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Copyright © 2007 by Open Horizons and John Kremer
Last modified: 9/08/07

Promoting Your Books

Marketing Your Books Online

Jokes for Word of Mouse Propagation

One of the best ways to get your message passed on is to include a joke. While your entire message may not get passed on, the joke will be. For example, here's a joke I just received from Ken Darby, who sends out thePEBBLE Article for Print ezine, which always includes a joke, a saying, and an article that are all available for reprint at any time. He requires that if you reprint the article, you include his credits. See his credits at the end of this joke.

You may not know that many non-living things have a gender. For example:

1) Ziploc Bags -- They are Male, because they hold everything in, but you can see right through them.

2) Copiers -- They are Female, because once turned off, it takes a while to warm them up again. It's an effective reproductive device if the right buttons are pushed, but can wreak havoc if the wrong buttons are pushed.

3) Tire -- Male, because it goes bald and it's often over-inflated.

4) Hot Air Balloon -- Male, because, to get it to go anywhere, you have to light a fire under it and, of course, there's the hot air component.

5) Sponges -- Female, because they're soft, squeezable and retain water.

6) Web Page -- Female, because it's always getting hit on.

7) Subway -- Male, because it uses the same old lines to pick people up.

8) Hourglass -- Female, because over time, the weight can shift to the bottom.

9) Hammer -- Male, because it hasn't changed much over the last 5,000 years, but it's handy to have around.

10) Remote Control -- Female. Ha! You thought it'd be Male. But consider this: it gives a man pleasure, he'd be lost without it, and while he doesn't always know the right buttons to push, he keeps trying.

— Ken Darby authors many articles found in newspapers and magazines throughout North America. He is the author of The Saga Of Pinehill, The Adventure, now available at your favorite bookstore. Web: http://www.the-pebble.com. Email: ken.darby@emailsystemscentral.com.

John Kremer, Book Promotion Expert

John is the author of 1001 Ways to Market Your Books and editor of the Book Marketing Update newsletter.

Amazon.com Secrets

The Inside Secret of Book Marketing

An Interview with John Kremer

Selling Novels

Q&A: Selling
Children's Books

My websites:

BookMarket.com

The Self-Publishing Hall of Fame

The Biology of Business

JohnKremer.com

JohnKremer.net

JohnKremer.org

CelebrateToday.com

Hot Times, Cool Places

WayBackWords.com

My blogs:

Promoting Your Books

Hot Times,
Cool Places Blog


Open Horizons
P O Box 2887
Taos NM 87571
505-751-3398

Accelerated Internet Wealth Video free trial ...

I'm handing out trial copies of the Accelerated Internet Wealth Video series, and I'd like you to have one.

I'm thinking of offering this set of wealth-building videos — where Derek Gehl and his team reveal exactly how they grew $25 into $40 Million in online sales — to all of my customers. ... but first I want to make sure that other people can duplicate the results I got with my online business from watching them.

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A. If you're convinced that you'll be able to make hundreds of times more money by using this information, you can keep the videos.

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In this DVD series, you'll discover how to guarantee that all your e-mail gets delivered (and not accidentally deleted as spam)... how anyone can turn an idea into a profitable web site with almost no up-front cash in less than a month... how you can make $2,031,959 in one year (as they did) using just one forgotten marketing technique... how you can increase your customer list by thousands and thousands of names, and much, much more!

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Derek is limiting the number of people who sign up, in order to make sure there are enough trial copies for everyone. So I'd like to encourage you to follow this link right away: Trial DVDs.

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— John Kremer

P.S.: Don't underestimate the value of the information in this trial. Just one of the secrets cost Derek and his team over 2 years to learn — and cost them $100,000 in research and expenses.


Internet Explorer Toolbar Builder

Internet Explorer Toolbar Builderhttp://www.iebar.com

One way to keep visitors coming back to your site is to integrate your site directly into Internet Explorer by giving visitors a custom toolbar. The web site above makes it quick and easy for you to generate a custom IE toolbar with all the bells and whistles, including your branded images, multiple search boxes, password boxes, drop down menus, and much more. The software to design, license, upload, and track your custom toolbar downloads runs $129.99. A no-cost trial is also available at the site.

