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Jun 29 2010

The Entrepreneurship of Writing A Book

image Both new businesses and new books often start with an idea that you just can’t shake.  I have spent a lot of time talking about how entrepreneurs should approach a new business and have found that there are a lot more parallels between starting a business and launching a new book than you might imagine.  Below are a few insights from my recently becoming acquainted with the book launching process and the similarities that exist with entrepreneurship.

What’s Your Purpose?

Deciding to start a business is different than deciding to start a successful business.  The plans to open one store vs. a goal of creating a massive nationwide retail chain vary significantly.  It is hard to know what steps to take if you don’t know your end goal.

The same goes for your book.  What’s your end game?  Are you using it as a calling card to get more clients?  Are you seeking a label of achievement (like “best seller status”) for your brand?  Are you hoping to make gobs of money from it or are you using it to spread a message (by the way, if your goal is make gobs of money, you might want to chat with a few industry professionals first)?  These goals will significantly impact the planning and strategy of not only your manuscript, but the launch and marketing of your book.

And while you are at it, you might as well set the biggest goal that you can.  Nothing happens if you don’t achieve your stretch goal, but as Wayne Gretzky says, “You miss 100% of shots that you never take!”

Know Your Customer

I am always preaching in business about how important it is to know your customer, but my first book manuscript go-round was somewhat lacking in this department (which got fixed in the second go-round, thanks to great feedback from industry folks!). 

To be successful in business, you have to know what pain point you are solving for your customer and how you are delivering value.  Plus, if “everyone” is your customer, you are going to have a hard time reaching anyone at all, so having a focus is critical.  The same goes for your book (particularly non-fiction books).  Ask yourself what tangible benefits your reader will take away from investing their time and money into your message.  Who is your specific reader and what quantitative and qualitative benefits are they seeking?  This will shape not only how you deliver your message in the book, but also how you plan to market your book. 

The Idea Isn’t Valuable; It’s The Execution

In an era where we have access to virtually everything we want and need, plus a whole bunch of crap we don’t care about, it is hard to have a truly novel idea (pun intended).  Having the idea for a business isn’t valuable; it is executing on the business plan every day.  The same goes for a book.  Once you have the idea, you have to write the manuscript and then market, market, market!  Most publishers care at least as much, if not more, about your marketing plan than the content of the book.  So, even if you have a great idea, if you can’t or don’t want to pound the pavement to meet your goals, there isn’t a lot of value there.

The Day You “Open For Business” Is Where The Hard Work Starts.

Conceiving a business idea and writing your plan is a cakewalk compared to what you have to endure day in and day out to make your business successful.  The same thing goes for a book.  The common misconception is that you are done when you finish writing- not so!  Writing the manuscript, as daunting as it may seem, is easy compared to everything that comes next.  Prepare to devote a lot of time, effort (and depending on your goals, money too) AFTER the book is written!

The takeaway: Make sure you evaluate and prepare for launching a book, just like you would a business, if you want to be successful with it.

Please share any other similarities you have found between starting a business and launching a book.

Carol Roth writes Unsolicited Business Advice (TM) for aspiring entrepreneurs, solopreneurs and other small business owners at CarolRoth.com You can find her on Twitter as @caroljsroth  Carol helps businesses grow and make more money. An investment banker, business strategist and deal maker, she has helped her clients, ranging from solopreneurs to multinational corporations, raise more than $1 billion in capital, complete hundreds of millions of dollars in M&A transactions, secure high-profile licensing and partnership deals and more.

Written by Warren Whitlock · Categorized: book marketing, internet marketing, sell books · Tagged: book marketing strategy, carol roth, platform

Jun 28 2010

What Authors Can Learn From the World Cup

Guest post from Joanna Penn, from TheCreativePenn.com:

clip_image002You might not think soccer has much to do with writing, but authors can learn a lot from the World Cup about marketing, branding and creating multiple streams of income.

