Saturday, February 23, 2008

NEW WEBSITE FOR SELF PUBLISHERS

A new website has been recently launched allowing self publishers to advertise their work for free. From their website they promise the following:

"We provide:
  • A place to facilitate the sale of your book. You can upload the cover picture of your book, a few sentences about your book and a link to your personal web page. On your personal web page you can display sample pages of your book, reviews and purchasing information.
  • If you do not have a personal web page we can provide one for you at a reasonable price.
    A forum where self-published authors worldwide can communicate regarding all facets of creation, publishing and marketing books.
  • Pertinent news and items of interest to self-published authors.
  • We will be attempting to direct as many potential buyers as possible to our site.
Book lovers and self-published authors are welcome. For absolutely no fee of any kind self-publishers may display their book's cover, a blurb and a link to their own website. Book lovers deal directly with authors cutting out the expensive middlemen. We have a unique sales plan and work tirelessly to help authors promote their books. Our international forum is open to all. Whether you are a writer or a reader please check out our new site, join us and help spread the word."

Check out their website at http://www.selfpublishersplace.com/

Monday, February 04, 2008

USING FACEBOOK AS A MARKETING TOOL

What do you think of Facebook as a marketing tool for self-published books?

An Interview with Ron Pramschufer

A month ago I would have told you that Facebook was a useless website where 15 years olds trash talked each other and otherwise wasted time. As a mater of fact, I originally opened my Facebook account to try to rummage around and see what my 16 year old was up to. Today I am convinced that Facebook should be considered a primary marketing tool by every self-publisher.

About a week or so ago, I visited FaceBook to see if my 16 year old had changed the “Animal House” looking picture of himself that was posted to his account. He hadn’t. To the first time visitor the website is just what the name implies, a virtual book of faces. The first time you go to the site you reach a very plain looking page with a green button that says “sign up”. For those who don’t want to sign up right away there is a search field where you can use to enter a person’s name. For instance, if you enter “Pramschufer”, you’ll come up with my picture, right on top. There are a few links about the picture like “send message” or “view friends” or “Poke him/her” but all links take you to the sign-up page. This is as far as you go without signing up. The sign-up is no big deal, go ahead and do it. An email, choose a password, enter a birthday and you’re in…. or at least part way in. Now those same people that you did the sample search for, you can click and “send message” or “Poke” or “View Friends” or “Add to Friends”.

As a parent, using the site for the first time, I thought I had hit pay-dirt when I hit “View Friends” because I could now see my kid’s “friends”… but that was all I could see… postage sized images of all his “friends”. Other than a few, “I haven’t seen him/ her since 2nd grade; this is as far as you get in the super snooper department at Facebook.

The next level of activity is adding friends, which is what Facebook is all about. It took me a while to figure out what it was all about. To add a friend, you click on the “Add to Friends” link next to the picture. The trick is that the person on the other side needs to click “ok” before you are officially a friend. A friend basically means that you have gone from access of the person’s headshot, to access to the persons home page. What is on a person’s home page? Whatever they put there. I think I originally just listed my name and company name and maybe a picture.
Finding friends is a bit tricky in the beginning. For instance, did I ask my 16 year old son to be my friend? Of course not. There was no way he was going to click OK and let me in. He doesn’t even let his older brother into his “inner sanctum”. I tried my oldest son first. He accepted me as a friend. That was pretty neat. I got to see some of his friends. Many of which I already knew. I clicked on a few of them and they were added to my friend list. I still didn’t see any real point to the site until I did a search for publishers, or self publishers, I forget which. Lo and behold up pops the picture of probably the best book hustling self-publisher on the planet, Relentless Aaron. I click the “Add to Friends” link and a half hour later Relentless was on my friend list. It was exploring his site that the full impact of this site became apparent.

