Ready to promote and market your book?

16th June 2014
Blog
6 min read
Edited
17th December 2020

Right pleased I was, winning the W&A blurb competition, the prize being a publishing package with the Amazon-owned Createspace. Partly my own perfectionism (read ‘indecisiveness’?) to blame, but the sometimes overwhelming process took a whole year from start to finish. 

Julia Johnston

Right pleased I was, winning the W&A blurb competition, the prize being a publishing package with the Amazon-owned Createspace. Partly my own perfectionism (read ‘indecisiveness’?) to blame, but the sometimes overwhelming process took a whole year from start to finish. 

I wanted a paperback edition (POD-Print on Demand) as well as an eBook, but it was time-consuming. You focus on the look of the book and you must approve physical copies which have to be meticulously checked/reprinted/shipped with corrections. Cover design, interior design, and editing—all require substantial input. This is both the most welcome and most challenging aspect of self-publishing.

The time difference and ‘language barrier’ added to the challenge of making speedy effective decisions. The Createspace staff couldn’t have been more helpful and patient, but something was definitely lost in translation. 

I had to send a lexicon of British English words to the editor too including ‘bonkers’, ‘sloshed’, ‘Asda’, ‘Lynx body spray’, ‘Butterscotch Angel Delight’ ‘grub’ and ‘arse’.

Misunderstandings were sometimes more serious. Nearing the end of the journey, the back and forth caper became exasperating. I’d be sent a proof copy, find errors like line breaks, and wait for the next one. A word had been incorrectly spelt in a poem once (spotted by my eighty-nine year old mother!) but it wasn’t my mistake. I was sent a subsequent copy with… the error uncorrected. Argh. As my launch date approached, anxiety mounted. Would I receive the box of expensively shipped ‘perfect’ books in time?

In the end, they weren’t perfect—it seemed with every proof, another line break or missing/inserted letter would appear. The process would have been easier and a lot quicker, I imagine, if I’d been working with a UK-based company. Oh, and the imperfect books did arrive on time for the book launch.

Publishing an eBook only would have been loads quicker. If a reader likes your work, they’ll look to see what else you have out and some indie authors are increasing their output and therefore their visibility, by putting out collections of short stories, non-fiction work, blogs-made-books etc ‘over night’. Nothing to lose, and if they’re well written and well received, a heck of a lot to gain. And you can change or withdraw an eBook whenever you want. Some writers who churn out two, three, four novels a year e.g. in the romance genre, offer a new book free, aware that the freebie might well lead smitten readers to purchase their backlist. Clever stuff. Very markety stuff too, which is alien to many ‘creatives’!

And so on to promotion and marketing! I’ve learnt stacks since my novel came out. Pushing your ‘product’—yucky words to most writers—is crucial, if you want to sell books. You need a plan. Your book will languish, unseen, among the tsunami of titles out there if you do nothing… and that goes for traditionally published books too.

So, below are my marketing tips, most of which cost NOTHING. You would do well to work on:

  • a website/blog
  • an email sign up on website/blog/in book!
  • a presence on one or all—twitter, facebook, google+, Goodreads
  • eliciting reviews from friends, family & top Amazon reviewers
  • using said reviews in your book description
  • the seven descriptive key words or phrases allowed on Amazon. Choose words someone might type in when looking for a book like yours
  • your two Amazon categories. MASSIVE TIP HERE—initially, don’t list your book in a highly competitive category like ‘thrillers’. I was invisible in a huge category, but I reached #6 in a less saturated category’s best-seller list, immediately becoming more discoverable to potential readers. Calling myself a ‘best-selling author’ gives me a better chance in a broader category. Amazon staff will help you with this. 
  • selling your eBook in multiple stores like Smashwords, Kobo, Nook, Apple, even if you start with KDP select  (ebook exclusive to Kindle but you gain 70% royalties rather than 35% plus special 5-day promotion to create buzz.) NB Kindle books can be read on all other devices with the Kindle App
  • not pricing your book too high or it won’t sell. It keeps changing but at the moment £2.99 and $2.99 seem to be the most popular prices for an ebook
  • your sales page so it looks the best it can (link to an author page on Amazon’s ‘Author Central’)
  • Join Goodreads as a reader, then an author and try a Goodreads ‘giveaway’—wonderful for exposure
  • Apply to Bookbub (not free)
  • Join Netgalley (not free)
  • Join Author Marketing Club (not free)
  • List or advertise your ebook on Bookbub, Pixel of Ink, Fussy Librarian, Ebookdaily, Kboards, ereadernewstoday, digitalbookstoday, kindle books and tips
  • Try guest blogging/conduct a blog tour
  • Offer talks in schools/libraries/plan a book tour…?!
  • Attend book fairs and festivals
  • Join the Alliance of Indie authors—ALLi (keep up to date/seek advice)

Good luck, lovely writers!

Julia JohnstonWriting tips:

TIP 1

Choose your Amazon categories carefully (pick the most obscure that reflect your book’s content or themes)

TIP 2

Self-publishing will not ruin your chances of a traditional deal; it can be a swifter route than the slushpile!

TIP 3

However, if you have to do most of your book promotion yourself, would you still surrender your rights and royalties to a publisher...?

Some suggested reading:

How to Market a Book, Joanna Penn.

Opening up to Indie Authors, ALLi

Let’s get digital and Let’s get visible, David Gaughran

Website: www.janefriedman.com - ‘Helping authors and publishers flourish in the digital age’

Writing stage

Comments

Excellent post, very informative, and I enjoy your dry wit! I've bookmarked this and will definitely come back to it once I've finished my manuscript (hopefully this decade).

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Steven
McKinnon
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Steven McKinnon
19/06/2014

I'm just about to start my final draft of my children's novel so I will push on through that and then have a good weigh up of my options!

Your blogs have been both educational and refreshing, and I wish you all the luck with your future endeavours.

Many thanks.

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Mark J
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Mark J Braybrook
18/06/2014

Thank you, Mark. Aha, so I've 'turned' you! Well I'm glad you'll now think carefully about self-publishing. You don't have to do all the above, I'm sure you realise; I am still pursuing some of the routes myself. I haven't really had the opportunity to say that I am not averse to being traditionally published in the future, but hey, how long does one spend begging? I didn't really spend that long in fact, as I won the competition at a time when I was just beginning to consider the possibility, but there is certainly much peace of mind, knowing I own my work and have the final word on every aspect of it. I've had to make myself a time-table, though, as it's easy for your writing to fall by the way side by focusing too much on marketing and promotion! And just for the record, and with regard to self-promotion, I offered my services to Writers & Artists! In other words, they didn't seek my out, I sought them.

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