Traditional marketing and publicity opportunities for books are rapidly becoming scarce as Oprah exits network television and national morning shows more regularly use in-house correspondents instead of author experts. This means authors and publishers need to restock their marketing tool box.
Using digital marketing tools can help authors and publishers by-pass the network television gatekeeper and take book messages directly to the reader. Digital tools help authors connect with potential readers wherever they spend time online, be it Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube, blogs or search engines. And, it is essential to remember that nearly half of all web users are accessing the web throughout the day via their mobile devices so creating digital content that plays nicely in mobile formats is key.
I recently spoke on the topic of digital tool kits at BookExpo America 2011 on the Digital Marketing Panel with Sally Dedecker, Fauzia Burke and Kathleen Schmidt. The panel consensus was that authors and publishers need to consider utilizing a wide variety of digital strategies to reach new readers. You can view my powerpoint presentation here. But many digital tools are expensive to create and not every author or publisher has the budget to develop and implement the more complicated and costly digital strategies used by major brands.
Here’s a list of my favorite low-cost digital tools authors and publishers can their book campaigns.
Blogsite or Website with a blog
This is the author’s home base. Readers should be able to read more about the author, find links to the current and previous works of the author, view a personal appearance schedule and read the author’s blog. Readers should also be able to sign up for a continued relationship with the author, perhaps through a newsletter or to receive a sample chapter of a new book. Whatever the offer, the author needs to capture the e-mail addresses of people who express an interest in hearing from them. Authors can create a free blog using WordPress or Blogger and an e-mail management system like MailChimp is free until the author has attracted 2,000 fans. MailChimp automatically generates the HTML code needed for an Opt-in box, which the author can place on his or her blog. By working with the publisher to offer a sample chapter as a digital download, authors can offer a sneak peek for new books for fans who sign up for the mailing list.
Social Media
Social media amplifies the authors website and blog messages and creates a connection to help readers feel as though they’re involved in the author’s world. Authors can share tour information, preview books, give fans special content such as original stories on their website or blog and spread the word via social media. It’s easier and faster to amass a large following on Twitter and Facebook than to acquire a large subscription base on a website because millions of people are already gathered on social media sites. Go to where the readers are already gathered. Bring the author’s message to those readers instead of waiting for them to stumble upon that message on a website. It’s free to sign up for accounts on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and YouTube. There is no cost to use them. However, investing a few hundred dollars in design and custom tabs will allow authors to sell books directly from their Facebook Fan page, offer that sneak peek free chapter through an opt in box right from Facebook, create the look and feel of their own television channel on YouTube and give readers a sense of their personality on Twitter. For under $500, each of the author’s social media sites can be design to promote the others and ultimately to drive fans back to the author’s blog or home base.
Opt in
The theme for an author’s digital tool kit is “make it easy for the reader to find, follow, friend and like you.” By developing an e-mail database of readers who have expressed an interest in what an author writes, authors and publishers will be able to easily and efficiently push updates and marketing messages to potential book buyers who have already identified themselves as being interested. This permission based digital marketing is cost effective and can have a higher ROI than nearly any other book marketing. Adding an Opt in box and an enticing sign up offer on both the author website and their Facebook Fan page is an easy, inexpensive digital marketing strategy.
Video
We’re living in a social world where Facebook is the Wal-Mart of digital platforms. With nearly 700 million users now conditioned to expect to see a face attached to every brand, authors who use video effectively will have a competitive advantage in reaching readers. Readers like seeing and hearing from the artists they admire. In the past, meeting a favorite author or even a new author, was relegated to book signings and perhaps major events. Now authors can create short home videos and talk directly to their potential readers, sharing their tour experiences, their creative process and even concepts from their books. Readers enjoy authors who share a bit of their personality and their time by creating short video messages. This, too, is an easy and inexpensive digital marketing concept.
Digital Assets
Authors can now create digital badges, original digital content like blogs or articles, downloadable author photos and bios, digital press releases, quizzes, games and contests. All of these digital assets can be used to create visibility for the author and his or her books online. The more interesting and compelling the digital assets are, the more likely they will be referenced, shared and valued by potential readers. Creating 5-10 original essays or blog posts that can be used as guest blogs on sites visited by an author’s ideal reader is a free way to use these digital assets to promote an author’s books. The topic of the posts could be related to the topic of the new book and the author by-line can reference his or her latest work. By providing desirable content to other websites, the author extends his or her own visibility and attracts new readers. Sharing charts, graphs, photos, videos, quizzes or other interesting and relevant content on these high traffic websites is another strategic use of an author’s digital assets. Think about what digital assets you can create to support the launch of your books and prepare those assets so they’re ready and available at launch time.
Online Advertising
Facebook advertising campaigns can fit any budget. Authors and publishers can set a daily or a lifetime cap to the dollar amount of the campaign. If an author already has several thousand fans, Facebook’s sponsored stories ads display an image of the author’s fan page to friends of that author’s fans with a subtle visual that implies “Your friends like this page. You should too.” Authors and publishers can try different types of ads, different images and different creative messages until they find one that drives new fans to press “like.” Facebook ads can also be created to redirect Facebook users to the author’s blog or website. Again, even a budget of $100 to $200 can have an impact, not just in new fans or readers, but in author and book visibility. Hundreds of thousands of impressions can be achieved for a very modest budget. This is a digital marketing strategy that is often overlooked because publishers and authors think advertising is expensive or that it’s difficult to measure the ROI. With Facebook advertising, daily metrics will tell the tale of these ad campaign affects.
These are just a few of the digital marketing strategies authors and publishers can implement for little or no monetary outlay. Are you using digital marketing strategies effectively? We’d love to hear your ideas and success stories.
Pamela Cory
Fantastic session at BEA. Thanks for sharing your well founded knowledge.
cindyratzlaff
Pamela, Thank you so much for taking the time to give me your kind feedback. I very much appreciate it.
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