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Oct 25 2010

Publish Your Book As An Experience

Publishing is not just pages in a book.

You know about ebooks, audio books and programs derived from books using video, multimedia and web technologies.

Now let’s rethink the reading/viewing/consuming experience. There are new tools coming that will allow you to put your book into a platform that creates a rich interactive experience.. so reader can pause and go deeper into an area, and for those of us who market, maybe BUY SOMETHING.

Here’s one I’m loving. Qwiki Now in Alpha, meaning that you may have to wait to use. In the meantime, watch this short demonstration and an imagine how readers will interact with your work

Qwiki at TechCrunch Disrupt from Qwiki on Vimeo.

Written by Warren Whitlock · Categorized: e-book, publishing · Tagged: book promotion, future publishing, online book marketing, qwiki, reader experience

Sep 14 2010

Make Your Book Marketing Defy Gravity

Today’s special post is from Rebel Brown, author of Defy Gravity. To receive a free workbook with your copy of Defy Gravity, click on the book cover now.

How Big is that Dinosaur?

Publishing has to be one of the largest Gravity markets I’ve seen in years. By hanging on tightly to the way they’ve always done it – publishing status quos can make it really difficult for innovative authors to do their thing. Talk about dinosaurs!

In my own personal journey toward the publication of Defy Gravity, I’ve learned a lot about avoiding the publishing tar pits where the dinosaurs exist. Here are some tips I’d like to share with you.

1. Independent is a good thing. Publishing is the only industry I can think of where being an independent entrepreneur is viewed by some as a negative. In technology, financial services, small businesses and more – being innovative, striking out on your own and choosing to be different gives rise to resounding applause. In publishing – if you choose to independently publish your book – some of the old guard will say you’re not a real author. What rubbish!

As an independent author I had the chance to make my own decisions about everything from content to book cover design to promotion. I had the opportunity to do things differently, to stand out above the noise – and most of all to stay true to myself and to my vision for the book. Those are all things I would have lost at the hands of a traditional publisher. They’d own the book – not me. They’d make all the decisions – not me. And they would do it exactly the way they’d always done it. Where’s the innovation in that?

2. Dare to be different. I’ve been a consultant for twenty something years, yet I’ve never heard so many rules about what you can and can’t do when it comes to a book. All based on the way it’s been done in the past, all designed to have you conform to those who came before you – all designed to make you a follower and not a leader. I’ve never heard a business want to make their products conform to what everyone else is doing – where’s the value in that?

Maybe that’s why so many people tell me I’m an original voice in this market. I chose to ignore the rules and do what I thought was best –based on my own experiences and knowledge, which after all is what my book Defy Gravity is all about. I wrote the book the way I thought it needed to be written, zany humor, commentary and all. I focused on my own voice and I didn’t listen to what others were writing about. Write your own book, not everyone else’s.

3. Stick to your guns. I can’t tell you how many times I heard “That isn’t done in this business.” My response was, “Well, maybe it should be!” Then there was the time when one of the retail chains told my publisher they wouldn’t carry Defy Gravity unless I changed the cover art. The reason? It didn’t look like every other business cover out there. Here we go with the status quo again. Well, I’d just returned from a conference where some 500 people showed me how much they loved the cover on the Advance Review Copy. So I wasn’t about to back down. And I didn’t. I decided to keep the cover – because I knew it was the right cover for my book. If that retailer didn’t carry the book, so be it. There was a lot of consternation in certain quarters about my decision, but I stuck to my guns because my readers had spoken.

Today, that cover gets more positive comments than I would have ever imagined. It’s the thing that gets people to pay attention to the book – and isn’t that what a cover is all about? It wasn’t very easy to follow my intuition and stick with the design I believed in. As an author, I want every retailer to carry my book and get the word out there. But, I’m happy to say that despite their initial reluctance, the retailer in question wound up coming around and placing a substantial order. When you stick to your guns, dinosaurs either evolve, like they did in this case, or they go away and become extinct.

4. You don’t need millions. The first three publicists I spoke with asked the same first question. “How much money do you have?” The story was that I needed 5-6 full time people, a million dollars and a corporate backer, and of course a nice big retainer with a big fat publicist to launch my book if I wanted any attention.

More Gravity! That’s like saying you have to advertise and do mega email blasts to communicate with your customers. That’s such OLD news. Thanks to social media and the internet – you can create a groundswell of momentum behind your book without breaking your bank. I’ll let you in on a little secret. Darned near every person who supported my book with endorsements, promotions, interviews and more – I met on Social Media! Not my clients, of course, but everyone else.