If you've ever wanted to offer a custom IE toolbar, this web site seems to offer exactly what you want -- at a low cost and fast (they say you can create one in as little as 10 minutes).

I learned about this web site in Larry Chase's Web Digest for Marketers ezine. You can subscribe to this wonderful ezine by going to http://www.wdfm.com.


Marketing Lessons from the Magic of Harry Potter

Warren Whitlock had an incredible idea. Why not tie into the media and consumer interest in the new Harry Potter book, which sold millions of copies. What did he do to piggy-back on this publicity and interest? Very simple. He created a blog about the book's marketing. Gosh, I wish I had thought to do that. He picked up hundreds of links to his web site as a result of his simple (and time-limited) blog.

Not only does he get all these links, but he doesn't have to maintain this blog for very long to get all the value that he has already gotten in less than ten days.

Check out his Marketing Lessons from the Magic of Harry Potter blog at http://pottermarketing.blogspot.com.

Just think: What upcoming event that will get a lot of interest can you blog about? The new TV season? The hot new TV drama or comedy? The latest reality TV show?

The NFL football season. The NHL getting back into play. The breakup of the big AFL-CIO union as unions go off on their own (this is big news right now in the labor and business markets).

Potter was really big. What's the next big thing? Think about it. Then blog about it. It's so simple to do. When you blog, always include a press release via the Internet as part of your blogging.

Again, check out Warren's blog to see what he did.


Web Trailers: Great Online Promotions for Books

Do you want to see an incredible introduction to a book? One that makes you want to read the novel at the same time it entertains you? Then check out this web trailer (it's for The Wheelwright's Son by Michael Alan): http://www.minefallspress.com/wheelVid/wheelwright/play.asp. Also check out this novel trailer (it's for Willforce by Michael Alan, again very clever): http://www.minefallspress.com/ wheelVid/willforce/play.asp.

If you'd like to know more about this web trailer technique (using Flash), check out http://www.minefallspress.com/trailermill.

You can also view other such trailers at http://www.vidlit.com.

These trailers could evolve into an incredible marketing tool and, eventually, into an incredible new medium for publishing. This is your chance to get in on the ground floor of a new book promotion and publishing format.

I can tell you this. The web trailers created for Alan's books made me want to read them.


How to Write a Good Book Sales Letter

In his latest Fred Gleeck Insights ezine (http://www.fredgleeck.com/ebooks), my friend Fred Gleeck provided an outline for a good Internet one-page sales letter that would work for books, reports, audiotapes, kits, home study courses, DVDs, databases, software, etc. Here it is:

1. Prehead
2. Headline
3. Posthead
4. Opening Line/Paragraph
5. Build Rapport
6. Demonstrate Credibility
7. Develop Bullet Points
8. Testimonials
9. Offer
10. Pricing Discussion
11. Guarantee
12. Bonuses
13. Reason to Act Now
14. PS

Follow this outline and you'll create a great sales letter. Include a few stories, some detailed testimonials, and a lot of soulful honesty and you'll knock the socks off your readers — and they'll want to buy.


Get More Links — Links That Last

“Since about 1999, I've been buying text ads in newsletters in just about every niche vertical you can imagine. Not only have those ads generated much needed awareness and traffic, those that are archived online still provide excellent, mature link equity.” — Mike Grehan, author, Search Engine Marketing

John's Comments: Would you like to get more links to your web site so you could get more visitors? One thing you might try is to buy text ads in ezines or newsletters. Why? Well, first, if you target the right ezines, the ads should get people to visit your site and maybe buy your books.

But, second and more important, most newsletters and ezines archive their issues. Hence, any link in your ad will continue to exist for years afterwards. Not only, then, do you get an on-going link to your web site, but it will be a lasting link, something that counts for more than a simple transitory link in most search engine ranking programs.


Creating a Blog: Some Considerations

Comment: That was fun, creating a free web log. Thanks. Now all I have to do is learn how to import, scan, refine, get sophisticated, and the rest of the Luddite curricula. My blog is Anagnorisis, due to frustration at being denied all other titles. -- Mitch MacKay

John's Comments: I hope you have fun with your blog. But don't forget to focus on your book. Blogging should be a hobby, a sideline, a marketing vehicle for your book, or a passion. Try to keep it focused on one of those four actions.

