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Book Marketing Buzz: Book Promotion & Publicity Tips: How to Promote Your Books with Amanda Ford

Posted by pumpupyourbookpromotion on March 26, 2008

Book Marketing Buzz: Book Promotion & Publicity Tips: How to Promote Your Books is a continuing series to help authors learn how to promote their books. If you would like to be a guest blogger for our book promotion and publicity series, click here.

Our guest blogger for today is Amanda Ford, author of Kiss Me, I’m Single: An Ode to the Solo Life.

The title of my book was partially inspired by those vintage buttons that read, “Kiss Me I’m Irish.” So it only seemed natural to have my own set of buttons made to promote my book. I got online and ordered two boxes of custom buttons. One box of big buttons that read “Kiss Me I’m Single” with colors and design that mimicked the cover of my book and one box of small buttons that simply read “Single” in black letters on a pink background. 

One of the first publicity events I attended after my book was released was a women’s trade show where I had a booth to sell my book.

 There were hundreds of women in attendance and booths selling everything from clothes to candles to tarot card readings to matchmaking services. My table was small and I needed something special to create a buzz around my books. 

Then inspiration strolled by in the form of a firefighter in his mid-twenties. A group of them were assembling at a table across the room to promote the latest version of the firefighter calendar. They were the only men in the place, and I knew that if I could get them to wear my button, it would surely bring notice to my book. I approached one of the firefighters and coyly pointed to the “Kiss Me I’m Single” button pinned on my dress. He read it, looked in my eyes, grinned and planted a peck on my cheek. I then pinned a button on his overalls and told him to send the rest of his boys over to my table. 

That was all it took. One after the other, firefighters visited my table to offer a kiss and receive a button. And of course, since my table was a regular stop of the only men in the place, women came flocking. At the end of the night, you could look around the room and see my adorable pink buttons attached to shirts, purses, shoelaces and even ponytails.  

I now take a small stash of buttons with me wherever I go and hand them out to people. They always get a laugh and the novelty of it seems to stand out in people’s minds. About a month ago, I was at a fashion show and a guy came up to me and said, “Hey! You’re the ‘Single’ button girl.” He then proceeded to tell me a story about a female co-worker of his who got one of my buttons and wore it out to a bar where a guy noticed it and started talking to her. In the end he asked her out and they’d been dating since. 

These buttons have been a great success for me because they have taken on a life of their own. I now get people contacting me and asking if they can buy one through my website. I’m thinking of adding a section to my website called, “Single Pin Stories” where people can post stories of things that happen to them while wearing their buttons.

With wisdom in her youth and poetry in her prose, Amanda Ford is a rare human being and a beautiful writer. She is the author of four books including Kiss Me, I’m Single: An Ode to the Solo Life and the internationally loved, Be True to Yourself: A Daily Guide for Teenage Girls. Her work has appeared in publications such as The Seattle Times, The Chicago Tribune and Real Simple magazine. As the relationship expert for eHow.com, Amanda writes articles and a love advice column in which she works to help her readers deepen all the relationships in their lives using kindness, compassion, understanding and play. Amanda lives in Seattle and when she isn’t writing, you can catch her Lindy Hopping, bicycle riding, tea sipping, joke telling and status quo questioning.  You can visit her website at www.oholive.com.

Amanda’s virtual book tour is brought to you by Pump Up Your Book Promotion Virtual Book Tours at http://www.pumpupyourbookpromotion.com/ and choreographed by Dorothy Thompson.  

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Book Marketing Buzz: Book Promotion & Publicity Tips: How to Promote Your Books with Dyan Garris

Posted by pumpupyourbookpromotion on March 20, 2008

Book Marketing Buzz: Book Promotion & Publicity Tips: How to Promote Your Books is a continuing series to help authors learn how to promote their books. If you would like to be a guest blogger for our book promotion and publicity series, click here.

Our guest blogger for today is Dyan Garris, author of Money and Manifesting: The Real Secret.

I created a series of easy and enjoyable tools for people to use for spiritual growth and transformation. Part of what’s in this toolbox is music and meditation CDs for relaxation and chakra balance, but part of it is books. To promote music one needs to open channels of distribution, get radio coverage, give interviews, and receive reviews. You need to create an awareness of your style and products. It is no different with books and maybe no different with any other product. The goal is to get your book out there in front of people, so if they choose they may have opportunity to buy it. And these days we are fortunate to have a great many avenues open to us for book promotion.