Social media gives us the opportunity to form relationships, share ideas, get to know one another – all in a down to earth, truth on the table fashion. What better way to create momentum for your book than through the people who appreciate your messages and story. Forget the big dollars – be yourself, make friends, share your views and let social media build the momentum for you.

Most of all – write the book you want to write. Believe in yourself and be unique. That’s the best way to ditch Gravity, dump the dinosaurs and power your success.

Written by warren · Categorized: best seller books, blogging, book marketing, online promotion, publishing, social media · Tagged: defy gravity, publishing industry, rebel brown

Sep 12 2010

Best Business Books Are Best Sellers

Read Fast Company Article “13 Business Books That Will Blow Your Mind” here

Rich Brooks

President, flyte new media
Portland, ME

Rich listed some of the best books any business person could read. I’ve listed the titles here that are clients or friends (Dale Carnegie and Ayn Rand are the exceptions.. two people I wish I had met)

  • Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us by Daniel Pink
  • Switch: How to Change Things When Change Is Hard by Chip & Dan Heath
  • Trust Agents: Using the Web to Build Influence, Improve Reputation, and Earn Trust by Chris Brogan & Julien Smith
  • How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie
  • Permission Marketing : Turning Strangers Into Friends And Friends Into Customers by Seth Godin
  • Presentation Zen: Simple Ideas on Presenting Design and Delivery 
  • Freakonomics and SuperFreakonomics by Steven D. Levitt & Stephen J. Dubner
  • The World is Flat: A Brief History of the 21st Century by Thomas L. Friedman
  • Crush It! Why NOW is the Time to Cash In on Your Passion by Gary Vaynerchuk
  • The 4-Hour Work Week by Tim Ferriss
  • Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand

Written by warren · Categorized: best seller books, book marketing, publishing, sell books, social media · Tagged: best business books, business best sellers, must read business books

Aug 31 2010

Remember When Books Used Paper?

Coming Soon - Area e

I’ve been commenting on the supposed “game changer” iPad device that getting so much press this year. My quip is that it’s not going to be that significant.. that we’ve been seeing dozens of reports of other devices to read book on, some replace laptops, others upgrade the Kindle, and a few we’ve reviewed will do totally new things.

Here’s a current page from Borders. None of these are from Apple, B&N or Amazon. All we soon be available where you used to shop for old school books.

Is your book out in ebook format?

Velocity Micro Cruz ReaderVelocity® Micro CruzTM Reader

Velocity Micro Cruz TabletVelocity® Micro CruzTM Tablet

Kobo eReader Kobo e-Reader

Aluratek Libre eReaderAluratek Libre

Sony Touch eReaderSony® Touch

 

Sony Pocket eReaderSony® Pocket

Written by Warren Whitlock · Categorized: book marketing, e-book, publishing · Tagged: ebooks, kindle prices

Aug 25 2010

Seth Godin Learns that Publishing is Dead

tribes

Authors need to have a tribe to read what they write.

Publishers don’t build tribes, they print and distribute books.  This business model has served them well in the past when there were limits on ways authors could reach readers.  All authors and publishers would do well to study Tribes

Seth announced his intentions on his blog

Authors need publishers because they need a customer. Readers have been separated from authors by many levels–stores, distributors, media outlets, printers, publishers–there were lots of layers for many generations, and the editor with a checkbook made the process palatable to the writer. For ten years, I had a publisher as a client (with some fun self-published adventures along the way). Twelve bestsellers later, I’ve thought hard about what it means to have a traditional publisher.

Traditional book publishers use techniques perfected a hundred years ago to help authors reach unknown readers, using a stable technology (books) and an antique and expensive distribution system.

The thing is–now I know who my readers are. Adding layers or faux scarcity doesn’t help me or you. As the medium changes, publishers are on the defensive…. I honestly can’t think of a single traditional book publisher who has led the development of a successful marketplace/marketing innovation in the last decade. The question asked by the corporate suits always seems to be, “how is this change in the marketplace going to hurt our core business?” To be succinct: I’m not sure that I serve my audience (you) by worrying about how a new approach is going to help or hurt Barnes & Noble.

We know that publisher can still serve an author. If you have build a two way dialog with your tribe (say, you are on TV but have never blogged) then a large check from someone betting on your title to click with their distribution is a no-brainer.

Seth has been teaching us to build a tribe for years. Now he’s broke ties with the old model that used to serve him. No doubt he’ll do well.

What’s your strategy to build a two way dialog with your readers?

Written by warren · Categorized: best seller books, book marketing, internet marketing, publishing, sell books, social media, twitter · Tagged: attracting reeaders, build a tribe, publishing future, self publishing, seth godin

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