What do you want to accomplish with your blog? Once you know that, you'll know if it should be a hobby, a sideline, a marketing vehicle for your book, or a passion. It can't be all four. It could encompass two of the actions, but very, very rarely three. Never four.


Promoting Your Books with Blogs

Blogs have become ever more popular recently as a marketing tool. Why? For one major reason. Search engines like Google and Yahoo spider the blogs more often than other web sites (spidering means that they visit them more often to see if there are any changes or new pages). Blogs have two attributes that attract this increased spidering: 1. a continuous stream of new content provided by the main blogger as well as by those who comment on the blog, and 2. lots of links, both inbound and outbound, suggesting a more popular web site.

Why should you blog? Here are three major reasons:

1. A blog establishes your expertise much in the same way as writing books, but in this case, a blog establishes your expertise on the web.

2. A blog helps to get you more attention on the web, thus exposing you, your ideas, and your book to more people.

3. Increase your web site rating. A popular blog with lots of links to your web site (or as an integral part of your web site) helps to increase the rating for your web site.


Incredible Blogs Lead to Paid Speaking Engagements!

Tip from a reader . . . Tell your authors (audience) to blog!

1. It's the best free publicity I have ever gotten.

2. Blogs are hot.

3. It's an extension of books.

4. If speaking engagements are important, it's a great way to obtain for fee speeches. In the four months that I've been blogging, I have received 11 for fee engagements. The profits are much greater than publishing a new book -- 300 Incredible Blogs on the Internet!

— Ken Leebow, blogger and author. Web: http://www.IncredibleBlogs.com.


4 Great Self-Promoting Web Sites

Below are four web sites that are helping self-publishers in other fields to sell their works:

Deviant Art — This site is helping little-known artists to promote their original art as well as sell prints of many of the entries. A wonderful site for up-and-coming artists.

CdBaby — Founded by a musician, this site helps garage bands and other unknown musicians to sell their self-produced music CDs. The site has sold more than a million CDs already!

Pure Volume — This site allows you to sample the work of many new musicians and groups. You can even download many songs for free. You also have the option to pay to download some songs after you listen to them. It's another great web site for singers and musicians who have produced their own music.

IndieDocs — This more commercial site features all sorts of movies including experimental, self-distributed, IMAX, and more. Plus books about movies, producers, directors, and reference.

If you know of other sites like these for self-promoters, please let me know by emailing me at JohnKremer@bookmarket.com. There should be sites, I think, also for songwriters, poets, and others who are self-publishing or promoting their works. I love that the web allows for this kind of exposure, thus enabling people to get started without a lot of money but still get exposure to millions of potential customers and fans.


Blog RSS Subscriptions and Google Adsense

Question: I get your newsletter and have also started a blog about the same time you did. I'm curious about two things.

1. How did you arrange for the subscribe buttons for My Yahoo and MSN? It's quite a convenience for those visitors.

2. Is the Google Ad Sense program worth the effort?

John's Answer: 1. The subscribe buttons I got by visiting feedburner.com. They have a place there where you can add feeds from all the areas that I have listed on my blog. I also picked up and copied the graphics from there.

2. I don't know if the Google AdSense program is worth the effort yet. It took about an hour to set up, so that wasn't too big a problem. I would guess, though, that the Ad Sense program would be a bigger money maker if I had a blog about cars or automobiles. Then the click-through ads would be worth something.

Reader's Comment:

I use the Google Adsense program for my websites (although not my SmallPress Blog yet). I've found it requires very little work. Google sends you a check every month that your account balance exceeds $100. I usually get a check every other month for somewhere between $125 and $150. It was more at the beginning, but it has leveled off.

At the start, I had to spend time blocking URLs from diploma mills (and since I write college guides, this is important). But after that, it has been smooth sailing. — Thomas Nixon

Another Reader's Comment:

We signed up with AdSense (pay per click advertising) for our holiday website www.Merry-Christmas.com. The interface to add the html code is easy to use. (I use Microsoft FrontPage to modify our pages.) It was nice to be able to choose color schemes to match with the colors of the page. You do need to review your web pages once you post ads. It's important to view what ads are being posted to your site. You are able to block URLs with advertising that is inappropriate to your web pages.

