FB ads, offering
reader magnets in my books.
Even if selling your latest book is your primary call to action, you can also use a pop - up dialogue box to offer bonus material or other
reader magnets in exchange for their email, without messing up the website design.
He explains how to set up what's called a «landing page,» a web page with a single purpose: to offer
that reader magnet in exchange for an email address.
Download my step by step guide to transform your LinkedIn headline into an eye catching,
reader MAGNET in 5 minutes flat!
Not exact matches
If you haven't yet «liked» the page, you're missing out on some great
reader discussion (
in fact, posts with zero comments on the main blog are often getting talked about quite a bit on Facebook) along with the grand unveiling of the new USDA MyPlate icon (replacing the old Food Pyramid); a distressing graphic of what the White House garden would look like if it were the recipient of current farm subsidies (hint: hope you like corn); a great Father's Day gift idea for dads who cook; news of an exhibit of vintage government food posters; an egg salad recipe; and even a chance to win a coveted (not really) Lunch Tray fridge
magnet!
The print audience and online subscribers to SEEN include
readers interested
in educator - related professional development, curriculum, lesson planning, teaching technology, tips and school topics that touch on every type of school - independent, private, public, charter,
magnet, home, faith - based schools and more!
They are experienced
in magnet schools; we try to keep the same
readers every year who are all trained well.
Nick Stephenson (known for the book
Reader Magnets and the Your First 10k
Readers program) outlines his method of launching your book or product
in his course, «Your First Six - Figure Launch».
This is a strategy called «
reader magnets» or an opt -
in that has helped bestselling author Nick Stephenson get his first 10,000
readers.
The library can be a
magnet for ebook discovery and a distribution platform for helping authors self - publish... The article mostly broadens our awareness of how a library and its expert staff can help ensure that the right title finds the right
reader at the right time — and how the considerable research expertise can help deepen and strengthen the research
in the book.
They've written to market, have 10 (or more) books out (and they're good, follow tropes, etc) have great blurbs, great covers, a big mailing list, a free
reader magnet, and use thousands of dollars
in advertisement when the book releases, yet they still don't come close to making a living (most only make a few hundred dollars after production costs).
Verified, new, and «most helpful» reviews are ranked more highly on your Amazon page, so efforts made to develop relationships with book bloggers and Amazon reviewers
in your genre will go a long way toward making your Amazon page a
reader magnet.
When you answer that question
in your back cover copy, you will have a book that is a
magnet to your perfect
readers.
As an Indie author, I have set up a permafree book (the prequel
in the series) and a
reader magnet (the first book).
In these cases, you would choose the option on your subscriber
magnet to NOT ask for
readers» email addresses.
Basically, a subscriber
magnet is an ebook that an author gives away for free to
readers in an effort to encourage them to sign up for his / her newsletter and, eventually, to buy more books.
Put an image and link to your subscriber
magnet in the front and back matter of each of your ebooks, inviting
readers to sign up for your newsletter to receive the free ebook.
And this is where
reader magnets really come
in.
Take a cue from the business world and create what's called a «
reader magnet» where you offer customers something of value, like your first ebook,
in exchange for their email address.
It just makes all the difference because with
reader magnets you're thinking about what is
in it for your
readers, not what's
in it for you.
Reader magnets are basically something of value that you give to your
readers in exchange for an email address.
I offer them a book as a
magnet, a full book (either another book
in the series, or a related book if it's a non-fiction book), but you don't have to offer a full book, you can offer bonus chapters, deleted scenes; or
in non-fiction: cheat sheets, case studies, videos, anything you want as long as it's related to the book that the
reader has just finished.
Both the front and back of the device are covered
in glass, meaning that when you place it on a solid surface, it makes a satisfying clunk (although it is a fingerprint
magnet, as discerning
readers have probably noticed from the photographs.)