Copyright Ben Cavanna
All dressed up and looking for a buyer                                                                                               (Photo credit Ben Cavanna)

 

“So you’ve written a book.” Foreboding voice in your head

In the olden days, seven years ago, you would have found an agent, endured participated in the editing process to make your manuscript the best written most marketable product it could be, and then sat back while your agent shopped your baby to the highest-bidding publisher. Your book would hit the shelves, and you’d laugh all the way to the bank in your brand new Ferrari.

“Wait. What?” You

Well, maybe it wasn’t ever that easy or profitable, but we all know the landscape has changed. Today, whether you’ve self-pubbed or kept your ego in tact through dozens of rejections and finally hooked up with the agent/publisher of your dreams, you know the weight of marketing your precious baby will fall on you. The author. Because that makes perfect sense.

Now you’re wandering helpless through unfamiliar and intimidating territory, wondering how to:

1. Find your potential readers

2. Reach your potential readers

3. Convince them to BUY YOUR BOOK!

Let’s look at conventional wisdom.

Reviews  You’ve heard you need reviews, lots of reviews, to sell your book. Maybe you have (or can recruit) a Street Team of willing friends who will read your brilliant manuscript and post 5✮ reviews on Amazon, B&N, Goodreads, their personal blogs, Starbucks’ bulletin boards, and FB posts including a photo of them holding reading your book. But are reviews really effective for selling books?

Who reads reviews? People who have already heard about a particular book, and are looking at it online. And how many readers are we talking about? According to a 2005 Gallup Poll, only 7% of readers choose a book based on reviews, so… maybe they’re not as influential as we’ve been led to think.

Blogs  There are bloggers who do book reviews and interviews. You could ask a few of them to interview you or write a review in exchange for an all expenses paid spa weekend a copy of your book. If they agree, and if they read your book, and if they write a review, their posts will slide through their followers’ Reader streams. If a title or picture catches a follower’s eye, or a follower just likes that blogger enough to read whatever they write, then they will be exposed to your book and they might consider buying it.

Online Marketing Experts  Many, many online “experts” prey on authors have developed programs they claim will dramatically increase your book sales. I listened to one of these guys on a webinar last week. (He has a “sure-fire” method he will be happy to share with you for only $597.) He used to sell Facebook ads. He says one of the options you can choose when you purchase a Facebook ad is to target the people who follow top selling authors you’ve identified in your genre who have FB pages. The author won’t be aware you’re doing it, but your ads will appear next to those followers’ FB Newsfeeds. Of course, this guy claims FB ads are the “most effective” way to market your book. (One word: AdBlock)

How many of the book ads that show up next to your FB Newsfeed do you read, much less click on to make a purchase? (GD Deckard and Atthys Gage share their experience with Google and Amazon ads on this very site, in Jousting Windmills and its comments.)

SO WHAT WORKS? Here’s what I think:

Finding and Reaching Your Readers  Common sense works here. If you write YA SciFi/Fantasy, and your followers are middle aged women and men, posting about your book on your blog, FB and Amazon book pages, Goodreads, Twitter, G+, Tumbler, IG, or Pinterest probably won’t sell books. Start closer to home; go where your potential audience is. Local schools (middle grade to junior college) have English teachers who might see the value of inviting a local author to talk about writing and publishing. Your local library might be interested in having a local author host a brief workshop on creative writing. They might be willing to pay a speaker’s fee. Even if you speak for free, you’re finding your audience. Sure, have books available to sign and sell, but set your goal at connecting with the people who can spread the word. If you incorporate things like decorations, costumes, snacks, and give-aways themed on the most exciting aspect of your book, you create something attendees will tell other people about.

Word of Mouth  When I get excited about something — a movie, a play, a restaurant, a book — like most people, I talk about it. I recommend it to my family, friends, and anyone else who’ll listen. If it’s a book, I buy copies as gifts. What author doesn’t appreciate that? What makes me excited enough to spread the word? Three things:

  1. Excellent quality: For a book, this means a well-written page-turner.
  2. A certain something…je ne sais quoi…the X Factor…”It”: Something out of the ordinary — not just weirdness — that catches a reader’s fancy. Consider Rowling’s Harry Potter or Weir’s The Martian. Subject matter? Voice? Novelty? Controversy?
  3. A Buzz: Everybody’s talking. Word is spreading like a viral video.

How do you create a buzz?  Well, a viral video would work. (When you figure out how to guarantee that, let me know, okay?)

A friend who began her marketing career 20 years ago at a publishing company, has her finger on the digital pulse. She says one highly effective marketing strategy is to engage the opinion of a “digital influencer” in your genre. These are celebrities whose tens of thousands of followers seek out their posts, read them, and take what they have to say seriously. A digital influencer’s recommendation starts a buzz. But my friend doesn’t suggest stealth bombing their followers with ads for your book; she says to build a relationship with the influencers by interacting with them, commenting on their posts, creating a conversation.

