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Your Path to a Successful Book

Our $uccess blog will feature writing, marketing, and publishing tips we continue to learn since writing our 2009 INDIE Finalist workbook $uccess, Your Path to a Successful Book keeping our readers abreast of the everchanging skills required to write, publish and sell a successful book. We will also have guest commentators. Achieving your goals as a writer is what matters. Anything we can do to help you get there is our goal. We welcome your comments and hope you will sign up for our bi-monthly (or whenever we have enough material) newsletter.

Archive for the ‘Online Information’ Category

AME’s Eight Tips to Make Your Next Writers Conference Awesome!

Saturday, June 4th, 2011

Maralyn and I have learned a great deal from Penny Sansevieri.

Her 8 tips about writer’s conferences are worth passing along.

Our tip is to participate n a workshop or writing conference where Penny is speaking.

Feature Article: Eight Tips to Make Your Next Writers Conference Awesome!

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I love going to writers conferences, and it’s really awesome when I’m speaking there as well. But as wonderful as the networking is, if you don’t show up with a plan or a set of action items for the conference, you can get sucked up into the vibe of the event without being very productive. Here are some tips to help you maximize your event!Goals: Before you go to a writers conference, be clear on your goals. If it’s just networking, that’s great, but if you want to get more than networking out of the event, make sure you establish your specific objectives in advance.

Start networking before the event starts: Now that you’ve gone through the conference website, it’s time to identify the folks you’d like to get to know better and start your networking early. Send them an email and tell them you are looking forward to seeing them at the event, or hearing them speak. Follow them on Twitter and begin to network with them there. Early networking is a great way to get in front of agents and publishers you might not otherwise have access to.

Make appointments early: The conference website should be your new best friend. Comb through it to find names of publishers and agents who are going to be there. Most conferences will offer you publisher or agent appointments so you can present your work, but if you want to coordinate a meeting with someone for any other reason dig through the website to find out who will be there and see if you can get on their calendar. I have shown up at conferences hoping to make appointments there and found that they’re not only difficult to schedule, but often confusing as well. Once you hit the conference floor the momentum of the event takes over, and any appointments that haven’t been confirmed prior to event generally won’t happen.

Take business cards: Make sure you bring a lot of business cards, running out at an event is never good.

Stay organized: I will generally bring some letter-sized envelopes with me to the event and then file cards by session or event so I can keep track of where I collected them. For example, let’s say I went to a big awards dinner and did some networking. If I file all of these in the “Awards dinner” envelope, I can add a personal element to the follow up email like “It was nice to meet you at the awards dinner, wasn’t Marci’s acceptance speech great?”

Easy follow-up: Ok, so you’ve had a great meeting with a publisher and they want to see a chapter of your book. Great! Now what? Take their card, flip it over and jot down a few important notes on the back such as: follow-up steps, short meeting details (“met for lunch”), and anything else you can fit onto the card such as any personal details they shared – like having a daughter who went to the same school as your kids or something like that.

Never eat alone: There’s a great networking book by the same name (Never Eat Alone by Keith Ferrazzi, Crown Books) and the statement is true. At a writers conference be sure to grab a table packed with people and even better, don’t sit with the same folks over and over again. Mix it up and meet new people!

Action items: At the end of each conference day, I find it helpful to gather my notes and go through and highlight the important items from the day. I have often waited until I’m on the plane back home, or worse, the Monday following the conference and I generally can’t make heads or tails out of who I am supposed to follow up with at that point. Lesson: do it early while the information is still fresh.

And finally, our bonus tip:
Plan B: If you can’t afford to attend the writers conference that’s in your town here’s an idea for you. When a big conference rolls into town, an author friend of mine will sometimes hang out in the downstairs coffee shop or restaurant at the hotel where the event is being held and network with people there. You never know who you might meet.

Conference follow-up: This is a biggie. Make sure you always follow up with everyone you connected with, especially if you committed to them that you would send them more information, sample chapters, whatever.

