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Getting Known

Fobian

New Member
Hello,

I have written and published a book. I have it available to purchase on amazon, barnes & noble, books a million... and many other sites, however, just because it is on these sites does not make it known to the world. I do not have a lot of money to spend on advertising, as publishing took up most of my $. I am willing to work hard to get the title out their. What can I do to get my book known to others? I have tried google's adword program, and I get a heck of a lot of viewers, but no buyers, thus, each click costs $ but I get no results. Any other ideas?

Thanks,

Christian Fobian
 
I do have a day job, but I'm also the managing editor for a little press called Adventure Books of Seattle.


Book Promotion 101

First, I noticed you said you spent a lot of the budget actually publishing the book. I hope this was for professional editing and formatting, and not just for printing copies. Self-publishing is tricky, but a self-published book that was not gone over by a pro editor is almost impossible to market.

1) Start local...then move outward from there. Establish a slick website about the book and include it in your signature on all emails. Make sure the site has good images of the front/back covers and a pdf excerpt from the book. Print up some really nice business cards and give them out to anyone you meet. Set up some book signings. Hopefully, you are obtaining your books from a source that can provide copies to you at below wholesale rates, such as Lightning Source, who are the best in the business. Definition of wholesale: A six-by-nine inch paperback of 200 pages should be costing you less than $3.60 per copy, plus shipping. Trade size paperbacks should cost you even less. If you are paying more, you need to go to Lightning Source or another printer. I highly recommend LSI, because they are THE pros...however, they are NOT free. (See AB video on this subject)

2) Bookstores. I have spoken to bookstore managers by the score. They will try a new book...if they can get it at 50-55% off what is called 'normal retail' for that size book. This is standard practice, and they will a want a 90-day sale-or-return policy from you. Don't worry, they seldom actually RETURN any books...they just discount them if they don't sell. For example, if you have a normal trade-size paperback that would retail in stores at say $7.99, then you have to be able to provide that book to the bookstores at about $4.00 per copy. If you can't provide your book at wholesale, most bookstores won't even talk to you. Trust me on this.

3) THE REAL WORLD OF SELLING BOOKS: If you can't get your title into bookstores at wholesale, then the only people who will ever buy your book are family, friends, and the occasional online sale. Amazon, Barnes, etc. sell a lot of books. Most of them are by famous authors. Anyone else does average sales, usually much less. Consider online sales only as an occasional bonus and concentrate on stores. That's where the books sell. To begin, google on 'Independent Bookstores' (your state) and print up a nice little promo sheet about your book. Mail it out to all of them, making sure to include ordering details, wholesale price, and something about the author.

I have some videos onsite at AB on this subject, but you'll have to find us on your own, since I am reluctant to plug us on this forum.
To get you started, AB posted a positive review of your book at Amazon...good luck!
 
Recently, an author of a self-published book discovered that one way to boost a book's rank on Amazon is to show a lot of positive review activity. So the author created a number of fictional identities and proceeded to post over ninety positive reviews from various screen names. What this author apparently didn't realize is that it's fairly easy, by clicking on the 'about the reviewer' link to discover the true identity of the reviewer. It wasn't long before some savvy readers figured out that all these glowing reviews for a previously unheard of book were all from the same person - the author. Word spread and Amazon has since removed the reviews, but now the author's name is Mud in many a reader's opinion.

I wonder who that is?
 
Too late for the edit function:

This book is a must-have for authors:
'The Complete Idiot's Guide To Getting Published' by Jennifer Basye Sander and Sheree Bykovsky. This book is a down-to-earth, blue-collar guide to the REAL world of publishing. It covers subjects from 'Why Do You Write?' to 'Marketing and Promotion'. It shows examples of good and bad queries, synopsis, and has many illustrations.

Author Sander runs her own successful NYC literary agency.
Bykovsky is a 'book packager' with more than 20 of her own books published.

Foreword written by crime writer Ann Rule.
This book is in its fifth or sixth edition now, and for good reason. You can find it at Amazon...:)

Eyezonme: Yes...Who WAS that masked man, the one posting up his own reviews? I would be curious to know.
 
masked man?

OK, I think I'm missing an inside joke. Does everyone know who it is already or are people really curious and want to know?

-Sabrina
 
I have no idea. I thought perhaps it was a guy I once knew with the initials 'M.B.' but I don't know for sure.
 
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