Another feature is you can use AdSense to track viewership on your individual pages. You can designate Channels on ads that represent the pages they are posted and you can see where your visitors are clicking on ads. So far it's been a good service for us since we don't have time to do our own ad sales. I imagine with the internet there will soon be many pay-per-click programs you can sign up with.


Web Digest for Marketers: Top 10 Trends

The following is excerpted from my friend Larry Chase's Web Digest for Marketers. Enjoy it with his compliments as part of his celebration of ten years publishing the digest...

To herald this 10-year anniversary of publishing WDFM, I present to you my Top 10 Trends for the next 10 years for Internet marketing to help you see what's really coming. Enjoy.

1. Pay Per Call Rings In: Any salesperson worth his or her salt knows that a call is worth many times more than a click. Having 1-to-1 contact with a prospect live on the phone is so much more likely to result in a sale. Some say the likelihood is ten-fold. So it's no wonder this nascent industry has many people watching closely. There will be issues with "fake" phone calls that will be reminiscent of click fraud problems today. But look for the pay-per-call industry to catch on fire within the next 1 1/2 years, despite these concerns. I am devoting an entire issue of Web Digest For Marketers to the subject of Pay Per Call later this year.

2. Feed Marketing Flourishes: You've got RSS (Real Simple Syndication). You've got Podcasting (where you can download and time-shift audio content to your iPod or MP3 player). Now you've even got Video Podcasting where you can download MP4 videos into Sony's PlayStation Portable unit for viewing when you're mobile. As the use of RSS grows quickly, and more consumers buy iPods or MP3 players, these formats will grow in usage. And where there are ears and especially eyeballs, marketers are never too far behind. The podcasts may employ the sponsorship model, or subscription (further off), or simply be done for the coolness factor, customer retention, or PR pop that you'll get if you do it early enough. RSS ad units will settle into some format that offers a decent ROI for the advertiser. There are already coupons being fed via RSS. Expect to see more point-to-point syndication feed models as we move forward in time.

3. Email Marketing Will Survive: Spam issues will recede dramatically, because they have to. Too much is at stake. We may resort to the payment of email postage for guaranteed delivery, or maybe not. But the email platform is now like a fax machine. While there are fancier applications, email is easy, cheap, effective and everywhere.

4. Agent, Personal Agent: Watch for the growth of agent software to help you sift through the morass of online information. There's too much relevant stuff for mere humans to sift through now. Agent software learns your habits by following your moves online and on your computer as well as by asking about your preferences. Some early forms of this exist now, but it will become much more sophisticated. Your agent will bring you both B2B and B2C offerings, whether the latest on-target ad deal or the best tennis racket at the best price.

5. Reverb Marketing, In Stereo: eMarketer points out that many Internet users already use multiple forms of media at once. Even as I write this I'm listening to CNBC in the background. Smart marketers will synchronize their messaging so the end user hears and sees complementary messages at or near the same time. This will be the new definition of what media planners call Road Blocking. Since the end user's attention is split between different media, it will be essential that messages reinforce each other. HINT: Visual gags on TV spots or simply showing the 800 number on screen won't be as effective, because a significant segment of people won't be watching the screen. Even today we're starting to use TV like radio.

6. Blogs Go Multimedia: Blogs are obviously here to stay. Some of the cutting-edge blogs are starting to offer content in audio and even in video. This will not only affect journalism, but it will impact the retail business as well. Imagine a personality-driven QVC blog on your computer screen.

7. TVIP Adds Interactivity: Microsoft and others are currently exploring TV over Internet protocol. But don't expect TV on the Net to look and act like the TV you see on your television screen. After all, we already have television, so who needs the redundancy? TVIP will take a different twist. While Madison Avenue types will say, "At last, we can now feed TV commercials over the Net!", consumers will not want to see those ads on their computer screens. They already TIVO over on them on their TV screens, right? TVIP will be much more interactive. In addition to an 800 number, with TVIP you'll be able to click and buy right then and there. One form might be a video catalog wherein you click on the product or infomercial of interest. To really make this happen, compression schemes will need to get better in order to prevent buffering at the consumer end.

