Archive for the ‘Book Review’ Category

Earned Media Is All About Generating Free Exposure

September 26, 2013

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Get Your Attention Right Here!
Earned media is really just the digital-age term for word-of-mouth advertising. It’s an idea that has grown hand-in-hand with content and social media marketing and the notion that a viral success can cheaply translate to mega-exposure.

Everyone wants earned media.

Marketing agencies know this, and they routinely pitch their ability to generate it. Most businesses, even small ones, are embracing the earned media paradigm to shape their social media strategies. Indie writers are no exception.

However, there are many misconceptions floating around the notion of earned media via the use of social media.

Earned Media Has a Number of Advantages
Many of them are obvious. (1) it’s “free,” in the sense that there’s no direct payment for the exposure provided; (2) it’s transparent, in that brands need not rely on intermediaries to measure it; and (3) it tends to create greater trust than paid or owned messages.

People trust the enthusiasm and recommendations of friends, acquaintances and professional networks more so than ads.

The Disadvantages Are Less Obvious
The real disadvantage has to do with earned media’s hidden cost. It requires investment in internal and external social media content generation. It takes time and effort.

Sometimes a lot of effort.

This week, I spent some time looking over past entries to my blog, because I thought they might make an interesting booklet if compiled and published together. One I could sell.

Looking at them, however, I noticed I keep talking about writing blogs and the Twitter and the Book of Face, as though they’re going to help, all by themselves in some magical way, reach out to fans, create a nice fan base and sell books.

I keep pushing new media as the be-all and end-all of promotion, completely forgetting the many years I spent dealing in old media to sell things.

Old media that worked.

It made me realize I’m not doing justice to readers who are looking for indie writing/publishing advice by pushing so hard on the new media tack without completing the story. Being an indie writer myself and talking about my experiences is not sufficient.

I do mention the need for word-of-mouth publicity, and I’ve written about earned publicity … not paid publicity. I just don’t do it enough.

Evaluate Social Media
When you consider maybe half the people in a social network will actually see a posting (assuming they aren’t following so much stuff they don’t have time to read any of it), and maybe one percent of those who see it will respond, and about five percent of the responders will buy, you’ll understand why marketing types today use this formula to evaluate social media:

(followers) x (50% see it) x (1% pay attention) x (5 % buy it) = sales.

Using this as gospel, you can figure out what the outcome will be for any given social networking post. For the sake of example, I’ve chosen an audience following of 100,000 (I should be so lucky). It works out something like this:

100,000 x 50% x 1% x 5% = 25

You read that right. Assuming you have something to sell, a posting to 100,000 followers on your social media site (your blog, the Twitter, the Book of Face, or whatever else you use) could possibly translate into 25 sales. Maybe.

Twenty-five. That’s it.

Considering all the time I spend on those sites, those numbers made me feel sick, too.

I have almost 2000 follows here. Another 1650 on The Twitter. Only about 53 on the Book of Face (I’m not real active there). I’m not at all sure about Pinterest or Tumblr or LinkedIn or any of the others I’m on and vaguely familiar with, so I won’t count them.

So let’s say it’s about 4000.

Let’s see … 4000 followers x 50% x 1% x 5% = 1.

Seems I’m way ahead of the curve with my actual sales, but it still isn’t promising. Mediocre is more like it. Never mind my first two books are award-winners. They don’t sell as well as I would hope.

So What Are We Supposed To Do?
There are scads of untalented hacks … people who couldn’t write their way out of a wet paper sack with two sharpened pencils and an axe … who sell more books than some great writers.

And I’m not talking about books in some alternative universe. These untalented non-writers sell all kinds of books right here on good ol’ planet Earth: non-fiction and fiction.

What’s the secret? You know their name.

That’s it. Name recognition.

Nothing is more powerful. If you want to reach a mass audience, you must use mass media. Must. Not should.

Must.

You see, it doesn’t matter how good your book is … and why simply telling people how good it is on social media won’t, all by itself, help. It’s why someone like Glenn Beck (or whomever it is who writes his books for him), have books on the best seller list.

People know his name (the same is true of non-talented folks like the Kardashians, too … so I’m not just picking on you, Glenn).

Use the same formula I just gave you, but assume 200 million people around the world know your name. Go ahead, do the math.

(200,000,000 people) x (50% see it) x (1% pay attention) x (5% buy it) = 50,000 sales.

That’s a bestseller right there.

Quality doesn’t necessarily matter when exposure is that high.

But to reach the kind of volume you need to achieve those numbers, your plan has to include ideas for reaching out to every form of mass media: newspapers, magazines, blogs, radio and television.

And since you don’t have an automotive company’s marketing budget, you need earned media.

Earned Media
Earned media refers to favorable publicity gained through promotional efforts other than advertising. In other words, free publicity.

Wait, you say. With social media, you can reach a mass media-type audience. Yes, but will you reach as big an audience? No.

But, you continue, everything you write will at least get out there, and the mass media may decide to cover something after spotting it in the wild, if enough people pick it up and repeat it.

That, Gentle Reader, is true.

Self-Serving Posts Don’t Get Read
But a common mistake is to treat social media as a monologue, and to make it self-centered. That’s why you see a lot of Book of Face pages that are often ‘me’ focused (including mine sometimes, sadly) and feeds on The Twitter that are just links to press releases.

In order for social media to be earned media means it isn’t something you wrote about you. You may start the conversation, but it’s a dialogue to which a lot of people contribute.

