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Promoting Your Book
By Nithya K. A large part of promoting your book is promoting yourself
and making sure your name is recognizable to your target
audience. While you may not reach cult status, you can go a
long way to establish yourself as an expert on your subject
matter by becoming heavily involved in the community for
which you write. To Brand yourself and your work do the
following:
Create Your Website
Websites have become crucial marketing tools for authors and
are a great calling card. Create a website that provides
value to your audience and lets them get to know you and
your work. Give people extra tips and tricks they won't find
in the book, update any outdated information and provide
news and reviews of your books and news that you know of in
the community. If you are really ambitious you can create
your own community around your website.
Arranging for an Author Interview
Many publishers have done marketing studies showing that
authors who provide comments on their books or participates
in author interviews on the online bookstores sell more
books online. This is a no-brainer as it doesn't take much
of your time and is perceived as an added value for your
reader. Large websites, such as Borders.com, make a practice
of interviewing authors.
Trade Shows
Trade Shows are a fantastic place to promote your book.
Every attendee and speaker is a possible book-buyer. Try to
arrange with your publisher to do a book signing either at
their booth or at the trade show bookstore. Many authors
sell thousands of their books at a single trade show. If you
can find a chance to speak at a trade show or are invited to
speak on one of the panels, the best bet to opt for. Aside
from being great book publicity, it's another way to get
your name out there in the community.
Teaching
Teaching is a great way to develop your pedagogy. It's also
a great way to understand how people learn the technology,
what their frequently asked questions are, and how you can
best improve your books so that they are most easily
understood. If you are not interested in teaching at the
local university or community college, you might want to
consider teaching online courses. There are numerous online
education companies looking for authors to help teach their
courses. Most authors find online teaching to be enjoyable,
lucrative, and something that can be done almost
simultaneously with writing books.
Email Newsletters
Email newsletters are a great direct marketing tool. Though
a lot of work, if done right they can lead to huge name
recognition and royalty checks from book sales. Several
authors have had tremendous success with their email
newsletters to the tune of thousands of subscribers. A good
example is the Kabalarian Philosophy Electronic Newsletter.
Consulting/Training
Many publishers look first for trainers or consultants to
author books on certain topics. To become known as an expert
in the community, you need to stay abreast with what is
latest in the technology field. It's good to diversify if
you can -- if you concentrate only on writing books you can
become out of touch with the latest advances. Consulting
will keep you on the cutting edge. Also, if you're lucky,
the company or companies for which you consult will want to
buy a copy of your book for the entire staff.
Reviewers
Positive book reviews are always a great way to sell books.
Keep an eye out for bylines of reviewers in magazines and
journals particular to your book topic and coordinate with
your publisher to make sure that the reviewer receives an
early copy of your book. Trumped up reviews on Amazon are
easily seen through and don't do much for an author's
reputation, but if you get a genuine email from a reader
with positive specific comments you might want to ask him or
her to post their comments on Amazon.
Magazine Articles
Article bylines have long been good book promoters. Research
the major trade journals on your subject matter both in
print and online and pitch article ideas tangential to your
book topic. Also, you should consider writing for some major
websites that serve your topic area. You can often attach
excerpts from your books (ask your publisher for permission)
to contribute to popular sites, which promotes your book at
the same time.
Discussion Groups & Newsgroups
Discussion Groups are a huge part of any community these
days. By participating online you are getting your name out
in the community, staying current with all of the latest
developments, and making crucial contacts that can include
book reviewers, magazine editors, book editors and the real
gurus of technology.
Newsgroups on the Web, including chat and message forums on
proprietary services like AOL and Compuserve, are great
places to make yourself known and promote your books, your
website, and your career. Many authors have gained
prominence on the newsgroups, particularly in the web
scripting and programming area. It's important to be
helpful, answer questions, and make yourself available
without pushing your books too obviously or obnoxiously. If
you spam the newsgroups or forums it won't serve you in the
long run.
Amazon Corrections
If you have a book listed on Amazon.com and wish to correct
erroneous information on their site, here is the person to
contact. They respond quickly to author requests to correct
information.
Albert Rodriguez, Catalog Department: [email protected]
Other PR Resources
You can find more information about marketing and promoting
your book from John Kremer's Book Market website. John is
the author of 1001 Ways to Promote Your Book.
A great resource for adding advertising to online
publications is Art.com. They offer free banners and you can
add them to your site. Advertisers pay per click, and you
receive a percentage of what the advertiser pays. It's an
excellent way to create extra income from your out-of-print
books or supplementary material on your site.
An interesting way to promote your book is to put your
website in search engines like Yahoo! Yahoo generally takes
a day to update newly added sites, but there is no absolute
surety that your site would be listed.
You can also sign up as an Expert in About.com, which
provides a wonderful way to promote your work.
Last but not the least, become a bit philanthropic and with
a large heart give away your books for free among critics,
friends and family. Also add your website URL in all your
outgoing e-mails and correspondence. More mails obviously
means more views for your book!
About The Author
Nithya K is a India-based writer who specializes in writing
fiction and has tremendous interest in writing non-fiction
related to science, technology and other genre. She is also
experienced in creating technical documentation. Basically a
BE graduate with an MBA degree, her main focus is still
writing. Nithya is also interested in Ghost writing of books
and articles in the areas of business writing, technical
writing, science and technology writing and fiction.
The author can be contacted at
[email protected]
and also invites readers to visit her webpage at
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