8. Commercial Content, On Demand: Messages from marketers need to be so appealing that the audience actually requests the message. This evolutionary process is already underway as push marketing is giving way to pull marketing. The costs of paper, postage, TV and print production are getting too expensive and are not performing as well as they used to. Commercial content that the end user wants isn't far-fetched. Look at Lucky magazine or niche catalogs such as Outdoor Adventure Sports. B2B marketers have been using high-value ads for years. The advertisers in Web Digest For Marketers generate sales leads by offering high-value PDF downloads on subjects of particular interest to the target audience they're trying to reach. The how-to workshops at Home Depot are a prime example on the B2C side. It doesn't take a seer to see that the days of "hot air advertising" are so over.

9. Publishing Faces Tectonic Shifts: Research is already showing that many people in their 20s are not picking up the newspaper habit the way their parents did. Add to this demographic shift the cost of newsprint, postage (for magazines) and handling, and it's likely to cause tectonic shifts in the publishing industry. Many people already read newspapers and magazines online. My bet is that special issues will appear in print, and that many publishers will ultimately have to figure out how to make a go of it with free content online (i.e., advertiser-supported), perhaps by asking their readers for demographic information that enables the publisher to sell targeted advertisements at a premium, as you'll frequently find with trade publications. At the same time, in select industries people will pay for online subscriptions that deliver real value. This is already apparent (the Wall Street Journal has 700,000 paid subscribers), but it's not for every content provider out there. For a look at the next level, check out www.cnbcdowjones.com, where you can get just the editorial clips of CNBC, sans commercials, for $99(US) a year. You get 250 plays per month. I subscribe, and find it to be a great time saver.

10. Direct Marketers Will Take Over the Internet: Oops, this has already happened, but not the way I predicted 10 years ago. There are two types of direct marketers on the Net. Those who started out as online marketers have come across the language and practices of DM without realizing it. They talk of response rates by way of clickthroughs, cost per lead, cost per sale, and so on. This group would do well to study the DM masters who have written extensively on the subject over the past 80 years. Then there are the traditional direct marketers, some of whom get it, and some of whom are still riveted on the shriveling response rates of print mailings and catalogs and on ever-increasing postage costs. The irony here is that traditional direct marketing folks are the ones who understand human nature best. Because of their extensive experience, they can smell what will work and what won't. It's baked into their genes now. This group would do well to look at the Net as the incredible opportunity it is, rather than focusing on what was. What was is not coming back. The good news for traditional DM'ers is that the Internet has not repealed the laws of human nature. So while the tools of DM are changing, the underlying principles that have driven DM since the time of Ben Franklin are still exactly the same.

Bonus Tip

11. Internet-Free Zones Become the Hot New Trend: The Internet will become as ubiquitous as cell phones are today. Some enterprising travel package company will then begin offering Internet-free zones -- no cell phones, no Internet, no fax machines, and you won't have to climb the Himalayas to escape the media onslaught. This won't be an option for many people. It seems already that people desperately need to stay connected to others, lest they connect with themselves.

Larry Chase's Web Digest for Marketers (WDFM) is a free weekly email newsletter featuring mercifully short reviews and links on marketing-oriented websites.

If you received this issue from a colleague and you wish to have your own free subscription, you can get that by visiting http://www.wdfm.com and filling out the subscription form. It takes less than a minute.


Promoting Your Books Online:
Do You Qualify for the Self-Publishing Hall of Fame?

Do you qualify for the Self-Publishing Hall of Fame? Not sure? Then check out the criteria at the Self-Publishing Hall of Fame.

More than 300 authors who self-published are already featured in this incredible hall of fame, including Margaret Atwood, L. Frank Baum, William Blake, Ken Blanchard, Robert Bly, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Lord Byron, Willa Cather, Pat Conroy, Stephen Crane, e.e. cummings, W.E.B. DuBois, Alexander Dumas, T.S. Eliot, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Benjamin Franklin, Zane Grey, Thomas Hardy, E. Lynn Harris, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Ernest Hemingway, Robinson Jeffers, Spencer Johnson, Stephen King, Rudyard Kipling, Louis L'Amour, D.H. Lawrence, Rod McKuen, Marlo Morgan, John Muir, Anais Nin, Thomas Paine, Tom Peters, Edgar Allen Poe, Alexander Pope, Beatrix Potter, Ezra Pound, Marcel Proust, Irma Rombauer, Carl Sandburg, Robert Service, George Bernard Shaw, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Upton Sinclair, Gertrude Stein, William Strunk, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Henry David Thoreau, Leo Tolstoi, Mark Twain, Walt Whitman, and Virginia Woolf.