I know what a fantastic tool the internet is for marketing. In my opinion using this is one of the first and most important things anyone can do for book promotion. You can reach your target audience immediately. It’s not expensive and you get a lot of value for your dollar. So when I wrote Voice of the Angels Cookbook –Talk To Your Food! Intuitive Cooking, I knew I wanted to start with internet publicity, but wasn’t really sure how to go about getting a mass amount of exposure in a short time. After some research I discovered Dorothy Thompson’s Pump Up Your Book Promotion Virtual Book Tours. Dorothy puts on an amazing book tour and is an expert on utilizing the search engines. The results of a Virtual Book Tour are perpetual. I think there is no one better than Dorothy . That’s why I again hired her company for the March, 2008 promotion of my new book Money and Manifesting.

Knowing that internet promotion should be just one cog in the wheel, along with this I researched some traditional publicity firms. My work is rather non-traditional, so I was curious to see how this might fit in with a traditional publicist’s format for book promotion. I was told that for an enormous amount of money, I would be booked for several radio interviews and if the subject matter was interesting enough, perhaps some TV appearances down the road. I asked if this large fee converted into actual sales and was told it did not.

I decided there had to be another way to get radio exposure, and sure enough, Dorothy publishes an e-book “101 Internet Radio Talk Shows to Promote Your Books.” This has been an invaluable resource for setting up my own radio interviews. There are numerous very high quality internet radio programs in production these days worth checking into.

I wouldn’t really be me if I didn’t leave you with a few basic teachings about manifesting along with tips on book promotion. The very first thing to do is to get a firm picture about what it is you desire. In terms of book promotion, if you focus on getting sales and “making” money as a primary goal, you may find this eludes you. We do not “make” money. We create a flow of the energy of money. Focus on creating awareness, bringing up and out to others what you have already created, and connecting that up with the passion you have about your project. Then communicate that in the most effective manner that you can, whether that be writing and answering written interviews, and/or publicly speaking about your work on radio or seminars, workshops, or author signings. Let the energy of your spirit and what you’ve created travel up and out as you let go of your preconceived notions about the way this should return to you. The rest will follow.

Dyan Garris is the author of Money and Manifesting, Voice of the Angels – A Healing Journey Spiritual Cards, The Book of Daily Channeled Messages, Talk To Your Food! Intuitive Cooking, and Fish Tale of Woe – Lost At Sea. She publishes a Daily Channeled Message at www.voiceoftheangels.com.  In 2005 she created a series of music and meditation CDs for healing, Automatic Chakra Balance,™ help in sleeping, relaxation, and vibrational attunement of mind, body, and spirit.

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MONEY AND MANIFESTING VIRTUAL BOOK TOUR ‘08 will officially begin on March 1, 2008 and continue all month. If you would like to follow Dyan’s tour, visit http://www.virtualbooktours.wordpress.com/ in March. Leave a comment on her blog stops and become eligible to win a free copy at the end of her tour! One lucky winner will be announced on this blog on March 31!
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Dyan’s virtual book tour is brought to you by Pump Up Your Book Promotion Virtual Book Tours at http://www.pumpupyourbookpromotion.com/ and choreographed by Dorothy Thompson.
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Book Marketing Buzz: Book Promotion & Publicity Tips: How to Promote Your Books with Tinisha Nicole Johnson

Posted by pumpupyourbookpromotion on March 7, 2008

Book Marketing Buzz: Book Promotion & Publicity Tips: How to Promote Your Books is a continuing series to help authors learn how to promote their books. If you would like to be a guest blogger for our book promotion and publicity series, click here.  Our guest blogger for today is Tinisha Nicole Johnson, author of Searchable Whereabouts.

When I learned I was accepted by a publisher, I was very excited and decided to take immediate action. I didn’t know what I was doing or what I was getting myself into, but I knew that I wanted to do whatever needed to be done to promote my mystery novel, Searchable Whereabouts.  I started keeping a spreadsheet of any and all promotional ideas. I began numbering my list.  I spent a lot of time googling. Anything and everything that had to do with promoting books, I tried to do, without spending too much money, that is. I joined yahoo groups, ning groups and other book related groups. Recently what I’ve been doing is networking with various authors. They send me there promo items by mail (bookmarks, flyers, postcards, pens, etc.) And I contact book clubs, book events, conferences, whomever. I buy decorative plastic gift bags which are inexpensive and stuff the bags with all of our promo items and mail the bags to those who will accept them. On the front of each bag I do our course place labels on them with my name and website. I’ve found that that events/book clubs are more inclined to accept gift bags with various authors promo items inside, then just mine alone. I’ve had some outstanding success with this.  I’ve even had libraries accept my promo bags, which they were happy to give out to their local book clubs.  

