Author Promotions: The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly
Okay, I've sold my books (yay!), and now it's month two.
What's the worry du jour? Promotion. How much is enough? How much is too much?
You can spend TON$ of money on promotion and it may not be worth it. The great
fear of mine (and probably others) is, if I do nothing, will my book just wither
away on the shelves, collecting dust, or getting the notorious ripped-cover. So,
this month, I decided to pick six of the finest writing and PR minds in the
business, Stephanie Bond, Suzanne Brockmann, Susan Grant, Holly Jacobs, Maudeen
Wachsmith, and Jo-Ann Power. I asked a few questions, nothing ground-breaking at
all. Different people have different approaches. There is no silver bullet or no
"you must do this," however, I hope you get some new (and cheap!)
ideas that help you out.
The first question concerned inexpensive PR opportunities. Holly
Jacobs, author of I Waxed My Legs For This? mentioned writing articles
for local newsletters and also sending press releases. Some of the places to
send a press release? Local newspapers, TV and radio stations, organizations you
belong to, booksellers, libraries, your hometown newspaper and your alumni
magazines. Stephanie Bond, whose latest release is Our Husband, mentioned
going to your publisher and asking to be featured as author of the month on the
website. Suzanne Brockmann, two time Rita winner, mentioned several items: 1)
press releases, especially RT. She noted that RT loves pictures and to include a
picture of you with a noted author. 2) starting your own email newsletter. 3)
your own website. 4) romance bulletin boards. Susan Grant, award-winning author
of The Star King, mentioned getting reviews from online romance and
review sites. Maudeen Wachsmith, a publicist, indicated having a contest on your
website and advertising it via RT online. Use the emails you get for your email
newsletter.
I also asked about print advertising and got mixed responses. RT
and RWR were mentioned. Stephanie Bond and Holly Jacobs both noted the RWA
publication, Romance $ells, which will get you a full page for $175 (pretty good
deal). Romance Sells goes to over 4000 bookstores and 1700 librarians. RT ads
are about ten times more costly; however, it is targeted directly to romance
readers and is considered the premiere romance magazine.
Of course, I could not overlook asking about bookmarks.
Stephanie Bond makes it a practice to put a bookmark (with her backlist) in
every book she signs. She designs them herself and then gets them printed
professionally (5 to a page). Maudeen Wachsmith mentioned using bookmarks as
thank-you's to reviewers, websites, booksellers, etc. Suzanne Brockmann wrote
writing articles when she first getting started and attached promotional
materials on the back. She sent copies to the chapter conferences listed in the
RWR. Suzanne also noted that now that she has name recognition, she is doing
more with bookmarks and postcards. She named Getz Color Graphics in Kansas as a
cheap place to get these done. Susan Grant said she hasn't made any bookmarks
yet, but is about to start. She mentioned "useful" trinkets such as
to-do list pads, mugs, etc. At the same time I was gathering information for
this article, AARLIST ran a question on whether a bookmark will cause a reader
to seek out a book. Several readers mentioned that yes, this is true. They love
getting bookmarks and postcards from their favorite authors. So, it sounds to me
like bookmarks are great for your established fans, but unless your cover art is
pretty stellar, they might get overlooked. Many authors are now doing
refrigerator magnets and Stephanie Bond also mentioned that she believes
excerpts to be very effective. Jo-Ann Power said, "To produce a promotional
item that is cheap and looks it, brings
you nothing, except the impression of cheap and looks it. It is better to
do nothing, than to do something which inspires a potential customer to never
buy your book (having gained the impression that poor quality is chosen by those
who value and produce poor quality.)"
There are several on-line reader lists to send information to,
Holly Jacobs mentioned RRA, READ, and cata-romance. Also, I just learned that Jo
Beverley has an RWA email list, RomExcerptLinks that is an announce only list
that will send out book excerpts. For more information on these links, see my
website (www.kathleenoreilly.com
and look at Favorite Links) (Heh-heh-heh, I'm learning).