You could stock a superb college library or an incredible bookstore just from the books written by the authors who have chosen to self-publish. Why not join them today?


Improve Your Online Testimonials

Would you like to increase the believability and effectiveness of your online testimonials? Here are a few tips from Martin Boyd, editor of HBT News, a biweekly newsletter about online home businesses.

1. Ask people who give you testimonials if they can send you a photo to put up with their testimonial.

2. Feature a scan of their actual signature.

3. Record their testimonial and feature it in an online audio. You can tape their testimonial by phone or in person.

4. If they send you a postcard or hand-written letter testimonial, scan in the postcard or letter and post that on your web site.

5. Ask people who send you testimonials to send you a short profile as well to give them a human face.

6. Videotape the testimonial if you meet them in person.


Promoting Your Book: Using Google News

The Google News page now allows you to customize your page in many wonderful ways. Not only can you rearrange whether news, sports, business, entertainment, technology, or whatever comes first, but you can also create customized news sections.

To customize Google News for you, simply click on the Edit Customized Page link in the gray box at the top right of the Google News Page.

I currently have news sections tracking the following three news items: Book marketing, self-publishing, and John Kremer. You'd be surprised how many John Kremers there are in the world. I always thought I was the one and only, but there's a German scientist, a teenage football star in Pennsylvania, a vice president at a high-tech company, and more.

You can select any search terms you want and customize your news very specifically, especially by using the Advanced Search options. Track to see where the story of your book is hitting (you can search by book title), where you might have been interviewed, etc. Also check out the competition. Or keep on top of the news in your special area of interest.

I love seeing how I or one of my dopplegangers made the news each day. Today, for example, my post at BlogCritics.org was the top news story under self-publishing. That's cool.

Check it out. It can be a useful tool for planning your marketing campaigns, especially as you track to see where your competition is making the news. Two to three months from now that same media will be looking for your story. Be sure you know about which media are covering what stories. Google News can help you do that.


E-Books for Fast Profit . . .

The following has been adapted from Pat O'Bryan's Effortless E-Books ezine:

“I just wanted to thank you for all the information you provide. I just launched my first eBook, Feng Shui for Abundant Living, and sold 98 copies in 12 hours. Everything worked just like you told me it would!”

That was from Kathy Browning, a new author. She wrote an e-book. She registered it with Clickbank. She sold 98 copies in 12 hours. That's all she did.

She took the step by step instruction I laid out in Effortless E-Books #51 and started building her e-book business. She took the simple strategies and techniques she learned from reading this ezine and applied them.

Of course, it doesn't hurt that she wrote an excellent e-book and is practically giving it away (less than $15!!!). Or that her subject is fascinating and useful. Or that her sales page is well-written and attractive.

I'm in favor of any trick, strategy or secret that will help me be comfortable, effective, and productive. Feng Shui has been keeping people comfortable, effective, and productive for centuries.

To see her sales page, click here.

Maybe she was able to write her book because her furniture is properly aligned in her space... There's no reason to wait to read her book and find out. Do it now.

By now, you should be pretty curious.

John's Comment: Sometimes the simplest things work quickest. Don't wait around until you have a printed book. Start selling now with an e-book. Even a chapter can be an e-book. Get something out now. Sell it. Test the market. What are you waiting for?

Email Pat O'Bryan at pat@patobryan.com and ask him to email you a copy of his Effortless E-Books Issue 51 right away. It tells you how to get started today selling e-books (or tomorrow at the latest, if you're slow). Check out his web site as well: http://www.patobryan.com.


Book Marketing: The Book Blog Tour

Book Angst just had a great item on doing a blog tour. Click on Book Angst above to see the item.

Key link: The Virtual Book Tour sets up blog tours for others.