If you are going to sell books, or anything else for that matter, you need to look your prospect in the eye, reach out and shake their hand and demonstrate how your product meets their need. Facebook give you that opportunity. I don’t see it as a “quick hit” but a place to build a strong foundation on which to build. The site is very easy to work with and everything can be customized to meet your personal tastes. There is a great mixture of work utilities as well as playthings and other gimmicks to keep you coming back for more. If you let them, your “friends” will get to know you. As they get to know you, they get to know your product. If you are an author/self-publisher, you have something to share. Share it.

Facebook is the #7th highest ranked website on the Internet for web traffic. To put that number in prospective Amazon is ranked #33. Think about that a moment. Authors spend countless hours and sometimes thousands of dollars to get a few copies on a shelf, spine out, in a bookstore visited by a few thousand people per month, in hopes of selling books. Facebook has tens of millions of visitors and it costs nothing but a little bit of your time.

If you are already listed in Facebook, look me up and add me to your friend list. There aren’t too many Pramschufers there so it shouldn’t be hard to find me. I started a group called Self-Publishing Basics the other day. You are welcome to join that as well. I am not 100% sure what I am going to do with that group yet so you’ll certainly be getting in on the ground floor. If you haven’t signed up yet, go do it now. Once you are in, spend some time there and work on your contact page. This is how people will get to know you. There are dozens of modules that can be added to your site to help people get to know you and help you communicate with others. Have some fun, meet some prospects, shake some hands and sell some books. See you there.

Your friend,
Ron

From Publishing Basics Dec 5 2007
http://blog.selfpublishing.com/?p=230

Saturday, October 27, 2007

WILL YOUR BOOK SELL ITSELF?

Not without Divine intervention, and even then it might be “iffy.” And of course, your book won’t sell itself. If the public is not aware of your book’s existence, it really does not exist. This means someone has to promote your book so it can be sold. That someone is you. To paraphrase Pogo, “I have met the publicist and it is me.”

Not too long ago, book publishers promoted books and authors. Today, only the big-name authors are promoted. And, we can’t blame the publishers. They’ve paid many ga-zillions of dollars in advances to these authors, and what dollars are available for promotion have to be spent to protect these advances and maximize their sales.

If you’re self-published, it’s even more important that you come to grips with the reality that promoting your book is even more important than writing it. Let’s assume you spent hundreds of hours, perhaps months or years completing your book. And let’s assume you’d like to sell it so you can pay the rent, or make a car payment, or your student loan. Maybe even alimony. Perhaps quit your day job.

If these things are important to you, then run – don’t walk – to the hat rack, and put on your marketing hat. If you are rich and famous, you can hire a publicist, but for most of us, that’s beyond our means.

BOOKS SALES STATISTICS
Let’s stoke the fires with a few facts. According to The Wall Street Journal and Nielsen’s BookScan, even books published by mainstream publishers can represent a dim sales outlook. In a recent survey, approximately 80% of the titles tracked by Nielsen sold only 99 copies, and fewer than two percent sold 5,000 copies or more.

The survey also determined the average title sells 500 copies, and fewer than ten percent of the 110,000 titles published in an average year reach the shelves of traditional bookstores. Just being on the shelf doesn’t mean thousands of people will pick up the book and buy it. The really sad news is that titles reaching bookstore shelves have about ninety days to be sold or they will be returned by the store to the wholesaler.

The public must be driven to the marketplace, whether the marketplace is a bookstore or a website. Do these numbers mean that 90% of these books were un-saleable? Of course not. Most of these unsold books weren’t promoted, either by the publisher or the author. You can avoid the “swamp of low sales” with effective promotion. Even if your book isn’t great and even if you’re not an experienced PR person, a decent promotional campaign will sell books.

BOOK PROMOTION
“The press release is the most widely used and effective means of communicating to the newspaper.” Mac Tully, Publisher, Kansas City Star News releases (called ‘press releases’ until recently), are the cheapest and probably the most effective means of book promotion. Good promotion is a numbers game. Throw enough news releases up on the wall and some of them will stick. Some will get published. One good news release can pull your book out of that “swamp of low sales” and turn your life around.