In addition, I also created my own book trailer and began burning it onto CD’s. I give these away as promotional items as well. I’ve also done trailers for other authors as well. 

I’m constantly on the lookout to find creative ways to promote my book.

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Book Marketing Buzz: Book Promotion & Publicity Tips: How to Promote Your Books with Dr. James Hardt

Posted by pumpupyourbookpromotion on March 5, 2008

Book Promotion:  The Art of Smart Thinking

Self-publishing- ups and downs.

My book, The Art of Smart Thinking, originally went to press in a pre-publication effort in April of 2007.  This book developed over a number of years as I audio-tape recorded question and answer sessions about my work that I set up with friends.  These audiotapes were transcribed and went through many stages of edits. 

In April of 2007 my assistant Terese had 400 pre-publication copies of my book printed as quickly as she could manage in order for us to use it as promotional material at a conference in Atlanta, GA.  We had hoped to sell the book, but upon arriving at the conference and finding that it was an unexpectedly small event, we decided to give the books away.  We came back with a large percentage of our original 400 copies.  Shipping the books back and forth from the event was a surprisingly expensive ordeal.  That should have been a clue as to future hurdles that I would need to learn to overcome. 

By September of 2007, we managed to give away and sell the rest of the four hundred copies that were left after the conference.  I had also done another round of edits on the book.  To sell the book (and the brain wave trainings it describes) we promoted the book through our website and e-newsletters sent out to our Alumni.  After the last of the original 400 books were gone, our office felt a great need to have more books printed. At this point we also had a good deal of confidence and hope for the future of the book.  One of the individuals involved with pre-publishing the book in April of 2007 proposed a plan for achieving a New York Times Best-Seller.  Although the idea was very attractive to me at the time, the proposal involved a great investment of time and resources and the book was not going to be “out there” in the public eye for over a year.  For us, this prospect of major delays was not a viable one.  So we looked for another answer. 

One of the challenges of marketing The Art of Smart Thinking is the subject category of the book.  While The Art of Smart Thinking is truly an important topic of interest for anyone who has a brain, it focuses on self-growth and self-improvement with a twist.  By combining information about psychology and physiology of the brain and brainwaves (EEG) with my personal scientific research and technological information, the book tells the story of how to improve your life while also telling some of the story of my life,- which has been dedicated, since my college days, to developing the field of knowledge known as neurofeedback.   

The book has a strong scientific basis, but is also easily read since it was composed by my conversationally speaking answers to people’s questions about the brain and consciousness.  However, in addition to Science, the book also has a spiritual theme.  This unique mixture of topics in a ‘self-help’ book is quite new to our culture and especially new to literature.  Science, technology and spirituality often do not mix in literature unless it is within a philosophical context.   

Thus, marketing the book on a mass scale was a somewhat daunting task, for which we had no experience.  Through the advice and referral from a wise and supportive friend, John Assaraf, we found a marketing strategist, Michelle Price, who has experience marketing books that deal with self growth topics and who also has had significant success in marketing books that are of a similar genre as The Art of Smart Thinking.  Upon her advice, we decided to set our goals on achieving an Amazon.com best-seller based on a “targeted marketing strategy” consisting of emails delivered to people who have already expressed an interest in neurofeedback and other closely related topics.  Her proposal to attain Amazon.com best seller status projected a timeline of only a couple of months and her suggested investment was significantly less than the proposal for a New York Times Best Seller.  

We rushed an order of 1,000 books and were able to get them delivered to our office just a few days before the scheduled release of our book on Amazon.com.  Again, the shipping costs were outrageous and overall, the shipping costs have significantly reduced our ability to break even from our book sales.  We have spent over $100,000 in producing, printing, shipping and marketing the book and revenues have been less than $30,000 to date.   