Does it work? According to Tom Dolby, it does. As he notes, “On February 15, 2005, content about me and my book reached more than 50,000 readers; this made my tour the second most successful he has done to date, trumped only by that of novelist/web guru M. J. Rose... What kind of sales did this effort result in? It's difficult to say exactly, but I do know that my Amazon numbers shot way up, and booksellers that I visited in Manhattan over the following several days appeared to be constantly in the process of restocking their copies, so I know it had a positive impact.”

There's also the Girlfriends Cyber Circuit which tours two authors a month on 18 like-minded blogs by female writers. It's an dynamic exchange network that can produce great awareness.

And the Business Blog Tour.


Email Newsletters

Question: I have a question regarding email newsletter distribution, if you're willing to answer it. I have a free, inspirational bimonthly newletter to which people subscribe. I've started having trouble with getting through to my subscribers who have AOL. All emails going through AOL have been returned this time! That's a significant amount. They all say on the return mail "greeting failed." I'm assuming that AOL thinks it's spam.

How do you handle this kind of thing for your newsletter????

John's Answer: There are a number of ways to handle it.

1. Don't send HTML formatted email.

2. Ask each AOL member to put your ezine sending address on their white list or safe senders list.

3. Start a blog, and encourage them to get your news there.

4. Post every newsletter at your web site and tell them if they start missing your newsletter to look on your web site.

Those are all things that I've done at one time or another to defeat AOL and other spam blockers (who for whatever reason see my email as spam as well).

A reader's comment:

“I send out a twice a month e-mail. I was getting so many bounces, like 50% of the list, that I went low-tech. I had a beautiful HTML newsletter and I went to text only. Fixed it right up. Now I get a much higher percentage of newsletters through *and* opened.”


Search Engine Marketing and Online Publicity

Click here for a great article on how to write news releases and articles for optimum pick up by search engines and other web sites.

Note that these same ideas do not apply to writing news releases for regular media. They require more stories and intriguing opening statements.

But when you are writing for search engine marketing (SEM), you need to be key word rich.


Web Sites: Author Promotions Updated

Below are some relatively new web sites that are designed to help authors and small publishers to promote their books more effectively. I don't know much about them, but you might find them worth pursuing.

Open Horizons Book Marketing Blog by John Kremer. Web: http://openhorizons.blogspot.com. John Kremer's daily weblog on book marketing.

Author Reviews, Lukas Johnston. Email: author.reviews@gmail.com. Web: http://www.author-reviews.com. Allows authors to promote their work free of charge.

Autographed by Author — Web: http://www.autographedbyauthor.com. This web site sells autographed copies of books direct from the authors (the authors fulfill the orders and give a percentage to the site).

Booklinker — Web: http://www.booklinker.com. A book promotion site. I don't know any other details except that they are offering to display some banners for authors.

Bookmovement, Pauline Hubert. Web: http://www.bookmovement.com. Bookmovement creates a private web page and discussion forums for reading book clubs, where they sell books for 30% off. Bookmovement’s online reading guides entice readers with authors’ discussion questions, an author Q&A forum, publisher information, related links and excerpts from books. For a charge of $250 to $500 per year, authors can reach book clubs with book previews, interactive reading guide services, and more.

Indiezon.com, Paul Saitowitz. Email: paul@indiezon.com. Web: http://www.Indiezon.com. “I've started a website for self-published authors similar to Amazon, except it's only for independent authors.”

New Book List — Web: http://www.NewBookList.com. Here's a new source for helping authors sell their works. A specialized traffic exchange that rotates authors websites for free.

MarketAbility's new blog article: “2 Easy Steps to Make Your First Book a Success” — Web: http://www.marketability.com/first-time-author-info4.html.

iReadNet 866-REA-DNET; Fax: 603-659-7336. Email: kurt@ireadnet.com. Web: http://www.ireadnet.com. A two-year-old video book tour and author news network, with 1.1 million hits in January 2005.


Online Book Marketing Resources

Question: I am the author of Not Tonight Honey Wait Til I'm a Size 6, due out in May from Kensington. I was wondering where I might find (buy) a list of top TV producers to which to pitch my new wacky book? P.S. I love your web site!

John's Answer: The best place is from the following web site: FreePublicity.com. Bradley Communications offers a directory of the top 241 national TV & cable shows that interview authors and other guests. You not only get contact names, addresses and emails but also detailed profiles on each show including what types of guests they want and the best ways to approach them. — John Kremer

Question: Where do I find pertinent information and resources about publishing books? How to go about finding a publisher or literary agent? How to build my own publishing business?