Obviously, there are many kinds of promotion. Book signings, articles, book reviews, radio and TV interviews, and public speaking appearances are all worthwhile projects. But we’re playing a numbers game. One has to make a lot of garden club guest appearances or host a lot of book signings to accomplish what a news release can do. Especially one that reaches several hundred thousand readers. And, in a major publication the numbers can get to the millions in a hurry.

NEWS RELEASE BASICS
There are so many things involved in the writing of releases, I can only cover a few points in a few paragraphs. In my book and software program, Promote Your Book in the Media, I devote many pages and examples to the subject. Here are a few things that are really important.
The headline. Most PR mavens believe a good headline represents a 90% chance for your release being published. And a poor headline represents a 90% chance of its being summarily rejected. I concur. The headline is critical. And remember, for purposes of your release, the editor is the customer, not your library group or the ladies in the garden club. The editor is the person who must be sold.

Consider limiting your release to a single, double spaced page. If the editor likes your story, there’s a chance you’ll be contacted to expand it into a longer article. Avoid fancy fonts and gimmicks. Stick with Times New Roman, black. The KISS principle is paramount. Editors are busy, overworked professionals who have no time for gimmicks, games, or cutesy gambits. These things will brand you as being un-professional.

If you are mailing, faxing, or e-mailing the release, it should be directed and personalized to a specific editor. The same principle applies to media editors as is applicable to sending out your queries and submissions. Personalization is critical.

If you mail your releases, envelope labels are an absolute no-no. For the editor to read your release, the envelope must be opened. A personalized envelope has a much greater chance of being opened than one that has been labeled or addressed to “Editor.” These envelopes will usually be trashed. You can’t afford a summary execution.

WRITING THE RELEASE
The old press release format was an announcement of a new product or service. They generally opened with a headline, and a first line that stated, “XYZ Publishing is pleased to announce the publication of Suzie Striver’s new book …” Editors will trash that release immediately. They won’t bother to re-write it, either. They don’t have the time.

Editors want a story, not a sales brochure. It is estimated that more than thirty percent of a paper’s news space (not advertising space) is populated and derived from news releases. Read your paper and count the number of articles that begin, “XYZ Company is pleased to announce …” Not even the automobile companies use these old hack formats, but they are still being recommended by some so-called PR experts.

Make your release a story and sell the story, not your book. This is easier said than done. It is critical that your release not appear to be a sales brochure – even though it is. I’m not a speed writer, nor do I represent myself as a PR expert. I only know what has worked for me, and I have spent as much as a week writing and re-writing a 400-word release. News releases pulled my first self-published book out of the “low sales swamp” into a book that sold 50,000 copies. Actually, my swamp was the “no sales swamp.”

SENDING OUT THE RELEASE
Since this is a numbers game, utilize every avenue possible. Post your releases on your website, and on the internet. Post to the professional services, such as PR Newswire. You can gather media data from the library (Bacon’s Directory), but many of the names are out of date. For my first self-published book I spent many hours transcribing data from library resources and keying the data into my computer. It worked, but it was laborious.

I have faxed and emailed releases, and posted them with the wire services, but the most effective were releases printed on good paper stock (not 20# copy paper) and addressed to specific editors. Email is the cheapest. However, the editors get so much junk and spam, unless they know you, your chances of getting an email to their desk is getting to be more remote every day.

Services such as PR Newswire can be good, but they can also be very hit and miss. If an editor or reporter picks up your release, that’s great. However, I subscribe to being pro-active. There’s nothing more effective than a release sent to a specific editor in a personalized envelope. Most of the time, the editor will open that envelope, and that’s the biggest hurdle in getting a majority of your releases read.

MEDIA INFORMATION
Regardless of the medium used, your job can be made hundreds of times easier with a simple database populated with current media data. In Promote Your Book in the Media, I use My DataBase, an uncomplicated program that is simple-simon easy. I can contact specific editors at almost 500 of the nation’s largest newspapers by email, fax, phone, or U.S. mail. Data is current as of January 2007, since it was gathered over the last four months by contacting each of the papers in the database. Circulation of the listed papers exceeds 70,000,000. That kind of circulation allows you to play a true ‘numbers game.’