  • The brand stands even though the players change over time. Each of the national teams in the World Cup have a following from their country, but they also have a character of their own. People debate Brazil, Germany or England as if they are the same team every competition. The brand of the country’s team is what persists. This is key for authors who are concerned about whether to build websites around themselves or their individual books. Think about it. Each of your books will be hyped for a short time and then will fade away and it will become part of your backlist. You do not have the time and energy to build sites around each of the books.Build yourself as the brand and you will persist over time. You do need to market each book but this should feed into your overall author brand.
  • Build merchandise around the key product to create multiple streams of income. Soccer fans don’t just pay to watch games. They also buy millions of dollars worth of merchandise to support their team and show their dedication. Let’s face it, unless you sell a blockbuster, authors don’t make a huge income from book sales. What you need is multiple streams of income that sit around your book and provide extra income. Think online courses teaching people valuable information about writing, genre specific tips for fiction writers, or giving additional information about your niche for non-fiction writers. Think speaking and running seminars, live or on the internet. Think audio products, either straight audio versions of your books, or additional information that people are interested in. This is not selling out to commercialism, this is paying the bills!
  • Create loyal and fanatical followers. Soccer fans are some of the most loyal and crazy fans in the world. They wear the badge of their team, they travel round the world and they are passionate and even violent in support. You want to create loyal fans for your author brand and your books. These are the people that will buy your book on preorder as soon as it is announced, or will buy the whole backlist to make sure they have read every word you have written. How can you encourage followers like this? Firstly, it is a given that you need to write great books that create a marvelous experience or are packed with information. You also need to create relationships by giving people more than they expect. You can blog and reveal some of your writing practices, create audio interviews so people can find out more about you, do live events, be accessible on social media. The new crop of successful authors are out there connecting with people, selling books by creating fans, one person at a time.

So, keep an eye on the World Cup and learn what you can about marketing, brand building and fanatical followers as you do.

Joanna Penn is the author of 3 books, a speaker and blogger at The Creative Penn.com : Writing, Publishing Options, Internet Sales and Marketing…For Your Book. Click on the following links to get your free article on Author Branding, plus an audio on Book Marketing and theAuthor 2.0 Blueprint: Using Web 2.0 Tools to build your author platform online. Joanna is also on Twitter @thecreativepenn

Written by Warren Whitlock · Categorized: book marketing, online promotion, sell books · Tagged: fans for authors, joanna penn, world cup

Jun 16 2010

Increase Your ROI at Seminars

I wrote about meeting other authors, speakers and attendees at seminars, and the system I use to do a preemptive love strike.

Since then, authors have been sharing other ideas.

media_httpchristianad_xffnJ[1]Carrie Wilkerson, The Barefoot Executive showed us her notes from a seminar.

Click on the photo here to see the full size and her description of how she follows up with the panel of speakers in an event she was attending

When I asked about using the photo (on her Facebook Wall where it added to my link to the discussion) she added another suggestion about using the photo for a greeting card

That’s how Carrie thinks.. she never misses another opportunity to add value (love) to a conversation.

That’s an author to model

What other ways have you sent a preemptive love strike when networking with authors and speakers?

Written by Warren Whitlock · Categorized: networking · Tagged: author seminar, barefoot executive, book marketing speaker, unseminar

May 21 2010

Will LinkedIn Help Authors Sell Books?

Guest Post from Judy Cullins

Judy CullinsAre your book sales slow? For social media marketing, you may have tried Twitter and Facebook.. Maybe, you’ve even put up a book blog to stimulate and engage your book’s audience.   I too used Twitter and Facebook and dropped my blog over 2 years ago thinking not enough results. That is, until I got some coaching on social media, and discovered LinkedIn, that works so well for consultants, authors and other small businesses. 

Maybe you made these two big mistakes on social media..

Mistake 1. You collected followers and friends, but most of them weren’t your book’s best audience.

Until I got my 1000 friends and book group members to join my fan pages, I got low results at Facebook. So, for all three of my social media marketing (Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn) I shifted my marketing strategy from collecting numbers to concentrating my social media marketing only on my book’s best audiences, This may shock you, but this change makes all the difference in my results, which I check monthly with Google Analytics. Now, 25% more are coming from LinkedIn each month.

Results: Some visitors just read my blog articles. Some come for my free reports. Many in my target audience take my hands-on teleseminars.  The committed ones either read some of my  books or contact me for my famous half hour coaching sessions to get specific solutions for their specific needs.

I still tweet, but only 2 times a day. I interact at my Facebook (FB)  fan page with people who want book writing, self-publishing and social media marketing. I interact two times a week in Twitter for those who respond to my tips.

