is that an author must get over the idea that one must be humble at all costs, and that seeps over into an author’s marketing. I happen to know you are a religious man, so it is an example to all that even those of use raised on some Puritan principles can learn to accept ourselves, be proud of our accomplishments and be willing to tell others about it for the good of our books!
In other words, I learned a lot from you today! (-:
Best,
Carolyn
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