How to Market your Self-Published Book

I’m joking; if I knew I’d be a millionaire. If anyone tells you they have the magic formula – back away very slowly. I do believe that there is one little pieMagic Wandce of magic involved, but I’m not going to reveal what it is until the very end.

This world of promotion and marketing is all very new to me. This time last year I wasn’t even sure I was going to publish. However, encouraged by my wonderful editor, Hiliary Johnson and friends and family, I finally took the plunge last July and set my book baby free in the big bad world. Frankly, that was the easy bit; what came next is like something out of a nightmare. There I was clutching my book baby and no clue how to get it noticed. I ran around like a headless chicken trying this method and that. Some succeeded and others failed. What follows is a History of the Trials and Tribulations of an Indie Author in the Virtual World’!

A slight tangent first. Here is a checklist. If you cannot tick off all of these then don’t read any further.

  • I have written the best possible book/short-story/script/play, etc., that I possibly can.
  • I have had my work professionally edited and proofread at least once (best friends, grannies, etc., do not count!)
  • I have the best possible book cover, that has been well researched (i.e., appropriate to my genre).
  • I have a blurb that will have potential readers salivating.
  • I realise that the hard work is only beginning! [No groaning please]

All of that in order? OK, let’s proceed. Just to be clear, my book is my debut and entirely self-published in July 2015. It is available as a Print on Demand paperback (POD) and ebook, is historical fiction, and so far only on Amazon. I can’t comment on any other platforms as I have not used them yet. I am not going to endorse any particular method but I will tell you what has worked for me.

Pre-Launch:

I probably fell down here at the very first hurdle. I didn’t have a coherent plan or budget, at all. I did read up on it but was so stressed about getting the book up on AmaFall downzon on time that I let all of that stuff drift. I didn’t have a strong social media presence either. I only set up my website/blog a few weeks before launch. I joined Twitter a bit late as well and had no clue how to use it well. I did announce my book on my personal Facebook page and I got an overwhelming response from my friends and family (this probably accounted for most of my sales in the first 3 months). I set up a page on FB for the book but then found myself duplicating posts and probably annoying the hell out of people. I have since created a new author page as opposed to a book specific page, ‘cos I plan on writing more books!!

So what should I have done or done better?

  • Pre-launch promotion will build up interest in your book. Set up your author website/blog as soon as possible. I use WordPress – it’s free and it’s easy to use. I did purchase my domain name so that I could use www.pamlecky.com – it looks more professional than a long and hard to remember URL.
  • If you are launching an ebook on Amazon, you will have the choice of loading it up for pre-order. Do it – I did get a reasonable number of pre-orders, but I didn’t promote it enough!
  • Obviously, build up some anticipation on Twitter and Facebook and if you don’t have an author page, create one. I try to keep my personal stuff and publishing stuff separate. Invite your friends to ‘like’ your author page that way they have a choice. I now keep my promotional stuff almost exclusively on my author page.
  • Sit down and decide on a marketing budget.
  • I made a book trailer with the help of my daughter and promoted it before launch. It is a nice to have, and we had a lot of fun putting it together, but I honestly don’t know if it generates sales. I suspect if you are an established author it might. I was able to make mine very cheaply as my daughter is a bit of a whizz on the tech stuff and had previously made a book trailer as part of a school project (her writing was published before mine, by the way!). The main cost was the purchase of iStock images (between $1-3 each), some video and I also bought a backing track (all very reasonable if you look around). Word of warning – don’t infringe anyone’s copyright. Purchase the licences or don’t do this at all.
  • I had business cards printed. Cost me about €20 euro for 200. Business CardYou can give these to people or ask to leave a few in shops, pin to notice boards wherever you can. Ninja dress-code and stealth advised! The title of my book was long and I was using my maiden name, so the cards were a very handy way of making sure that people searched for the right book when they went online. These definitely generated some sales.

Things I didn’t do but might be worth looking into:

  • Amazon and Goodreads ads pre-launch.
  • Send a copy of your book to reviewers well before launch – great pre-launch reviews would be worth their weight in gold and if you are going the POD and ebook route, you could add them into the book cover/inside blurbs, etc. before launch.
  • Book launch: I didn’t have the funds and the advice out there was not to bother if you are self-publishing and going the POD route in particular. The cost would have been high for me as I would have had to buy the books from Amazon and pay the huge whack of postage they charge from the US (I think it is different if you are resident in the UK as CreateSpace print there). ALSO, the sales would not be recorded as sales, only as purchases by me. (Sales count if you are going out looking for an agent/publisher at a later date). I was told by an industry professional (and open to correction on this) that the definition of a successful book is 2,000 sales in 2 years. Again, this could be for a traditionally published as opposed to self-published book.