For marketing the book I invested in a small marketing package that included: 1.   A copy written sales letter, 2.   A website devoted to the book (www.theartofsmartthinking.com) which includes a free e-course to support The Art of Smart Thinking and free gifts from authors that are related to the content of my book, and 3.   Several email lists that were comprised of email addresses of individuals who expressed a desire to know more about topics related to the content in The Art of Smart Thinking 

I consider the investment in this targeted marketing campaign to be the most successful piece of our marketing strategy.  We released the copy written sales letter the night before the book was made available on Amazon.com and immediately we shot up in the charts to number one on the worldwide Movers And Shakers best seller list.  We maintained number-one status here for only a brief time before falling behind the former Prime Minister of Pakistan, Benazir Bhutto’s Reconciliation: Islam, Democracy, and the West (by HarperCollins which had languished in obscurity until her assassination).  In the third day, we rose to #3 World-wide Best Seller and were very excited to hold the number three spot all day long and then, to stay in the top ten for about another week or two.  As a result of our book sales, Amazon.com ordered 3,000 books on one day and then another 5,000 books the day after that.  We were forced to rush the order and printed10,000 copies to meet the demand from incoming book orders.  Again, placing a rush order and shipping on the last minute ended up costing us a great deal more than it should have; however, more importantly, we were able to fulfill orders for Amazon.com in a timely and professional manner. 

While it has been a significant investment to publish this book ourselves and to market the book ourselves, I honestly can say that it is a wonderful experience to have.  I can better influence how the book is perceived and where it gets publicity.  I am directly connected to its progress and I feel a happy responsibility for the outcome of our efforts.  Some of the professionals involved in the marketing effort were also astonished at the powerful and sustained results we achieved in sales at Amazon.com.  So astonished were they, that they asked to interview me about how I felt with this amazing and unexpected degree of success. 

Because I had to formulate my thoughts and feelings for that interview in early January, I can now more fully recall and re-create my experience here for you. 

It was an entirely new kind of pleasure that I had never experienced before in my life.  Many people could understand the idea of a new kind of pleasure in life as being, for example, a new zesty exotic flavor, or an amazing new position in sex, or a deeper level of love and commitment with a partner, or the blessed birth of a child, or the attainment of a great and enduring life-success for one’s child.   

The new kind of pleasure I had was none of these, but maybe was more than all of these and probably closest to that last one listed:  the attainment of a great and enduring life-success for one’s child.   I’ve labored, often unpaid or underpaid, for over 30 years to bring forth a technology for the spiritual awakening of humanity.  In this quest I’ve raised and dedicated about $11 million.  For the first 20 years in this work I was so far out ahead of my culture and university colleagues as to be considered a very dedicated oddity.  But here in the closing days of 2007, the book describing my life’s work was winning hundreds and even thousands of new people to their own awakening into the vast and beautiful possibilities for their own higher consciousness and a better, happier life for themselves and their friends and families. 

A strange new pleasurable feeling began to seep into my awareness.  It did not have a name and it was utterly new in my experience.  I did not even know what to call it.  Without a name for it, I was left marveling at the wonder of it.  When the interviewer asked me how I felt about this unexpected success of my book, some of my new pleasurable feelings crystallized into words.  Part of it was joy that the good news (of a method for broad and easy access, by ordinary people, to formerly forbiddingly unattainable advanced spiritual states) was being heard by thousands of my fellow human beings. 

Part of it was relief that a message and a knowledge that I had nurtured, developed, protected and carried for so many decades, almost alone, was now gaining a wider audience, so that it was less likely to be lost.  Knowledge can easily be lost, and has been lost all too often in the past.  But now I felt relief and joy with thousands of new people excitedly discovering the existence of a publicly-available Technology and Method for healing emotional wounds, empowering effective forgiveness, reversing aging in the brain, boosting IQ and creativity and enabling rapid access to advanced spiritual states.  This knowledge that I had been carrying almost alone, for decades was now almost flying out into our culture,- reaching a wider and more general audience than I had ever known before, and therefore the danger of the loss of this knowledge was being dramatically reduced.  It was a little bit like one’s child securing a stable, beneficial and enduring position in life from which they could then do the work of healing many others. 

For me one of the greatest joys is helping people to heal their emotional and psychic wounds and then go on into states of happiness, joy and bliss.  As the book sales expanded into the 1,000s I felt a contentment and a fulfillment in being able to bring this good news to many many people.  It was an acknowledgement that my sacrifices in so many areas of my life had been worthwhile.  My labors were bearing fruit and knowledge of better ways to organize your own mind and personality and spiritual seeking were becoming known to thousands of my fellow human beings.  I felt joy, happiness and fulfillment in being able to tell other people about better ways to forgive and to deepen love, compassion and understanding.  Sharing the good news with thousands of new people was an almost unspeakable new joy.  A certain part of me that had been working ceaselessly toward this goal was, finally, able to relax.  The warmth of contentment spread throughout my entire awareness and I was at peace. 