Look at marketing that works, and adapt it for your book. Since LOST first created an online world that treated Oceanic Airlines, the Dharma Initiative, and Widmore Labs as if they were real, movies like Interstellar and Independence Day 2 have used this technique to get people talking. Don’t make a normal, boring book trailer. Do something innovative.

Ultimately, marketing your book is far more than posting ads and links and waiting for the royalties to roll in. It’s about connecting with your potential readers and engaging them in your story’s world. We have a pretty good idea what doesn’t work, so take a look at all the successful marketing around you and make it work for you.

S.T. Ranscht is the co-author (with Robert P. Beus) of ENHANCED, the first book in a YA SciFi trilogy. She is currently working on the “final” edit prior to re-submitting their baby to a requesting agent. Her short story, Cat Artist Catharsis, earned Honorable Mention in Curtis Bausse’s 2016 Book a Break Short Story Contest, and will be published in its upcoming anthology, The Cattery. Her online presence can be felt on WordPress at Space, Time, and Raspberries, Facebook, and Twitter @SueStarlight. You can follow ENHANCED on Facebook and Twitter @EnhancedYASyFy.


38 responses to “Selling Your Baby”

  1. atthysgage Avatar
    atthysgage

    Terrific post, Sue. Thanks for being a part of this site. I’m looking forward to reading Enhanced.

    Liked by 2 people

  2. Writers – Marketing is easy, right? – Space, Time, and Raspberries Avatar

    […] written a guest post for Writers’ Co-op: Selling Your Baby, and I’d like your […]

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  3. Sue Ranscht Avatar

    Thanks, Atthys. I’m honored to be among such creative company.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. trE Avatar
    trE

    This is definitely great advice and I think it’s extremely profound in details and can assist all future potential authors regarding giving birth to their babies and sending them off to the world. 🙂 Nicely done, Sue!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Sue Ranscht Avatar

      Thank you, ma’am!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. trE Avatar
        trE

        You’re most welcome!

        Liked by 1 person

  5. jlfatgcs Avatar

    Sue this is well written, with all the bells and whistles that come after hard research and experience. I love it; it hits the nail on the head, so I couldn’t just scroll down because it made me want to read. Really good.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Sue Ranscht Avatar

      Coming from you, Jennie, that is high praise indeed. Thank you!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. jlfatgcs Avatar

        You’re welcome, and thanks for the kind words!

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Sue Ranscht Avatar

          You are very welcome.

          Liked by 1 person

  6. mimispeike Avatar
    mimispeike

    Really, really excellent. I’m going to read this several times, to make sure I have absorbed it all. You are a valuable resource indeed. I’m sure we will all turn to you for advice as we move forward. You certainly sound like you know the ropes.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Sue Ranscht Avatar

      Thanks very much, Mimi. I’m honored you feel that way, and I hope we can spark ideas in each other. Just imagine the resources as more and more writers start brainstorming.

      Liked by 1 person

  7. levishedated (Robert C Day) Avatar

    I love this article. I write a series of daily Writing Tips on my blog but this is better by far! Thanks for sharing this and good luck for the future. 🙂
    Kind regards – Robert (York, England).

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Sue Ranscht Avatar

      Thanks. You should join the discussion!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. levishedated (Robert C Day) Avatar

        I am involved in multiple discussion every day right here in my own blogging room. I invite you and all you know to join me here. We have a hoot! 🙂

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Sue Ranscht Avatar

          Thanks for the invitation, Robert. I sure I’ll stop by. The conversation ranges some on Writers’ Co-op, but, because the primary goal of the forum is to brainstorm marketing plans that really do result in book sales, I understand it’s its appeal has a narrow focus.

          Liked by 1 person

          1. levishedated (Robert C Day) Avatar

            Actually, now you say that – I would be very interested in being part of that conversation. It’s going to be something of intense interest at some point it the future when I start to roll my novels and non-fiction books out. I have a Chartered Institute of Marketing Post Graduate Diploma so I might even be able to make some suggestions. 🙂
            Can you give me the URL again? 🙂

            Liked by 1 person

              1. levishedated (Robert C Day) Avatar

                Ah – just tried. This is one of those odd sites that I can’t interact with via my smartphone. Shame, because I just read a really great article about dream sequences. 🙂

                Liked by 2 people

                1. Sue Ranscht Avatar

                  I guess smart phones either aren’t as smart as laptops, or just aren’t as smart as we sometimes need them to be. Wait a couple years. Someone with tech smarts will improve the machine.

                  Liked by 1 person

                  1. levishedated (Robert C Day) Avatar

                    Will do. Thanks Sue. 🙂

                    Liked by 1 person

  8. GD Deckard Avatar
    GD Deckard

    Thanks for the very informative blog, Sue! Detailed marketing tips for the digital age is exactly the information I need. You put a lot of thought and effort into this post. Great job!

    Your tags are also a revelation. It’s good to have someone here with experience utilizing the ‘Net for promoting books. Welcome!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Sue Ranscht Avatar

      Thank you, GD. I’m glad you feel it’s helpful. Pop culture speaks a language everyone can learn. Remember when we used to be its creators?