Mistake 2. Not getting active on LinkedIn.

You may have joined and put up a short profile, but this is not enough. You may complain it takes too much time. Yes, you don’t want to waste time on just any social media–that’s why I suggest you give LinkedIn a better chance. From my newest book "LinkedIn Marketing-8 Best Tactics to Build Book and Business Sales" I’ll recommend a few of the 8 Best Tactics now. (Tactics that are working well today)

What is LinkedIn?
Do you have a LinkedIn Profile?

Click over to LinkedIn.com and see my profile. Send me an invite (when warren@MarketingResultsCoach.com as the email address) and be sure to include a note telling me that you read the blog. I’ll accept you as a connection and you’ll be linked to thousand of people I know and millions of their connections

wsig

LinkedIn Best Tactics that Bring Top Results

  1. Do the most important thing first. Set up an engaging profile, where you give to your readers, and not start sentences with "I".
    In all content marketing as LinkedIn and blogging, start from the YOU point of view. What can you do for your audience? Include testimonials near the top because they sell books.
  2. Join 5-10 groups that relate to your book or skills you need. Keep researching and adding groups weekly that fit your book or business. Find these through search words for help like "book writing" and "LinkedIn strategies." or search words of your audience who will want your book.

    Do you know your book’s top 5 benefits? You should before you attempt to comment on your book’s values in the LinkedIn groups.. Do you know your book’s target audience? If not, write a Dear audience" letter  saying " I wrote this book because I know you’re having this challenge and need xxxx xxxx, and xxxx. ( solutions or  benefits)."  Then, transfer this information to your site and other promotion pieces. Remember, benefits sell; features explain. 

  3. Get active on ten or more groups you like. Once you join, you request weekly emails on what new discussions are going on. Then, when they show up in your email (how convenient) you can decide which ones to chime in with your useful comments.
    Each time you contribute, the whole group sees your face and who you are. That’s great exposure to brand you or your book. You can contact individuals privately by email too, which can eventually lead to a sale.
  4. Know that getting to the sale takes at least 3-7 steps, so don’t make the big mistake and shout out your Website or link to buy your book. You don’t need to. Readers in groups will see your picture and what you do and contact you if they are interested. 

    Develop patience. Get people curious about your book. They will respond. Offer one comment at a time. Or offer a blog link to a piece that relates to the conversations. This is the one link that is not considered promotion. Remember these groups are for education and help–not to sell directly to.

  5. Use content marketing on your site with articles, free reports or eBooks,  and blog posts to start.  Give content freely on your web site and in the LinkedIn groups. This showcases you as the expert of your book’s topic. Think of educating your audience, not selling them.
    LinkedIn offers many more ways to interact than other social media. That’s why I love it so much and have enjoyed its results  of 25% monthly web visitors, some of whom buy my books.  A book coach 24 years, I’m glad social media marketing is a great piece of the book marketing puzzle.

My mission is to assist you in getting more eyes on your book–the ones who really want or need it.  Check it all out at my site http://www.bookcoaching.com/  Ask me a question or leave me a comment on one of my blog posts.  I will answer your questions or send you a link where to get that information.

Written by Warren Whitlock · Categorized: book marketing, sell books, social media · Tagged: judy cullins, linkedin, social networking for authors

May 18 2010

How Authors Make Money

The other day, we had Peter Winick on the Profitable Social Media radio show.

Peter is the brains behind so huge best selling books, and specializes in strategies to sell lots of book and turn your content into a substantial income.

Here’s a clip from the show where I Peter talks about what he does. If you listen for a few minutes, you’ll also hear another guest, Pat Obryan, volunteer to have us talk about expanding his platform.

You may not have heard much about Peter. Like me, he works mostly with large book and product launches from behind the scenes.
 

Peter and I want to help more authors and combined our talent to put on a series to you authors make a lot more money from your content, without a huge start up cost.

If you are an author looking to leverage your content into new revenue streams, I invite you to apply at http://PlatformRoadmap.com

Written by Warren Whitlock · Categorized: book marketing, make money online, media publicity, online promotion, publishing, sell books · Tagged: author platform, author roadmap, author success, sell books

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