Post Book Launch:

These are in no particular order:

  • Radio Interview: I was lucky that a friend of mine had a contact with a local radio show that did author interviews. Slightly terrifying to do but actually was OK once you got into it. Did it generate any sales? I really don’t think it did but I have a link to it on my website (looks good if potential agent/published has a peek) and it was great experience for when I go global!!!
  • Goodreads Giveaway: You must set yourself up as an author and put up your book detGiveawayails (you will have to have an ISBN). Definitely the most useful promotion I have done. I put up six copies of my book (signed) and ran it for one month. Over 1,000 people entered. I also run a Goodreads Ad for the book that is ticking away in the background. You set your own budget for these, and pay per click. I also found Goodreads support staff very good to deal with as the advertising pages are a little tricky. Over 500 people have added my book to their ‘on the shelf to read’ list – hopefully potential sales. Goodreads is great in that readers can post reviews and ratings, follow you, follow your blog, etc. Just be aware that Goodreads is owned by Amazon.
  • Kindle Select: I resisted joining this initially and have to say it works very well. I have now run two countdown deals (ebooks at 99p/99c for a week) and sold about 140 books this way. Your book also goes into Kindle Unlimited where subscribers read your book for free. Amazon pays you a small amount for each page read, out of a global fund. People have read the equivalent of 40 copies of my book and although the income is small it is still getting my book out into reader’s hands. Hopefully if they like it they will remember me and buy the next book.
  • I begged for Reviews on Amazon & Goodreads: OK, you are unknown, first book and you desperately need those reviews so swallow your pride and ask – blanket requests for reviews don’t work. Email/text/message people one to one – they will usually respond. It keeps the ball rolling for you. The more reviews that are up the more notice people will take of your book if they come across it in a random search. It also affects how Amazon ranks your book.
  • Book Promotion Company: Boy, did I fall for this one. I won’t name the company and I don’t think it really matters which one you use. They will promise you the world. It didn’t work for me. They tweeted (only) about my book a couple of times a day for a week. It cost be $60. I deliberately didn’t do any other promotion that week to see if it worked. It didn’t produce 1 sale. The only good thing from it was that it generated about 70 twitter followers. Two people visited my website that week and they probably weren’t as a result of the promotion. Approach these with extreme caution. I certainly won’t use one again.
  • FACEBOOK: I love FB and find it much easier to use than Twitter. Finding writer groups, etc., is a great idea. Not only did I find my editor but I have found groups of authors who specialise in my genre. Most are indie like me and very supportive. As an aside, I have also found some great blogs hosted by these authors that really help with either writing or research. Well worth finding these and contributing – good things will come of it. Best of all was finding FB Twitter Groups. I have found these invaluable for promotion. They are closed groups (sometimes genre specific) that agree to retweet each other’s posts. You agree to 100% reciprocation. I am in a few different ones but there is an Indie specific one. PM me for details.
    Facebook ads: I have run two of these. Gained me a lot of likes but did not boost sales. I have now set up a ‘Buy Now’ button on my author page – it’s getting some clicks and may generate some sales. It’s free, so why not do it.