With this information and system, all one has to do is compose the releases, print them, and print your personalized envelopes. My DataBase interfaces seamlessly with Word, but will also print your envelopes if you don’t want to use a word processor. It’s not necessary to try and send out 500 releases in one day. When I first started, I found that sending out twenty releases a day brought a lot of success. And it was easy to do.

Remember, you must promote your book because your book won’t sell itself. Pogo was right.

William Hutchins

From Publishing Basics, 13 June 2007
http://blog.selfpublishing.com/?p=196

SELL YOUR BOOK WITHOUT BOOKSTORES

Recently, an author sold over 10,000 books, without ever hassling with bookstores. Here’s how your book can generate this kind of quantity sales this quickly:

BACKGROUND
According to a Harvard Business School report, 84% of books in large US bookstores sell 2 copies or fewer each year; only 2% sell 10 or more copies in a year. In addition to these dismal statistics, our author, whose name is Stuart, was stymied by another complication: He lives in Israel, rather than the US, so marketing books in the US was sure to be more complicated for him. So Stuart decided, with my encouragement, to temporarily ignore US bookstores for his children’s book, “Who Invented Vegetables?”

PUT THE BOOKS INTO A NON-BOOKSTORE VENUE
Stuart was intrigued by anecdotes of selling books in coffee shops and movie theatres. Non-bookstore venues have several key advantages: They pay better (60% and up, instead of 45%), they pay upon receipt (rather than 60-90 days later), and they don’t return books. Most importantly, however, there is no competition—because unlike a bookstore with hundreds of thousands of titles, coffeeshops, movie theatres, and other non-traditional venues generally don’t sell books. Once the decision was made to ignore bookstores, the question became, where would Stuart’s vegetable book sell in quantity?

FOCUS ON THE META-CUSTOMER
Rather than trying to sell to millions of end-customers, Stuart decided to focus on those who had the most to gain by selling the subject of his book: Vegetable exporters and retailers. The largest retailers of vegetables, he realized, are the major supermarket chains. And the chains are much easier to focus on than the thousands of individual vegetable stands.

GIVE THEM A REASON TO BUY NOW
Not only did Stuart want the chains to consider stocking the book in their grocery stores, he wanted to give the chains an impetus to buy the book immediately. Since the Jewish holiday of Shavuot is associated with vegetables, he presented it to the chains as a timely item, that would sell best if in the stores in the last few weeks of May, just before the holiday.

THE RESULTS
Stuart approached the largest supermarket chain in Israel. Within a week, his book was available in over 150 supermarkets across the country. Not content to rest on his laurels, Stuart then approached the major vegetable growers and exporters, and offered the books as a holiday gift item for children of employees and clients. For orders over a certain quantity, he would even put logos and personalized messages on the inside cover.

Results? Over 10,000 copies sold in a matter of weeks. Proportional to population size, that would be the equivalent of over 500,000 book sales in the US.

And because of the tremendous sales records, Stuart was then able to approach a US supermarket chain with his idea.

So think quantity sales, think outside the box venues, and think creative.

By Fern Reiss
From http://blog.selfpublishing.com/?p=197

Thursday, October 25, 2007

10 MODERN-DAY SELF-PUBLISHED SUCCESSES

Many works now considered classic were originally self-published, including the original writings of William Blake, Virginia Woolf, Walt Whitman, William Morris, and James Joyce.

Here are 10 modern-day self publishing success stories:

1. The Celestine Prophecy by James Redfield
2. The Book With No Name by Anonymous
3. The Joy of Cooking by Irma Rombauer
4. What Color is Your Parachute by Richard Nelson Bolles
5. In Search of Excellence by Tom Peters
6. The Christmas Box by Richard Paul Evans
7. Invisible Life by E. Lynn Harris
8. The Visual Display of Quantitative Information by Edward Tufte
9. Contest by Matthew Reilly
10. Eragon by Christopher Paolini

From Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-publishing

www.vanitypress.com.au

SELF PUBLISHING NEWS

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Dallas Robertson
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