I felt that I had successfully set into motion something that could now not ever be stopped.  I felt that “ignition” had occurred for a new stage of the consciousness development of humanity.  I felt that the awakening of humanity had now become inevitable.  The forces of ego and darkness would no longer prevail.  People were finally going to discover how to self-regulate their own brain activity and thus discover the greatest freedom they had ever had.  Instead of being like bound and gagged prisoners in the trunk of the vehicle of their own lives, they now had the potential to remove the gags and the ropes and shackles and to move into the driver’s seat of the vehicle of their own lives and to steer in new directions and to attain new and better outcomes in their lives.  Vivekananda, in his book Raja Yoga, says, “The goal of every soul is freedom and mastery” and I saw that this goal will now be attained very broadly throughout the ranks of humankind. 

Of course, there are many things that I would do differently next time I decide to self-publish, such as to contract with a shipping company for a better rate than “retail” shipping, but I did not know those things before I started.  

Our plan was simple:  a targeted marketing campaign based on an email sales letter that was professionally written by a copywriter.  We did not predict the hugely successful results; however, we did strongly intend for a successful outcome.  My staff was extremely supportive and enthusiastic about making the book happen and to make the book a chart-topper.  I give them a lot of credit for taking on the project with me and for making it a reality and a great success! 

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Book Marketing Buzz: Book Promotion & Publicity Tips: How to Promote Your Books with Laurel Bradley

Posted by pumpupyourbookpromotion on February 26, 2008

Book Marketing Buzz: Book Promotion & Publicity Tips: How to Promote Your Books is a continuing series to help authors learn how to promote their books. If you would like to be a guest blogger for our book promotion and publicity series, click here.Our guest blogger for today is Laurel Bradley, author of A Wish in Time and Creme Burlee Upset.

New and aspiring authors often ask published authors how they market their books. It’s something published authors ask each other as well, hoping for new ideas.

What I’ve done.

1. When my book was first released, I announced it to my friends and family. I asked them to pass around the news to their friends and family. The second part is really important. Ask people to help you spread the news. They might not think to tell others on their own, but when you ask them most are more than willing to help. I combined my announcement with a contest—the first twenty-five (25) people responding to my email got a free copy of my book. I gave away twenty-five copies and gathered a hundred (100) email addresses I hadn’t had before. That’s a hundred new, interested recipients for my newsletters and announcements.

2. For about six months, I ran monthly contests giving away signed copies of my book. I gathered a few email addresses. Some were new, but many were people who didn’t win in the first contest.

3. I had bookmarks, posters and postcards printed. I used the posters to announce book signings. I sent out postcards to the people I knew in the towns I had signings in. I booked talks to clubs and schools and gave bookmarks away. I’ve found that giving bookmarks as a reminder to those you’ve talked to works well, but leaving a pile somewhere really doesn’t. It’s the personal connection that sells. Tucking one in a book you’ve just signed and sold is an extra value but not really a promotional tool.

4. I bought a mailing list of book stores and book clubs and sent out free copies for the decision makers and bookmarks for the entire group.

5. I queried for reviews, sent out review copies, and entered contests.

6. I contacted bookstores, libraries, and coffee shops to set up book signings. I gave away free copies to the decision makers.

7. I backed causes and sent out press releases. Locally, I’ve had entire articles printed. Regionally, I’ve garnered mentions. Nationally, nothing so far. In support of Infertility Awareness Week, I gave a percentage of my royalties for the month of November 2007 to RESOLVE to promote infertility awareness.

8. I gave copies of my book to raffles for good causes. Most of the time the book was in a basket of goodies I provided.
 All told, I gave away 100 copies.

9. I joined loops and RWA and became an active member. Again, it’s the personal connection. People on the loops know who is a friend and who is just trying to sell to them.

10. I review other’s books and help out fellow authors (and people in general) whenever I can. The key here is to always follow the Golden Rule: Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. It works in life. It works in marketing.

11. I made book trailers and posted them to youtube.com, my space and bebo.com.

12. Don’t quit. Keep looking for ways to promote. Add your list of books and website to your email signature. Post to people’s blogs. Fill out author questionnaires. Participate.

13. Market, but remember to write. Publishing promotes your backlist. If a reader likes one of your titles, chances are she will go looking for your other books.

Laurel would love to see your questions and comments. She can be reached through her website www.laurelbradley.com.

Wisconsin author Laurel Bradley believes that wishes really do come true. After 11 years of writing, Bradley has finally achieved her dream of seeing her stories in print. Her first novel, the romantic time-travel A Wish in Time, was released February 2007 and was a finalist in the 2007 National Indie Excellence Book Awards. Crème Brûlée Upset, a contemporary romance released as an e-book January 2008 by The Wild Rose Press, is Bradley’s second novel.