    Facebook Promotion of your posts: I only recently discovered that the posts you put up on your author page only reach a certain percentage – that is why you will see ‘do you want to boost this post’ messages. I thought that everyone who liked a page saw the posts – not the case, my friends. I was more than a bit miffed when I discovered this – on average only about 150-200 out of 3,000+ people actually see what I post on my author page.
  • Book Competitions: The world isn’t fair, you already know that. Most of the big competitions won’t accept Indie authors. That’s just the way it is. However, there are competitions out there that do. Research and find them. If your book wins an award I imagine it is a huge boost to your promotional opportunities. My book was long-listed for an award and I use that extensively in promotions, added it to the Amazon and Goodreads’ description of the book. It will also go into the promotion for the next book – you see how it works?
  • Book Reviewers: I have sent my book to reviewers that I have found through FB/Twitter or blogs. I have never paid for a review and never intend to. Don’t risk it – Amazon will find out and withdraw the review and Lord knows what else. Anyway, isn’t it dodgy? Would you really be happy with a fake review? Lots of reviewers have blogs and the more prestigious the reviewer the better the exposure for you and your work. Be mindful; the Amazon top 100 reviewers are virtually impossible to engage.
  • Writing Websites: I had a link to an Irish writing website as the owner also ran the company which did my first structural edit. Through some emailing, I have managed to get two articles published online and they are currently reviewing my book. Well worth a look on the internet to see if there are any you can contact. Again, probably not massive exposure but it all helps.
  • National Media: Forgive me while I fall around laughing. In Ireland you have virtually no chance of national coverage unless you are in the know. End of and I don’t intend wasting any more time or money trying to get the national broadcaster or newspapers to review my book (several copies of my poor book lie forlorn in their storage areas or waste bins). If my book ever wins an award, I will have one more go at this, but I won’t lose sleep over it in the meantime.
  • Local Press: the local papers are much more amenable to supporting you. I was able to have a large piece put in a Dublin-wide paper. Not sure if it generated any sales but didn’t do any harm and a few people mentioned that they had seen it.
  • TWITTER: Grrrrrrh. Can’t make up my mind about it. I find it clunky. Most of my followers are authors or book promoters and guess what they are doing? Yeah, promoting. I could have a rant about automatic DMs but you might be eating your breakfast. Don’t you hate when you follow someone famous and all they do is tweet constantly about their book and never interact. You just know someone is doing it for them. I don’t believe that is what Twitter is about. Interact with me like a normal human being and I will start a conversation – it might go somewhere, we might become friends or not. I am more inclined to look into the work of someone who has the courtesy to ‘talk’ to me (and that goes for FB as well). I’ll leave it there – I think you know what I’m saying. It has its place but don’t become obsessed with it. Social media can suck the life and the hours from you.
  • Blogging: Write about the things you love. Write well and you will pull people to your site. Keep it interesting by doing a mix of stuff. I don’t use the blog to directly promote (bar the actual book launch and perhaps some big book news) but the information is there for any visitor to see. Make sure that people can sign-up to follow your blog, can contact you easily (I actually set up a separate gmail account for this as I didn’t want to give out my personal email). Most importantly, set up a Newsletter sign-up. Capture those emails so that when it comes to the next book launch you can dazzle with your amazing cover/blurb and exclusive content.
  • BookBub: is supposed to be good for promoting a book deal but notoriously difficult to be accepted. Haven’t tried it yet.