Keep the networking going: Relationships take time. Don’t expect miracles when you land at a writers conference. Sometimes great stuff will happen right away, and other times it’s a process. Don’t let the networking end when the function is over. You’re now networking with them online via Twitter and Facebook, and perhaps you have some follow-up to do. Keep on their radar screen and then be on the lookout for future events you can attend!

Writers conferences are a great way to get out there and network, meet your peers and meet agents, publishers, and marketing professionals who can help you publish or market your book. Here are a few for you to consider!

* Romantic Times:
http://www.rtbookreviews.com/convention-home

* Unicorn Writers Conference:
http://www.unicornwritersconference.com/Unicorn_Writers_Conference.html

* Romance Writers of America:
http://www.rwa.org/

* Book Expo America:
http://www.bookexpoamerica.com/

You are welcome to reprint any items from “The Book Marketing Expert Newsletter.” However, please credit us as a source with the following paragraph:

Reprinted from “The Book Marketing Expert newsletter,” a free ezine offering book promotion and publicity tips and techniques. http://www.amarketingexpert.com

Brenda C. Hill
International Food Wine & Travel Writers Association
Books By Hills Success With Writing
Where and What in the World

Finalist in the Writing and Publishing category of the 2009 Next Generation Indie Book Awards, ”$uccess, Your Path to a Successful Book.”

12 Points About Book Signings – E. Keith “JB” Howick, Jr …you’ll get out of it what you put into it

Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011

Blow Us Away

Frequently, I’ll quote some words or opinions from “JB” Howick, Jr. It seems like I know him personally, but we’ve never met except through a publishing list and my reviewing his book, Blow Us Away! Publishers’ Secrets for Successful Manuscripts, which is an accurate description of what publishers are up against. In general, I usually agree with most of his points and they are said succinctly.

His comments on what his firm has experienced with book signings, I personally believe applies to most publishers. He also has some creative thoughts on e-books at the end.

Our own experience with signings is that there is a great deal of science to the art of author signing events.  In our experience…

  1. The bigger the city, the easier it is to draw people.
  2. The bigger the bookstore, the easier it is to draw people.
  3. Trade bookstores (stores that sell just about anything) are not as useful as niche bookstores (stores that cater to a specific crowd) so long as your product fits the niche well.
  4. Well-established independent bookstores often draw more people than any other bookstore.
  5. Unknown fiction authors should expect few people until their notoriety grows.
  6. Narrative non-fiction (e.g., history books) that aren’t scheduled alongside a supporting event (e.g. veteran’s day for military history or a local historical celebration) should not expect many people.
  7. All other things being equal, problem-solving non-fiction (how-to, self-help, educational, etc.) usually draw the biggest crowds. This isn’t to say a fiction author can’t draw a bigger crowd, but the author would likely need considerable fame to make it happen.
  8. Authors that just want to sign books and meet consumers should expect to be bored.  Signings work best when accompanied by an activity.  (Not all bookstores allow activities.)
  9. Authors and publishers should be willing to contact every newspaper, magazine, TV station, radio station, club, association, reader circle, and interested community organizations, non-profits, governmental agencies, retail outlets … heck, even other bookstores (neener, neener), in an effort to maximize the opportunity for exposure.  We once had a signing for the author of a biography about a terminal cancer patient.  We sent press releases to hospitals and some actually posted the event announcement in their oncology wards — some people even came based on those postings!
  10. Authors and publishers should care about who else is signing during the previous and following week, no matter where.  A romance author scheduled at the local B&N while the borders across the street is hosting Jackie Collins shouldn’t expect much.  Authors and publishers should also care about what major events are happening.  We’ve had several signings that took place during major sporting events with quite a negative impact.
  11. Success is measured by the total increase in book sales in the area, not just the number of books sold at the event.
  12. Except for the host store, which really only cares about sales of your book through it.  A bookstore will be willing to host you again if they experience good sales during the event or during the following week, but won’t if they don’t.

Planning a good signing is almost as complex as the general marketing plan.  Unfortunately, most new authors believe that signings are magic.  If I schedule them at their local B&N people will be lined up at the door to meet them.  Setting good initial expectations helps, a willingness to work with a publisher to fine tune the signing process (e.g., the supporting activity, the announcement message, etc) also helps.  In the end, you’ll get out of it what you put into it.

