Friday, June 24, 2016

10 Myths about Marketing Your Book

By DiAnn Mills @DiAnnMills

Tweet this: 10 Myths about Marketing Your Book

What’s stopping you from marketing your book? Is it lack of knowledge?

Indecision about the tools? Fear of failure or success? How to approach social media?


Now is the time to debunk the following 10 myths so you can be a marketing rockstar.


 Myth #1: All I have to do is one thing: write a good book. 

A writer’s number 1 job is to write an excellent book. But without marketing and promotion, how will readers know about your exciting project? 

Myth #2: Marketing takes way too much money. Only big names can afford it.

Every writer has the ability to learn basic marketing, promotion, and the value of social media. No matter the marketing budget, reaching others can be accomplished and is vital to the success of your book.

Myth #3: A traditionally published writer doesn’t need to worry about marketing. The publishing house will spend lots of money launching it.

Publishing houses adjust their budgets for marketing and promotion according to projected sales. A savvy writer teams up with the marketing team to learn how to compliment what’s being done. Personalization allows the writer to make an impact on potential readers.

Myth #4: The only way a writer will succeed in marketing is to hire a book publicist. 

Writers research the needs of their readers to find out how to reach them effectively. A writer has the ability to influence their readers by discovering who they are.

Myth #5: If a writer is going to get involved in social media, then register for every platform. And never follow anyone back.

A writer chooses a social media platform according to her brand, genre, expertise, and audience needs. The goal is to be active, reaching out in a community of followers to fill a need. 

Myth #6: No one can help an author build a platform or develop a brand. It just happens as you publish books.

A wise writer focuses her passion to a specific audience. Her expertise and type of writing builds her platform so she can be branded by who she is and what she writes. 

Myth #7: Marketing through social media means you have to constantly promote yourself so people will remember you.  The goal of social media is to help others; it’s not about us. For every five posts, only one can be about the writer. Develop trust among your followers.

Myth #8: There’s no point in marketing your book until it’s released. After all, people can’t buy it until then. 

Marketing and promotion begins with the writer’s idea for a project. Social media posts, blogs, speaking topics, catch-phrases, Pinterest boards etc. begin at conception of the book premise.

Myth #9: If you receive an advance, plan on spending 10% of it on marketing. If you don’t receive an advance, then marketing isn’t expected of you.

Every writer has a specific amount designated for marketing and promotion. The publisher expects a writer to be involved in the process of letting the world know about the book. The advance doesn’t dictate the writer’s marketing. 

Myth #10: Once a writer creates a marketing plan, the same plan works for every book.

Not every project’s content is the same. The characters, plot, setting, emotion, dialogue, narrative, and symbols vary in each book. Just as the books carry different themes and topics, so are the new and unique ways of marketing.

What marketing myths have you proven wrong? Share your thoughts so we 

can all learn. 

Tweet this: 10 Myths about Marketing Your Book 


   



DiAnn Mills is a bestselling author who believes her readers should expect an adventure. She creates action-packed, suspense-filled novels.

Her titles have appeared on the CBA and ECPA bestseller lists; won two Christy Awards; and been finalists for the RITA, Daphne Du Maurier, Inspirational Readers’ Choice, and Carol award contests.

DiAnn is very active online and would love to connect with readers on any of the social media platforms listed at www.diannmills.com.

2 comments:

  1. Thank you, DiAnn. I will be (am?) a debut author with a scheduled release date of June 2017, so I'm trying to learn as much as I can about marketing. I appreciate this information.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Karen, So glad to help! Edie and I are committed to equipping authors with social media helps.

    ReplyDelete