What about your book promotions?
Not exact matches
While not all gossip is bad — one can share secrets
about wonderful things like a suspected pregnancy or job
promotion — Epstein points out that «useful gossip is, in the minds of most people, not
what gossip is really
about,» and so the majority of the
book focuses on the more naughty kind of tattling, the kind that makes your heart beat faster when the subject of ridicule comes around the corner.
When it comes to
book promotion she knows
what she's talking
about and indie authors should listen — and act.
So authors contact me and say «I'm curious
about what it would take to launch a
book promotion campaign for my self - published
book» too late for me to steer them toward the most information they could find: they haven't really self - published at all.
This is very hard concept for many indie writers to grasp, thus all the constant talk
about promotion and price - changing because a
book doesn't sell instantly on one site to some magic idea by the writer of
what it should sell or
what some friend's
book sold.
What does the public have to say
about which
books receive their share of
book promotion opportunities, and which
books languish in obscurity?
Years of training and coaching authors has helped me uncover
what most do and don't know
about book promotion.
If you think
about source or style rather than the advertisement / content itself,
what type of
book promotions tend to work on you as a reader?
It doesn't matter
what you do or don't know
about book promotion right this very minute.
Most authors want to use their
book as
what they're giving away but, again, think
about whether your new — and therefore mostly unknown —
book is really the best thing to motivate people to take part in your
promotion.
For example, there may have been no more than 40 people or so in a fast - paced, tweet - storm of a session on
what authors need to know and do
about promotion and publicity for their
books.
This is a great chance for us to talk
about what is acceptable for
book promotion on Twitter and learn different ways we can share the
books we love without being spammy.
But if the same author tweets five times a day
about the progress of her
book promotion campaign («I just sent out 3 email pitches to the media,» «A national radio show producer is on vacation this week and won't be checking his email — that leaves two pitches that might come through,» «Just received an auto response from a producer, so who knows
what might happen,» «I received a random phone call from a high school classmate and pitched my
book to her,» and «I just sold a coworker a copy of my
book»), that's going to get old pretty quickly.
There's a huge listing of these
book promotion sites, but I'm not sure if I can use them or not, because I don't know
what these remaining days are all
about.
I follow Dan for advice on
promotion —
what I especially appreciate
about Dan is his generous and understated approach to getting your
books into the hands of interested readers.
Although cash flow is
what sustains authors and their families, there are far fewer
books about the business side of writing than there are
books about creativity, grammar, writing,
book promotion, and self - publishing.
yesterday on the effectiveness of
book signings made me think
about what does and doesn't work as far as
book promotion goes.
Teamwork is
what book promotion is all
about!
Here's an example of
what book publicists and publishers mean by «
book promotion opportunity»: HarperCollins was
about to publish a
book written by Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto when... well, you know
what happened.
Five months later, I'm looking back to see
what went right and wrong and
what I can share
about book promotion.
I surveyed three veteran
book marketing pros and here's
what they said
about the changing world of
promotion and publicity.
You have to be more creative than ever, but that's
what book promotion has always been
about — creativity — and that's a good thing, after all.
Authors in my
book promotion e-course often ask for help deciding
what to write
about.
Filed Under: How to Begin Blogging a
Book, What Subjects to Blog About Tagged With: bestseller, bestselling book, book promotion, books that sell, Top 100
Book,
What Subjects to Blog
About Tagged With: bestseller, bestselling
book, book promotion, books that sell, Top 100
book,
book promotion, books that sell, Top 100
book promotion,
books that sell, Top 100 List
Do you feel like you're wasting your time on social media in spite of
what you hear
about how it's great for
book promotion?
The Author's Guide to
Book Promotions will teach: - Why networking is so important to author success - How to evaluate a blog's reach - What is the goal of a book blog tour - What to expect of a book blog tour - How do book promotion companies spread the word about a book - How do people consume social media content - How to evaluate a promotion com
Book Promotions will teach: - Why networking is so important to author success - How to evaluate a blog's reach -
What is the goal of a
book blog tour - What to expect of a book blog tour - How do book promotion companies spread the word about a book - How do people consume social media content - How to evaluate a promotion com
book blog tour -
What to expect of a
book blog tour - How do book promotion companies spread the word about a book - How do people consume social media content - How to evaluate a promotion com
book blog tour - How do
book promotion companies spread the word about a book - How do people consume social media content - How to evaluate a promotion com
book promotion companies spread the word
about a
book - How do people consume social media content - How to evaluate a promotion com
book - How do people consume social media content - How to evaluate a
promotion company
I thought and thought
about what indie published
book I could highlight today, and finally I remembered ones that I just recently got during their free
promotions.
:) You may want to also post
about this in the Free
Book Marketing or Marketing &
Promotions Group here to let authors know
what you're seeking.
Your presentation, because it's related to your
book's content, will be a subtle
book promotion, and that is SO much better than a presentation based on «here's
what my
book is
about and why you should buy it.»
What we're not talking
about is a business
book masquerading as a 45,000 word brochure, full of salesy schlock and rampant self
promotion.
Which makes sense, I mean it's
what we've been taught
about book promotion, right?
In order to satisfy your ravenous appetite for information
about writing, publishing, and
book promotion, I'm developing a series of online writing courses aimed at giving you exactly
what you need and delivered in a way that's easiest to consume.
What's happening in the marketing space in the
book marketing and
book promotion space has changed so radically, particularly in the last year, that I have begun thinking
about that whole thing and how they're approaching it is changing.
What I really loved
about this was your energy, and there was no complaining or begrudging the challenges of
book promotion.
The Agency case in Canada is not directly linked to
what Penn and Lefebvre are talking
about — author pricing of
books sold through Kobo and other online retail platforms — although it's interesting to hear Lefebvre discuss
what's better in terms of discount procedures for Kobo (higher regular prices), and thus
what its scanners are watching for when it comes to featured
book promotions.
And the upshot of it was that I said «
What you really want is — you're a publisher you need to publish a
book about book promotion and she said «Well, would you like to write it?»
In 1976, she founded and continues to direct Franklin Furnace, an artist - run space that champions the exploration,
promotion and preservation of artists»
books, installation art, video, online and performance art, further challenging institutional norms, the roles artists play within society, and expectations
about what constitutes acceptable art mediums.