… And, after all that, you might only sell three books.  Consumers are capricious.

Finally, it may seem obvious that ebooks don’t lend well to book signings, but what may not be obvious is how they affect the concept of book signings.  We’re starting to experiment with an ebook-first-print-second model in an effort to expand our catalog.  That doesn’t mean signings are dead until fame is achieved (justifying the print book) … it just means the nature of signings changes.  Signings might be replaced, for example, with webinars … and the promotional rules change with the venue.  If people really are interested in collecting autographs, maybe send an 8×10 of the book cover with the author’s signature as a thank-you for buying the ebook!  Ebook trading cards, anyone?
Cheers,
-JB–

E. Keith “JB” Howick, Jr.
President, WindRiver Publishing, Inc.

CityRoom, JustLuxe, Big Blend, Spa Review Magazine, Global Writes

Finalist in the Writing and Publishing category of the 2009 Next Generation Indie Book Awards, “$uccess, Your Path to a Successful Book,”

Current Online Marketing for Literature, Wine, Travel and Beauty from MBMA

Tuesday, April 19th, 2011

How do you market yourself or your book online with results. It is a daunting task.

I’ve finally found a firm I can recommend that comes through with terrific results at a fair price for services.

I’ve been so impressed with what this site has to offer authors of literature and hospitality or destination professionals, I wanted to share the information so you can judge for yourself.

Many authors and hospitality partners cannot keep up with social networking to market their business effectively. MBMA does it in a cost effective manner I wanted to share. They are also willing to work through PR companies.

If you determine it is appropriate for you, please call to have questions answered, and mention you heard about it from me. They can explain the details better than I can. I came across this site as I’ve had numerous articles placed on it.

Literature … Wine … Travel … Beauty …

Announcing three new publicity campaigns designed and implemented by seasoned marketing professionals.  Expansive, innovative, effective …and affordable!

A. Publicity Campaigns for Niche Markets – Literature, Wine, Travel & Beauty

Hand crafted campaigns to promote your company, products, and services – created by real people – utilizing Google Gadgets and Maps, websites and blogs, social media, forums and directories, newsletters and an amazing online magazine.

More information: http://www.mbmaonline.com/publicity-campaigns

Phone (206) 274-8054 (USA), or email sales@mbmaonline.com

B. Map-based Publicity Campaigns – Tour Companies

WorldwideToursDirectory.com stands at the head of a 50-website collection dedicated to promoting the best tours worldwide. Using a map-based directory, each niche site shows the basic information about the tours. But, beyond the map is an expansive promotional vehicle utilizing the best internet tools: articles, blogs, Google Gadget listings, press releases, Facebook pages, Tweets, and more.

Tours available now: Yoga, Spa, Wine, Culinary, Cultural, Spiritual.

Example site: http://culinarytoursworldwide.com

Example map: http://www.cityroommaps.com/tours/culinary-tours.htm

Programdescriptions: http://www.worldwidetoursdirectory.com/worldwide-tours/marketing/

For more information, please phone (206) 274-8054 (USA), or

email: sales@worldwidetoursdirectory.com

C. Map-based Publicity Campaigns – Wine Industry

Designed for: Wine Professionals, Wineries, Appellations, Schools, Wine Museums, Events, Festivals, Tradeshows, and Great Wine Restaurants.

Promote your wine-focused business to a passionate, opinionated, sophisticated audience with great taste.  The Oenologist campaign is your host. By adding your wine company to Oenologist.com and CityRoom.com sites, you will reach greater visibility through the most up-to-date media channels.   Each activity stream is executed systematically to ensure smart SEO and indexing.  Affordable, effective, and long-lasting.

More information:  http://www.oenologist.com/marketing-for-wine-companies.htm Phone (206) 274-8054 (USA), or email sales@oenologist.com

CityRoom, JustLuxe, Big Blend, Spa Review Magazine, Global Writes

Finalist in the Writing and Publishing category of the 2009 Next Generation Indie Book Awards, “$uccess, Your Path to a Successful Book,”