Now, she enjoys sharing the lessons she has learned about new technologies, networking and the importance of savvy marketing with other book enthusiasts and writers.
 Laurel graduated Cum Laude from the University of Wisconsin — Eau Claire with a BA in English. When Laurel isn’t reading, writing, networking or chasing to her children’s sporting events, she paints with watercolor and decorates Ukrainian Eggs. You can see one of her paintings and find out more information about Bradley’s books and her upcoming appearances by visiting her website
www.laurelbradley.com.

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Book Marketing Buzz: Book Promotion & Publicity Tips: How to Promote Your Books with Emily Bryan

Posted by pumpupyourbookpromotion on February 25, 2008

Book Marketing Buzz: Book Promotion & Publicity Tips: How to Promote Your Books is a continuing series to help authors learn how to promote their books. If you would like to be a guest blogger for our book promotion and publicity series, click here.

Our guest blogger for today is Emily Bryan, author of Distracting the Duchess.

When people list their fears, one phobia tops even death—public speaking. However, that’s exactly what I do to introduce people to my books. I present writers’ workshops at national and regional conferences. I give talks to readers’ groups and speak to library associations. Some writers, by virtue of their heroine’s vocation, have a built in constituency for their books—knitters, teachers, karate instructors—you get the idea. Since I write historical romance, there’s no gimmick or hook for my stories. My brand is myself and my unique style.

So, I decided the best way to deliver that brand is through public speaking. Of course, the immediate problem was “What the heck do I say?” So I took some time and developed three workshops for writers’ groups—one about developing believable characters, one on plotting, and, since my stories have a strong sensual component, one about sex in fiction. Please visit my websites http://www.dianagroe.com  and http://www.emilybryan.com  to learn more about these workshops.

Readers’ groups and librarians want the backstory. They enjoy hearing about the more esoteric research facts I’ve dug up but not been able to incorporate into my stories. The historical study I get to do is part of why I love writing romance in other times and places. For example, in researching DISTRACTING THE DUCHESS, which is set during Queen Victoria’s reign, I learned that it was only after she became the Widow of Windsor that the Victorian era turned prudish. In the early years of her marriage to her dour German cousin, the young queen had a risque bacchanalia painted on her boudoir walls at Windsor. Queen Victoria and Prince Albert make a cameo appearance at my heroine’s masquerade in DISTRACTING THE DUCHESS, something she would never have done later in life, but fit with the early Victorian years perfectly.

I also share my writing process and what I did that led to receiving “the call”—that magic, life-changing call that meant someone wanted to publish my manuscript and pay me for the privilege. Folks have this image of romance writers. They seem to think we sit around with our feather boas, sipping martinis and eating bon-bons while we dictate our prose. If I can show them what a real writer is like, maybe one of them will say to themselves, as I did after I met my first real writer, “If she can do it, I can do it.”

Of course, public speaking is not without its pitfalls. I still get the jitters before each time. I’ve been known to run out of material earlier than I expect and end up vamping for ten minutes. And one time, I wrecked my car driving through an ice storm to make a speaking engagement. For this reason, I make it a point not to schedule presentations in the dead of winter any more. Instead, I’m available to do phone interviews and online workshops when the snow flies.

But the upside is all the wonderful people I meet: the readers who hopefully will now remember me and look for my next title, the booksellers and librarians who know my work and can recommend me to their patrons, and last but certainly not least, the friends I’ve made in writers’ groups.

Writing my books is a solitary activity. Promoting my books doesn’t need to be.

Please look for my next sexy romp, DISTRACTING THE DUCHESS (March 2008-Leisure Books) by Emily Bryan. An artistic duchess mistakes Her Majesty’s spy for her next nude model. She has no idea his mission is . . . DISTRACTING THE DUCHESS.

Emily Bryan has always been an avid reader. In 2001, she started writing her own stories. In May 2006, her debut novel, MAIDENSONG, was published by Leisure Books under her real name, Diana Groe. ERINSONG followed in November 2006 and SILK DREAMS in July 2007. There are epic, dramatic tales—full of passion and angst in exotic settings. The Chicago Tribune calls her work “lushly sensual, sumptuously written historical romance.” Please visit www.dianagroe.com  to read more.