So, you have to ask yourself – what am I trying to achieve? It isn’t just about sales. It is about establishing yourself as a professional writer. Instant success and massive earnings only come to a few. You are building up your profile over time. Write well and the reviews will come. People will notice and recommend your work and this in turn will generate those precious sales.

So what is that little piece of magic I mentioned at the start? Haven’t you guessed?

Sparkles

Your writing, plain and simple!

19 thoughts on “How to Market your Self-Published Book

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  1. Pam,
    Good to read but sorry it is such uphill work getting your book out there and sold .I thoroughly enjoyed it and am looking forward to the next one
    Best of luck
    Teresa Quinn

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks Teresa for all your support. I am feeling philosophical today – if its meant to be, it will come. For me, the most important thing is that I am bringing some entertainment to the people who read my book. I didn’t go into this to make money or become famous. The stories are in my head and the characters want to see the light of day – I am just a facilitator!

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Very helpful Pam also for someone publishing with a small independent publisher. I have just been blogging about this too under the heading ‘Creating a buzz.’ It is another whole career!
    Barbara Lorna Hudson

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Read this with interest. I have almost exactly the same things as you with the same success. Got myself onto two local newpapers; didn’t generate any sales. Constantly begging for reviews for Amazon/Goodreads, by giving e-copies free to reviewers; don’t know how useful this is but at least it looks good on Amazon page. Keep trying business cards, don’t know how successful they are. Which company did you use, if you don’t mind me asking? Book promo companies – I keep getting these touting for business on my Twitter account and have been tempted, but then I look at who they’ve already got signed up and it doesn’t look very effective. Bookbub – if you can get onto this, you will be my hero, if you tell me how you did it. I’ve tried so many times and it is so expensive anyway. I have been told that Bookbub is now so successful that only agents/publishers with big budgets stand any chance of being accepted, and that since they want at least 20 reviews before they even look at you, you might as well forget it.I tried ‘EBookSoda’ at a cost of £21- didn’t generate any sales. ‘E-Reader News Today’ garnered me around 80 sales which sounds great, but I did it at bargain price of 99p/99c and at this price Amazon takes 70% of the sale leaving the author and the publisher to fight over the 30% left of 99p. Since I am not self published but with one of the many American (mainly e-book publishers) I actually made £22 which would have been lovely if I had not spent £25 on getting it advertised. Hey -ho You just have to keep on going.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. You do Jacaqueline – you can’t give up. My 2016 plan is to write, write, write, promote a little and keep connecting and talking to authors, reviewers, etc. I think the key is time, well that’s more a hope! Everywhere you turn to market, someone tries to take a cut. I will be lucky to break-even on this book and that was my initial goal and I don’t have an agent or publisher taking a cut of my earnings.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. It sounds like you have done everything you can think of in getting known! Thank you for sharing your journey of marketing your books, I also really like your style of writing, its fun to read.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. I;ve bought your book 🙂 – from knowing you in the fb group.

    I find twitter works and I got at least one piece of national press recently because of a chat on Twitter that developed into something else. It’s about having conversations on there. I dip in and out.

    In terms of writing competitions, have you seen the one on http://www.writingcap.ie – it is for self-published books. Costs €50 to enter mind you but is just for Irish authors.

    Like

  6. Good advice, Pam. You can also try cheap advertising with Amazon and Facebook. I’ve created campaigns where I only pay about 3c/click and get a boost in sales by targeting similar products or interest groups. I have had great success with KDP Select as well. As you said, I make somewhat less if someone reads my book on KU, but I assume that those are readers who would not have purchased otherwise. Since I’m getting the equivalent of about 35 sales a day read through the program, I will take it!

    A word of advice I would add is for indie authors to not undervalue themselves. If your e-book is perpetually free, that is how much readers are going to assume it is worth. Keeping your e-book price over $2.99 also means you earn 70% instead of only 35% on sales.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks Samantha. I’m still scrabbling around trying to find the most cost effective way. I have to say I balk at giving my book away free – just can’t do it! Do you see any other profession doing their job for nothing? I don’t think so. Some argue it’s about getting your book out there and read but I bet most people who download free books hardly ever read them. Of course, I could be wrong and would be interested to know what experiences others have had with this.

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  7. Really enjoyed this post, Pam.
    I’m in the Pre-Launch stage and I’m happy to see that I am doing the things you’re suggesting 😉
    What will I do next? I still don’t know. I’m very focused on the launch at the moment. But I like to read what other authros have done and especially what worked for them.

    I hadn’t thought about GoodReads, for example, although I am a member (only as reader). I’ll look into it.
    And really did the business cars works in terms of sales? I would have never guessed that. I’ll have to try.

    I would never pay for an ad campagn. I had a couple experience (not related to my writing) and both were hutter failure. I work for a small publisher in my town and last year I helped organising a Kickstarter campaign. My boss payed for a ad campaign that sounds a lot like the one you described… and had exactly the same result 😦

    Thanks so much for sharing.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. It’s all about getting your book in front of people. Doing the giveaway on Goodreads does that once you market it properly. Super cover and blurb are so important. Best of luck!

      Liked by 1 person

  8. Well done on all your hard work, Pam, and thanks for sharing your views which I can fully endorse from my own experience of book promotion.

    Another move which works well is to get yourself on the guest speaker list of local groups such as Women’s Institute, Rotary, Women’s Clubs etc., and prepare some talks based on your research into the themes of your books. The Bowes family would be ideal for this. You can charge a modest speaker fee to cover travel expenses but you’ll find you’ll sell books at every talk (esp if you discount them, knocking off the usual bookseller’s cut) and your desirability as a speaker will spread by word of mouth, bringing in yet more bookings and more book sales.

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    1. Thanks so much for your kind words and your advice – currently looking into book fairs in Dublin as a possible outlet as my book isn’t in bookstores. You just have to keep plugging away at it! I see one of your books is about the Black and Tans – an interesting time in Irish History – will add to my tbr pile.

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      1. I’m not sure – but I think you just have to go for these things – if you don’t ask, etc. If you have connections to these groups go through them.

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