Get 'em Hooked on Your Book
So you got your book published. Congratulations. Having a book
in print helps you build your credibility as an expert in your
field.
But if you're relying on your publisher to promote your book,
you're in for a real shock. Unless you're a celebrity or well
know writer like Stephen King or Mark Victor Hansen, you'll be
lucky if they include you in a press release with other authors.
A large part of promoting your book is promoting yourself and
making sure your name is recognizable to your target audience.
While you may not reach John Grisham status, you can go a long
way to establishing yourself as the expert on your subject
matter by becoming heavily involved in the community for which
you write.
If you want your book to become more than a blip on Amazon.com,
you're going to have to do some of your own publicity.
1) Write some more: To promote your book you need to make sure
everyone knows that you wrote it and you need to peak their
interest enough to make them want to buy it. To do that you
should write press releases and articles about your book's topic
and submit them anywhere that holds your book topic's audience.
2) Network: Attend meetings and special events everywhere you
can to meet people who would be interested in your book, then
talk about it. Make sure you have a short 'commercial' all ready
to say to anyone that shows the least bit of interest in your
book. Convince them that if they only buy one book in a year,
yours is the one they should buy!
And remember, networking doesn't mean offline events. You need
to network online as well. If you are active on list servs and
bulletin boards that relate to your book's topic. Mention the
book in your email signature.
3) Arrange public appearances: Call up bookstores to arrange for
a reading and book signing. Also, approach those who organize
events that are related to your book's topic and ask them if
they'd like you to speak. Experts with free time are very hard
to come by. They'll probably jump at the chance to have you
contribute.
4) Use an email campaign: Ask colleagues with strong email lists
to help with this for the most impact. Write an email that
drives people to Amazon.com to buy your book on one particular
day. (Just make sure that day isn't when the next Harry Potter
or anticipated next best seller is scheduled for release.) You
and your colleagues email it out. Depending on how big the email
lists are, you could see your book become an Amazon best seller.