When she wrote DISTRACTING THE DUCHESS (March 2008, Leisure), its light-hearted and frankly sexier style was such a departure from the first three books, her editor suggested a different penname. Emily Bryan was born. PLEASURING THE PIRATE is due to sail into stores in August 2008 just in time to be the ultimate beach read. VEXING THE VISCOUNT is scheduled for spring 2009. Romantic Times Book Reviews says Emily Bryan delivers a “sexy, fast-paced romp that will appeal to fans of Cheryl Holt, Lisa Kleypas and Celeste Bradley.” Please visit www.emilybryan.com  to read an excerpt and enter her contest! Light or dark, serious or silly—we need equal portions of laughter and tears to stay balanced. She hopes you make room on your bookshelves for both her incarnations.

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Book Marketing Buzz: Book Promotion & Publicity Tips with Stacey Joy Netzel and Donna Marie Rogers

Posted by pumpupyourbookpromotion on February 22, 2008

Book Marketing Buzz: Book Promotion & Publicity Tips: How to Promote Your Books is a continuing series to help authors learn how to promote their books. If you would like to be a guest blogger for our book promotion and publicity series, click here.

Our guest bloggers for today are Stacey Joy Netzel and Donna Marie Rogers, authors of Welcome to Redemption.

This past year has been a whirlwind for the two of us, so we’re still learning a lot in the world of promotion.  Some of this advice will be repeated often, but if any small idea we’ve done can help you, or spark a new idea, we’ll be happy to hear about it!   

Welcome to Redemption was e-released in September 2007, and print released January 2008.  For the e-release, we mostly passed word around to friends/ family, our area chapter, and any other loops we were members of.  We held contests in October and November, each with a great prize of $25.00 online gift certificate in hopes of drawing entries before Christmas, but did not have much success with them.  The first contest received 3 entries, and the second month 2.  You had to read our book to enter the contest, which we didn’t realize was illegal until after the contest had ended.  In the future, any contest we hold will be ‘no purchase necessary’ and more for the purpose of building our name recognition.    

For the print release in January, we had bookmarks made up at a local printer (which resulted in a sale to the printer) that we handed out at coffee shops and bookstores.  Make sure all your pertinent information is listed, including ISBN, website, and where to purchase.  We also had our book cover printed on T-shirts, and to our delight, some of each of our family members wanted their own to wear.  So they’ll be promoting for us, too.  Our mother’s are our biggest fans! J After our first book signing was set up at Barnes & Noble in Green Bay, we designed and printed flyers to post in coffee shops, local libraries, bookstores and on the bulletin board at work.  While at the library, we spoke to the fiction buyer, who purchased 4 copies to put in the larger branch locations.  Another sale was made to the lady behind the counter at Breadsmith.  We’d stopped for bread, asked if we could leave some bookmarks on the counter, and started talking about our book.  Turns out her mother’s birthday was the next day and she loved romances!  Like Terri Spear said in the previous post—always bring books!! 

We sent a press release to The Green Bay Press Gazette and were lucky enough to not only have them post the book signing event on the calendar, but received a small write up in the paper highlighting the fact that we were local authors. 

For a press release, try to send it around 2 weeks prior to the event you’re announcing.  Also, make sure to work the angle with the most interest in relation to your work—for us it was the “local authors getting published with a book set in Wisconsin” that netted the write up above and beyond the calendar listing. This summer, we hope to set up signings at different locations other than book stores.  Our book has animals in it, so we will to talk to pet shops and pet food stores, and one of the main characters owns a coffee shop, so we plan to speak with some of those businesses as well. In the fall, our high schools and churches are always holding local craft sales before Christmas.  We plan to reserve tables at these events to sign our books.   

Other basic promotion activities we’ve done: post excerpts on our loops, post reviews for other authors to get our names out, place ads in RWR and RT magazine, and send bookmarks to RWA chapter conferences.  For a smaller conference, 30-50 seems a pretty good number.  At our local WisRWA conference last year, there were many left over bookmarks and promotional items.  We felt bad at first, until we decided to disperse them among our local bookstores as a way to help those authors get their names out to more readers.  Consider donating a basket to your chapter conference for raffle, or better yet, do a basket exchange with another chapter that holds literacy raffles to spread your name farther.  If you can’t afford to donate one by yourself, get a couple of your chapter-mates/fellow authors to go in on one with you.   

Best of luck with all your promotions!  We wish you much success!

