Not exact matches
The primary target
audience for your
book is the «
ideal reader» that the
book was written specifically for.
You're not clear on your
book's
ideal audience.
Guest blogging on blogs that have your
ideal audience will create impressions of your
book in places you might not otherwise reach.
I help authors create public interest in their
books by identifying their
ideal audience and creating marketing strategies.
But for authors who are working solo to get their names out there and get their
books in front of broader
audiences, free might be
ideal, at least for a little while.
Dana Lynn Smith defines readers as «people who buy the
book to read... the most obvious category and it includes your primary
audience (the «
ideal customer» that the
book was specifically written for)».
In this interview we talk about her Award Winning
book The Frugal Book Promoter and we talk about the concept of how authors can promote themselves for nearly nothing and get in front of a hungry audience of ideal read
book The Frugal
Book Promoter and we talk about the concept of how authors can promote themselves for nearly nothing and get in front of a hungry audience of ideal read
Book Promoter and we talk about the concept of how authors can promote themselves for nearly nothing and get in front of a hungry
audience of
ideal readers.
Finding your
book's
ideal audience and the people who are influential with that group is a core piece of marketing, but many authors struggle with where to even begin.
-LSB-...] your
book's
ideal audience and the people who are influential with that group is a core piece of marketing, but many authors -LSB-...]
You have to get the
ideal audience for your
book to get behind it and then word can spread to other potential markets.
What better way to get your
book seen by more people, than to find ways to grow an ongoing relationship with your
ideal audience.
Our guest blogger today is Jan Bear, who helps writers create the platform they need to reach their
ideal audience and sell their
books.
I've posted about how to find your
book's
ideal audience before, so I won't wander down the same trail.
«With an
audience of more than [17 million] affluent, educated, self - identified readers, Goodreads is the
ideal place to advertise your
book.»
In part 1 of this
book marketing series, we'll explore how you can build your
audience step - by - step, starting with figuring out who that
ideal audience is in the first place!
In part 1 of this
book marketing series, we talked about how to find your
ideal audience — what steps you can take to figure out who your dream reader is, where they hang out, and how you can reach out to them.
This can be really good for getting
books promoted on Amazon, but if you're hoping to reach a wider
audience it might not be
ideal.
So, ideally, if the author can create an attractive
book, and has a decent
audience, then self - publishing is
ideal.
Her editing packages include: (1) developmental editing, the deepest level of editing, focused on story and
audience appeal and
ideal for authors looking to ensure their story has a strong foundation; (2) line editing, focused on the language of the text and
ideal for authors with a well - developed story who are looking to improve the language in their manuscript; (3) proofreading, a superficial edit focused on punctuation and formatting, designed for manuscripts that are virtually ready for publication, and (4) the critique, an in - depth, multi-page review designed to highlight strengths and troubleshoot weaknesses in the
book as a whole — and an affordable introductory package at $ 119 (for most manuscripts).
In this post, Dan explains how you can take very specific steps to find out exactly what your
ideal audience likes, based on the
books they're already reading and the authors they're already following.
I'm hoping this series gives you and other authors the tools and information you need to effectively and efficiently target your
ideal audience — and make your
book marketing and PR strategies that much easier.
His
ideal audience member — possibly you — watches no television, can't drive or swim, always carries a pen, hates cell phones, names Pale Fire as his or her favorite
book, wears glasses, and is afraid of flying.