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Christian InTech Articles - Ezines

 

 

Informative Articles

DDT: Do, Don't Think. Just market
*Article Use Guidelines* Use in opt-in publications, or on Web sites, but please include the resource box. Please send me a copy, if possible. Many thanks. ** Summary: Your marketing supports your business. Stop marketing, and your business...

How to Make Your Affiliate Program Profitable
You set up an affiliate program for your website and some affiliates signed up. But now you see your affiliate sales are less than delightful. Your first thought may be that affiliate programs don't work, but you know others sites are making...

Online Marketing: Five Fun Ideas that Increase Traffic
1. Using Hidden Links to increase subscribers or for a contest. Place a not so easy to find link in your copy and then ask people to find it. Give them a prize or freebie for finding it. Or you can give them the ebook after they find the link and...

Start Your Own Ezine Newsletter and Profit!
The information listed here is worth more than gold. if you apply these simple list building plans and techniques, we guarantee you will see results. you may not get the results as fast as you want to, but don't worry. all list building...

The Art of Endorsement
Remember the old time circus announcer who would shout at all oncomers, "Step Right Up. . ."? Well things haven't changed a whole lot since then. Today, every time you open your email, someone is telling you the very same thing. . . "Step Right Up...

 
     
WHAT I'VE LEARNED FROM MY SUBSCRIBERS

WHAT I'VE LEARNED FROM MY SUBSCRIBERS

As editor/publisher of Book Promotion Newsletter, I am fortunate in having an eclectic group of subscribers who number in the thousands. The ezine is interactive and subscribers are encouraged to share their innovative marketing techniques.

Since starting the ezine in March 2003, I have learned a great deal about the do’s and don’ts of book promotion. Some has been through my own experience as author of two local guidebooks, Catskill Alive (second edition) and Long Island Alive, both published in 2003 by Hunter Publishing. But most of what I know today comes from this creative group of authors, publicists, book reviewers, book coaches and editors.

First and foremost, subscribers agree, never hold a book signing without an accompanying presentation, contest or event. Simple lectures can be a bust – To promote my guidebooks, I spoke at Barnes & Noble and Borders to large groups of people who asked questions and challenged my knowledge and then left without purchasing one book.

One subscriber gets around this by doing “teaser” programs, in which she speaks about material not included in her book about plants. She says these presentations are successful because people are enticed to buy her book for new information. Subscribers who have written about animals bring them along; healing therapists who authored a book in their field do healing sessions in the bookstore. The rest of us have to find something unusual to add pizzazz to our signings.

Targeting your audience is a must. A subscriber who wrote a humorous book about his running knew that having a book signing at Borders was not the way to go. He needed to find runners so every weekend for the first four months the book was out he’d travel to marathon races and do a humorous presentation to the runners the night before the race and sell books. He reports that “it worked great and the race directors enjoyed providing something new and different.”

Another subscriber who wrote a travel narrative about a journey across America


with her two children tailors her press releases, speaking engagements and promotional efforts to different niche markets. She feels her book has broad appeal so not only markets to mother’s groups, women’s groups and parenting publications but also to veteran’s groups and the military since terrorism and patriotism are relevant to her message.

All authors pitch the media but how many of them are successful? One subscriber uses her “expert” status to interest the media. Her book deals with net crimes and she peruses the news online on a daily basis. When she finds an article that relates to a chapter in her book, she sends the reporter an e-mail stating why she liked the article and that she’s available as a cybercrime expert for expert stories. Her e-mail ends with the press release for the book.

Some subscribers were experts before they became authors and use their expertise wisely. One doctor/author was invited to the 2004 Olympics in Athens and when a reporter surfaced, the doctor introduced him to the staff and then retreated. He didn’t want to pursue the reporter as others had done. But in the end the article praised the doctor.

Above all, my subscribers have been my support system. After compiling the best of their strategies into a book and sending it off to a publisher who expressed interest, I was feeling blue. I didn’t know if the publisher would in fact publish the book or when I could hear from them and expressed my angst in the newsletter. This drew a flood of suggestions on how to fill the time until the publisher calls: “wait a month before calling,” “devote some time to your hobby,” “write another book,” “exercise,” “get your marketing plan in order.” One subscriber wrote that “a sense of being at loose ends is normal when you have completed a project that required a lot of energy and concentration. It’s kind of an empty nest syndrome.”


About the Author

Francine Silverman is editor/published of Book Promotion Newsletter, a bi-weekly ezine for authors of all genres. www.bookpromotionnewsletter.com