I asked what the best promotional thing each person had done was
and got five different answers. For Holly Jacobs, the best thing was giving out
small pink ladies' razors with a bookmark attached for her book, I Waxed My
Legs For This? Susan Grant used her day job as a 747 pilot to bring herself
"brand recognition," dubbing what she wrote "aviation
romance." Stephanie Bond said that her website (www.stephaniebond.com)
was the best thing she's ever done. She has pages for readers, writers and
booksellers. For Suzanne Brockmann, the answer is to give away as many copies of
your books as you can afford to buy. She mentioned that at a booksigning for
your second book, you can give away a copy of your first book as a freebie.
Also, she set up a flyer that would let people write in with an SASE and she'd
send back a signed copy of her first book. She got a great response and everyone
got a free book PLUS Suzanne's promotional materials on her latest releases.
Maudeen Wachsmith mentioned that she is working on a promotion now to contact
Bed & Breakfast's in the area where the book is set, and giving away
copies of previous titles in the series for a summer library. Information on the
new book in the series is included, of course <g>.
For the worst promotional thing, Stephanie Bond and Suzanne
Brockmann both mentioned mass book signings and book signing tours. Both said
they now tie book signings to conferences. The upside to book signing is that
the bookseller will order MANY copies of your book and you can sign them, the
down side is that you may not sell them while you're sitting there alone at
your little table. Stephanie said that she mainly visits the booksellers while
she's out and about and asks to autograph their in-store stock.
The most overlooked promotional items listed were:
|
Respondent |
Item |
|
Holly Jacobs |
"Mothers. My mom actually scares people into buying
my books!LOL." |
|
Stephanie Bond |
"Not asking your editor to put a mention of your next
book in the current book. Not listing your P.O. Box or website in your
current book. Not having a website. Not giving out bookmarks or other
promo items when you sign a book for a reader. Not sending excerpts of
your other books when you reply to reader mail." |
|
Susan Grant |
"schmoozing at conferences" |
|
Suzanne Brockmann |
"buying copies of your book and using them as a promo
tool" |
|
Maudeen Wachsmith |
Free publicity on the Internet |
The last question I asked was to rank four target markets in
order of importance. I got five different answers, but booksellers showed up
high on the list.
|
Respondent |
Booksellers |
Book Distributors |
Romance Readers |
Romance Writers |
|
Susan Grant |
2 |
1 |
3 |
4 |
|
Suz Brockmann |
1 |
4 |
3 |
2 |
|
Stephanie Bond |
2 |
1 |
3 |
4 |
|
Holly Jacobs |
2 |
3 |
1 |
4 |
|
Maudeen Wachsmith |
3 |
2 |
1 |
4 |
The purpose of this article is not to tell you how to promote
your book. There are as many opportunities for promotion as there are books
published, and which one that is right for you will probably not be right for
someone else. Promotion depends on your time, your money, and your interest in
PR. All that said, the best promotion is to work on writing your next book and
make it even better than the first. Nothing will sell a book faster than if it
is a great one, and no promotions in the world can help a bad book.
I appreciate the generous time and creativity from my
respondents.
-
Holly Jacobs, I Waxed My Legs For This? Harlequin Duets, 1/01, Do You
Heart What I Hear? Silhouette Romance, 11/01, Ready, Willing and .Abel?/Raising
Cain, Double Duet, Spring 2002.
-
Stephanie Bond, Midnight Fantasies (her story is After Hours), Blaze
Anthology, 6/01, Two Sexy! Harlequin Blaze, August 2001, Got Your Number, St.
Martin's Press, October 2001
-
Suzanne Brockmann, The Defiant Hero, 2/01, Taylor's Temptation,
Silhouette Intimate Moments (Tall, Dark, and Dangerous), 7/01
-
Susan Grant, The Star King, Love Spell, 12/00, The Star Prince, Love
Spell, 11/01
-
Maudeen Wachsmith, Maudeen is a publicist for romance writers and can
be contacted at maudeen@olypen.com:
-
Jo-Ann Power, Power Promotions, http://PowerOnTheWeb.com,
http://PowerInBusiness.com
And last, but not least, ME -- Kathleen O'Reilly,
DragonSlayer, Jove, 1/02; A Christmas Carol, Harlequin Duets, 12/01.
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