The best use of social media to try to achieve this … is to give your audience something. Inform them. Entertain them. Give them news they can use. Ask questions. Figure out why an average person would read what you’re saying. What would they get out of it? Indie authors trying to promote themselves should be no exception.

Give Your Audience the Best Value You Can
Then make it easy. By that, I mean make it simple … and make it easily found. Link things so whatever you post on your blog automatically gets on your Twitter feed, or on Tumblr, or the Book of Face … whatever you use. The more places the better.

Make it easy for other people to write and post content without jumping through a bunch of hoops.

Create a short video, put it on the You of Tubes and learn how easy it is to embed that video on your blog or put it on your Book of Face pages (I already do). Record a podcast and do the same experiment (I’m working on it).

The ideal system lets you write and post with the fewest steps possible, with your posting system linked to your other social media. Most new blogging platforms like WordPress will automatically sync with other social media like Book of Face and the Twitter, so every post you put up on your blog gets put on those other places, too.

Social media isn’t a replacement for earned media, but it’s a growing force for getting there and it’s becoming standard these days for any public figure or public figure wannabe.

If you’re in the public relations business … and, believe me, if you’re an indie writer trying to promote your writing you are … and you aren’t using social media, people today will look at you funny, as if you don’t believe in telephones.

You need to get dialogue going. More importantly, you need to have other people talking about you and your books. You absolutely need it.

Like my sons told me months ago, when they urged me to blog, tweet and Book on Face about my books … get into the 21st century, Pop.

What do you think? Share your thoughts in the comments section.

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New York Review of Books – A Reminder
Look for the mention of my novel REICHOLD STREET in the September 26, 2013 Fall Books issue of The New York Review.

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Creating Believable Characters
Don’t forget to click on the link in the right-hand column to get your copy of “Creating Believable Characters.” It was written specifically to aid writers with their character development and the price shouldn’t be a deterrent … it’s FREE.

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When We Least Expect It

July 3, 2013

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Good Books are Pleasant Surprises

Pleasant Surprises
Surprises come in all kinds of shapes and sizes. I don’t think many people would argue that pleasant surprises are the best kind. After all, they are events that make you smile and feel good, and who doesn’t need a little more of that in their life?

When I stop to think about it, I’ve had several pleasant surprises in my life. My lovely bride saying “yes” when I asked her was one.

Each of our three sons was another.

All of the former acquaintances who have since become treasured members of the “lifelong” branch of friendship with me are other miraculous gifts.

So are my grandchildren.

Some of you may remember last year, when I received an unexpected 2012 Readers Favorite Gold Medal for my novel Reichold Street. I’ve been writing for a long time, and would undoubtedly continue to do so whether anyone acknowledged it or not (just ask my wife).

While it’s not the same sort of surprise as those other things, it was still a very pleasant moment. Who wouldn’t want to know someone else thought their efforts, particularly judged against thousands of others, were worthwhile?

Other Successes
I had another very pleasant surprise last Sunday night, in the form of an email from the Readers Favorite organization.

My first thought was it must be some sort of solicitation, so you can imagine my elation upon learning my collection of fantasy short stories, Zebulon, has been selected as a 2013 Readers Favorite Finalist in the genre of young adult fantasy!

The winners won’t be announced until September, but that still gives me plenty of time to revel in the moment … at least through the holiday. Which reminds me, for those celebrating this week, have a safe and happy Fourth of July.

A FREE Guide
While I’m reveling, you might want to visit the link on the right-hand column of this page, and subscribe for your FREE copy of my booklet “Creating Believable Characters.” I created it to aid other indie writers. It might help, it might not (although I think it will) … but at least the price is right.

 

 

Compulsion Reads Endorsement

June 17, 2013

SUCCESSEvery Once in a While Something Happens That Feels Like Success

Tooting My Horn
Hey, somebody’s got to do it, and I don’t have a publicity machine working for me.

It’s just little ol’ me here, adding an audio file on my web site Broken Glass, updating my media page, playing the promote-on-Twitter game, using the Book of Face, keeping up with AuthorsdB, and Goodreads, blogging and, oh yeah, trying to figure out how to sell my damn books while I keep up social obligations, write two new brand new novels and generally hold down the fort at home while keeping the creditors at bay.

What Am I So Excited About?
Well, I’m glad you asked (it gives me a chance to talk about it). I just learned my indie novel REICHOLD STREET, which won a 2012 Readers Favorite Gold Medal, has just received a coveted 2013 endorsement from Compulsion Reads.

OK … I know it’s not like announcing I just signed a publishing house contract for the book with a high six-figure advance … but, trust me, it feels good anyway. It took me by surprise, because CR endorses less than half the independently-produced books they read, and it’s a pretty big deal in the indie world.

Yes, I’d much rather have a big contract, or at least be able to report I’ve sold thousands of independently-produced-and-marketed copies in the last quarter, but c’mon … little successes are good, too, aren’t they? (I just checked on my royalties so far in June, and I’ll be able to take my lovely bride to at least one nice lunch this month).

But I know very well every indie author out there is always glad to know someone (other than immediate family and close, I-actually-speak-to-them, neighbors) truly likes your work. I’m no exception.

Working Hard
I know I said I’d have my “Creating Believable Characters” freebie ready by my this post, and I really thought I would … but I’ve written 20,000 words on my Reichold Street sequel, another 5,000 words on a totally new book and then had the Compulsion Reads thing happen.

You can cut me a little slack, can’t you? My giveaway is almost done (about 24-pages), and I promise I’ll have it available just as soon as I figure out MailChimp.

Honest.