Stacey Joy Netzel lives in Northeast Wisconsin with her family and has been writing for 12 years.  She joined RWA and WisRWA in 2004 when she became serious about getting her work published.  She is active in her local chapter and is very thankful for the knowledge and support she’s received from fellow members.  Currently, she has three published romance contemporary works with The Wild Rose Press: Welcome to Redemption, an anthology, Dragonfly Dreams, a Christmas novella, and If Tombstones Could Talk, a short paranormal.  Visit Stacey Joy Netzel at: http://www.staceyjoynetzel.com/ 

Donna Marie Rogers lives in a renovated old schoolhouse in Northeast Wisconsin with her husband and children. She fell in love with romance nearly 20 years ago and started writing her first manuscript in early 2004.  Donna is a member of Romance Writers of America and quite active in her own chapter, serving as both conference chair and co-area contact.  Welcome To Redemption, an anthology she co-wrote with her good friend, Stacey Joy Netzel, received a 4-1/2* star review from Romantic Times magazine.  She has two full-length novels coming out this year with The Wild Rose Press: There’s Only Been You and Meant To Be, and a contemporary western novella, Golden Opportunity. Donna also writes erotic romance as Liza James and has several short stories published with both The Wild Rose Press and Red Rose Publishing.  Visit Donna at: http://www.donnamarierogers.com/ and Liza at: www.lizajamesauthor.com   

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Book Marketing Buzz: Book Promotion & Publicity Tips: How to Promote Your Book with Lois Winston

Posted by pumpupyourbookpromotion on February 21, 2008

Book Marketing Buzz: Book Promotion & Publicity Tips: How to Promote Your Books is a continuing series to help authors learn how to promote their books. If you would like to be a guest blogger for our book promotion and publicity series, click here.

Today’s guest blogger is Lois Winston, author of Love, Lies and a Double Shot of Deception and Talk Gertie to Me.

The latest buzz word in publishing is platform. Authors are told they need a platform for marketing purposes. Kind of reminds me of that song from the musical Gypsy where the strippers sing about how you’ve got to have a gimmick. We all need some platform or gimmick to make our books stand out from all the other books vying for shelf space and sales. So I thought quite a bit about platform — or gimmick — after I sold my first book, Talk Gertie To Me.

My background is in design. You know those needlework and craft projects you see in magazines and in kit form at chain stores such as Wal-Mart, Michael’s and Hobby Lobby? I’ve designed many of them. My books often draw upon my design experience. In Talk Gertie To Me one of the two main characters is a kinder, gentler version of Martha Stewart. In Love, Lies and a Double Shot of Deception my heroine is a needle artist and doll maker.

So when I was thinking in terms of publicity for my books, I thought about my connections in the craft industry. Was there some way I could use that connection to promote my books? So I sent press releases and copies of both books to industry people I’ve worked with over the years.

The response was overwhelming. My books have been profiled in an industry newsletter that goes out to thousands of retailers, manufacturers, and buyers. One magazine ran a review, along with my book cover, in their New Products column. And my books were used as props at both an international trade show and in a manufacturer’s catalog.

The catalog shot was responsible for Talk Gertie To Me going into a second printing. By the time I learned about the photo shoot, the book was out of print. When I sent my editor a jpeg of the catalog page and told her the catalog was being mailed to tens of thousands of retailers, buyers, and consumers worldwide, she convinced the publisher to do a second printing. Potential sales, not prior sales, were responsible for the reprint.

Few of us will ever have a book that becomes an Oprah pick or winds up featured in People or excerpted in Cosmo.

However, through niche marketing we can generate a good deal of publicity and sales if we learn to think outside the box.

Award-winning author Lois Winston writes humorous, cross-genre, contemporary novels and romantic suspense. She often draws upon her extensive experience as an artist and crafts designer for much of her source material. Her first book, Talk Gertie To Me, was released in 2006 and was the recipient of the Readers and Bookbuyers Best Award, took second place in both the Beacon Awards and Laurel Wreath Awards, and was nominated for both a Reviewers’ Choice Award and a Golden Leaf Award. Her second novel, Love, Lies and a Double Shot of Deception, was a 2007 release and so far has garnered a Golden Leaf nomination. Lois also contributed to several anthologies: Dreams & Desires, Vol. 1 and 2 and House Unauthorized. When not writing or designing, you can find Lois trudging through stacks of manuscripts as she hunts for diamonds in the slush piles for the Ashley Grayson Literary Agency. Visit Lois at www.loiswinston.com.

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Book Marketing Buzz: Book Promotion & Publicity Tips: How to Promote Your Books with Terry Spear (Pt.II)

Posted by pumpupyourbookpromotion on February 20, 2008

Book Marketing Buzz: Book Promotion & Publicity Tips: How to Promote Your Books is a continuing series to help authors learn how to promote their books. If you would like to be a guest blogger for our book promotion and publicity series, click