With the growing demand for social content, authors need to start creating more digital assets and organizing
them so potential readers can explore them and fans can share them.
Maybe we need to place a value on our work
so potential readers get a sense that it's good, and worth their time.
My best sales period (tripled my monthly average) was immediately after: (1) Last year's Labor Day Sale, organized within this group, which had very few books on it,
so potential readers weren't overwhelmed by the sheer number of books, plus it was widely shared.
So potential readers quickly scan the vast selections rather than evaluating every book one at a time.
One of the most interesting features was the ability to embed the entire book for viewing only within a webpage,
so potential readers can read the book on a controlled website, without downloading.
Many self - published and hybrid authors will tell you that two of the best ways to increase your readership are offering free e-books and building a newsletter subscriber list
so potential readers can stay up to date on your latest work.
We agree that self - publishing (1) can be a means of getting your words in print, (2) it will let you can control your tome's contents and design, (3) if you can market well, by self - publishing you can sidestep the big - house foot - dragging, (4) when your book is complementary to your greater purpose of displaying your expertise (as, for example, using your book to secure related speaking engagements), or (5) when self - publishing is the best (and perhaps only) way to get your words and ideas past the older, established houses
so potential readers and buyers have a chance to see and decide about the merits of your independent offering.
Not exact matches
There are a lot of reasons to create thought leadership, but let's be honest: the dream is that
readers and
potential investors will be
so impressed by your insights and expertise they click the link in your bio to find out exactly what you're selling.
Ghansah adds that over a third of Africans are millennials,
so OMG Digital has a lot of a
potential readers.
Pontus Jansson and Marcus Antonsson are off the list of
potentials, as recent winners should be, and
so we give the remaining options to you, our
readers, to select your
Reader's Choice Player of the Month.
I usually don't read the comments made by other
readers because they're usually overly negative
so today why don't we pass around the optomism pipe and get high on our teams
potential.
Today I am
so happy to be able to share with my
readers, as well as current &
potential bloggers 5 of the most important things that I have learned as a fashion blogger.
I like to test products, review them
so that every
potential reader knows which product they should invest Frequency about 2 posts per month.
Gamespot should be ashamed of allowing the
potential of shifting their
readers opinions
so ridiculously off base.
So children are being denied independent and guided reading time with texts of high interest and
potential access and instead are handed texts that are much too hard (frustration level) all year long without ever being given the chance to grow as
readers in their Zone of Proximal Development (pardon my reference to those pesky educational researchers like Vygotsky.)
So, go public, and allow people to find you, otherwise you will lose out on a large
potential pool of
readers, and might shut out an entire group of people without even knowing it.
Book promotion means being in the right place at the right time
so that people — by which I mean the media and your
potential readers — can find you, the author, and your book.
Really awesome in terms of bringing awesome book on first page of google
so that awesome
potential readers can reach it!!
And now this, as a techy and avid book
reader I see
so much
potential in this, if it can fulfill it's promise it hits all the right spots.I wish I could buy stock of the company.
It can be such a tedious process if you're not used to creating book blurbs, but a great book blurb will hook a
potential reader, even if the book itself is
so -
so.
Your cover is the face of your work,
so if the cover isn't good or is all wrong for your target audience,
potential readers will never get far enough to know your book isn't bad.
Additionally, I also found it curious that in another recent post by Howey regarding a new short story he published for 99 cents, he expressed
so much guilt concerning the size of the work versus the price point that he advised stealing the story somewhere if the
reader, or
potential thief, felt the story was not worth 99 cents.
Remember, almost every
potential reader will see your back cover — whether in person or online —
so both your back cover copy and author biography need to fit together to really draw in your audience.
You don't want
potential readers to get
so bogged down by details that they get bored and move on to someone else's book.
Without actual books or excerpts or product, we can only find
so many genuine
potential readers out there to support our platform statistics.
With
so many choices out there for casual reading, and most of us limited on time for reading, a review makes it easy for
potential readers to choose.
So, when a
potential reader searches something either on a search engine like Google or in an online bookstore like ebooks2go.com, the search engine scans through its database and returns results to fit the search.
There is another reason to ask your audience (and
potential readers) to contribute to the discussion about your book cover — and yes I realise I am telling you this as I am about to ask you for feedback on the cover options but this series is supposed to be an honest peek behind self - publishing
so...
A simple solution for providing a sample of your book to
potential readers is for you to offer a free chapter of your book, if you have the publishing rights to do
so.
Plus, when people skim your book, they will often glance at this material to decide whether to buy your book
so it can also sell your book to
potential readers that way.
Your pool of
potential readers is limited if you're still conducting exclusively traditional book promotion campaigns and ignoring social networking; producing articles, podcasts, and book trailers; syndicating your blog; using your Web site to create an online community; distributing newsletters electronically to those on your mailing list; publishing eBooks to offer free peeks at your book's content or to gain
readers who might potentially get interested enough in your topic to buy your book (or, perhaps, to hire you); and
so forth.
It is the height of disingenuousness for those thugs of Amazon to defend themselves as «
readers» or
potential customers when their main goal is finding books and authors to trash,
so that they can continue to grow forum boards like «Badly Behaving Authors.»
But I'd be willing to bet that most would not,
so that cover choice limits the number of
potential readers.
Your book will have been off the market for at least a few hours (possibly longer),
so it's important to keep
potential readers up to date about where and how to buy a copy!
The two of them were excited that there are
so many
potential teen
readers.
It should grab the attention of your
potential readers so that they click it online or flip it over in the bookstore.
Where she stops, nobody knows —
so publishers need to do everything they can to maximize resources and engage
readers and
potential authors alike.
Your challenge is to let
potential readers know about your expertise, and your title,
so that they'll be motivated to buy your book.
It is wise to fill it out
so you are creating a more personal relationship with your
potential readers.
Are you really expecting your
potential readers to be
so enamored with your book that they'll pay for it — twice?
Their real identities are an «open secret,»
so it's more about having the «right» kind of name on the cover for a
potential reader to be willing to check out the book.
I've even contacted some authors about making changes, but I've learned that most authors don't like being told they need to fix their blurbs,
so I gather they aren't taking into account the
potential readers they're losing.
Last summer, some
potential readers told us they would buy Book Design Made Simple only in ebook format,
so we considered that possibility for the first time.
«We have a fairly detailed and comprehensive product road map laid out,» Kinzie explained in an interview about Issuu's platform, «The whole point of Issuu is to connect publishers and
readers in a digital environment, making the content that these publishers are working
so hard to create accessible to millions of
potential highly relevant
readers.»
Patience has already run very thin for many manga
readers as a company directly backed by one of the biggest names in the industry has sat silent for
so long, with it the
potential promise of many beloved titles held just beyond reach.
Launching your very first novel at 99 cents
so there's less of a barrier to entry for
potential readers
«Pilot Error» would not have reached
so many
potential readers without your help.
But on the other hand, having contact information from
readers who express an interest in a particular title or genre is valuable information for discovering what the audience wants to read,
so potential for losing an ebook sale is outweighed by gaining a customer.
Your book cover is your ultimate point - of - purchase sales pitch for your book,
so you want to be sure it appeals to and entices your
potential readers!
That's why Amazon reviews are
so important, and
so powerful — they provide social proof that other people have tried and liked your book, making
potential readers much more likely to try it themselves.