      Liked by 1 person

  9. mimispeike Avatar
    mimispeike

    I am not too fact-focused, marketing plays, etc. Nor have I put a lot of time into trying to connect with blogger-pundits. I am still pre-published. I’m still writing, and I’m working on my website. My strategy, for the moment: interact online in an amusing voice, so that any who read my comments might make a note, mental or otherwise, to look up my book when it’s able to be found.

    On this site, on Book Country, on anywhere, it’s the voice that catches my eye. I once read a whole chapter in a book on insurance because it was so beautifully written.

    I think of my mind-set as supply-side marketing, which I’ll concentrate on until I’m ready, product in hand, to beat a big bass drum.

    Until then, I’m looking for pointers, and Sue is chock-full of them. Wonderful-wonderful! We need these kind of nuts-and-bolts thinkers. We can’t all be magical-thinking build-it-and-they-will-come types like me. Still, my approach has a place in this discussion somewhere. Something to do with best foot forward.

    The remark above that this site has a narrow appeal, that’s true. I try to entertain a bit, hoping that my free-range nonsense may attract a few more flies to this picnic.

    Liked by 3 people

  10. GD Deckard Avatar
    GD Deckard

    “…it’s the voice that catches my eye.”

    Right on, Mimi! As Henry Miller put it, great writing is symptomatic of the author’s personality, “not expositions of thought-out techniques.”

    Liked by 3 people

  11. mimispeike Avatar
    mimispeike

    They don’t call it a voice for nothing.

    Liked by 1 person

  12. mimispeike Avatar
    mimispeike

    That’s what irks me about the how-to manuals. I probably would not be able to limit myself to mechanics (never, not in a blue moon!), but for the right project, a thriller, etc., I can see how that might work.

    But mechanics alone don’t do it, you must discover and develop a voice, a way of perceiving and organizing the world, and a way of expressing your vision. Authorial personality will inevitably flavor the result.

    I assume that even the despised Fifty Shades has some seductive attitude, and I’m not referring to the sex. But I’m not curious enough to find out. Anybody here read it?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Sue Ranscht Avatar

      Not me. Not interested. lol

      Like

    2. Carl E. Reed Avatar

      I read Fifty Shades of Gray. Not the erotic s&m fest by E. L. James; I’m refering to Harold M. Fishburn’s book of the same title: a memoir of merchant ship hull painting during WWII. It was . . . great bedtime reading.

      Liked by 2 people

      1. curtisbausse Avatar

        Thanks for that tip, Carl – I must get Fishburn’s book, it sounds fascinating. Incidentally, have you read Jocelyn Cloudy’s Fifty Shades of Grey? A very perceptive analysis of the Irish weather forecast. Good book for the beach.

        Liked by 2 people

        1. Carl E. Reed Avatar

          Heh-heh! Another good alternate take on that infamous mommy-porn title. (PS. Not sure where else to put this, but Atthys & I have posted our Fright Night submissions under PAGES, PRIVATE. I think a separate category under WIPS would be better, so that others can comment. I don’t know how to post a new entry under WIPS, nor do I see a way to comment on PAGES stuff. Can you help us out here, Curtis? Thanks! & Happy New Year!)

          Liked by 2 people

          1. curtisbausse Avatar

            ‘Tis done! There’s an ‘allow comments’ box at the bottom of the panel on the left of the page draft which I forgot to tick. But they’re both posted now on the WIPs page with comments possible. Happy New Year also!

            Liked by 1 person

  13. […] Ranscht Selling Your Baby “Ultimately, marketing your book is far more than posting ads and links and waiting for the […]

    Liked by 1 person

  14. Carl E. Reed Avatar

    @Sue: Great article! Nicely done. As one who hates to self-market, I’ve bookmarked this page in my browser. Good, clear-eyed, thoughtful advice on a loathsome (I’m sorry; are my feelings showing? Heh!) subject.

    Liked by 1 person

  15. Sue Ranscht Avatar

    Thank you, Carl. Haha! I understand completely. My writing partner and I spent 6 weeks marketing ENHANCED during a Nerdist / Inkshares contest. We finished 12th out of 335, and managed to acquire more than enough pre-orders to earn Inkshares “light publishing” option, but we passed in favor of going for traditional publishing instead. What we learned was that marketing is a soul-crumbling endeavor. It took me 6 months to recover all the pieces and feel whole again. We submit our first four queries Tuesday morning. When things eventually fall into place, I know our role in marketing won’t evaporate, but I expect it will be delicioulsy diluted by some traditional help. 🙂

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Carl E. Reed Avatar

      Salute! Well done. So glad you’re part of the goings-on here at Writers Co-op. (Though you found the site long before I did, which just goes to show who’s the smart one, eh? Cheers!)

      Liked by 1 person

  16. […] here seven years ago. Her post, “Selling Your Baby,” is as apt now as it was then:https://writercoop.wordpress.com/2016/06/23/selling-your-baby/Sue Ranscht will now do what I have been doing – or not. She is creative, you know, and full […]

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