John's Answer: 1. For publishing books, go to BookMarket.com and ParaPublishing.com. The first provides all sorts of resources on book marketing, editing, design, POD, self-publishing, etc. The second is focused on self-publishing as well as writing a book. Incredible resources in both places. Of course, I am biased since one of the sites is mine.

2. You can find publishers of children's books, business books, cookbooks, first novels, sports books, religious books, light reference/humor books, and health books at BookMarket.com. This is the most up-to-date listing of book editors for those particular kind of books.

You might also want to visit PublishersMarketplace.com. You can find many literary agents and editors there as well.

3. For books printers, go to Book Printers.

For POD printers/publishers, go to POD Printers and Publishers.

For book cover designers and editors, go to Book Designers and Editors.

For book publicity resources, go to Book Publicity Services.

For book consultants, go to Book Consultants.

For fun, read about all the great self-publishers at the Self-Publishing Hall of Fame: Self-Publishing Hall of Fame.

I hope this helps.


Blast Those Cookies

A few weeks ago I read a news item over at the Clickz.com web site. The author was trying to stir up businesses to take a stand on how to overcome the problem of Internet users deleting the cookies web sites place on users' computers. Now, I understand that some of these cookies are really important if you want to get customized home pages from Google or Yahoo, or want to shop again at Amazon.com where they would still know what you've bought in the past. And for web sites where I really want what they offer, I reluctantly accept their cookies.

But, here's the problem. No one tells us what those cookies do. Why the heck must Yahoo store 8 cookies on my computer in order to update my Yahoo home page? Why can't they do it with one? What is wrong with the cookie system?

Anyway, here is what I wrote to the columnist at Clickz.com in response to his article:

I'm one of those people who deletes most cookies except for myYahoo and a couple of other sites that I want to keep functioning like I want them to. The reason I delete all other cookies (and I do this several times a day) is because I don't know what the cookies are doing. There should be some way for cookies to tell users what they are for. The current cookie technology doesn't do that now.

I'd rather be safe than sorry. I'm happy to have people I trust track my behavior to customize things for me better, but I want to know what each cookie is doing. When a web site adds five or six cookies after just one visit, there is some kind of overkill going on. Now I'm speaking as an ignorant consumer. I don't know what each cookie means. If I did know, I'd probably keep most of them on my computer.

Why can't cookies include a short note about what they are doing? That, to me, would solve the problem. Now the cookies are in some sort of Greek code that tells me nothing. It shouldn't be that difficult to include a note what the cookie is meant to do. Or am I crazy? Is it really too complicated for cookie creators to accomplish that little thing? If I knew how they worked, I could probably institute this new procedure in about five minutes, probably less. Why don't cookie spreading web sites do this now?

It seems to me a simple customer service issue. It should have been resolved many years ago. Just like email spam should have been resolved years ago. All they have to do is institute system where your home address is available whenever you sent out an email. I know there might be a few complications in instituting this, but not many. And what person would spam if his home address was included. I certainly wouldn't. I wouldn't want all the angry people calling me at all hours of the night. I might be naive, but some solution like this should be able to cut spam by 90%. That would be an incredible relief for all of us.

With so many incredible minds working in the software and Internet industries, you'd think a few of them would have sat around a boardroom table and instituted new standards for email that would lock out spam and viruses. If there are people in a position to make changes for these standards, I'd be happy to volunteer my time to help them set up a system that works. Just call me: 641-472-6130. The best time to reach me is in the afternoons, Central time.


A Lesson in Copywriting

The following is taken from an email I received from Joe Vitale earlier today. I thought it made a great point about the importance of copywriting in making sales. Note how he quietly promotes his own web site in the process of critiquing another. He advocates that you read his web site to see how much better the copy is there. Well, if the copy is as good as he says it is, you might well end up buying whatever he sells on that site.

So his point is to show you how copy sells. But his hope, as well, is that you will buy from his well-written copy? Do you dare read it? You might end up buying or getting an automobile...

Does copy really make a difference on websites? Can't you just make sales with a few words, a good headline, and an order form? Well, let's see....

Brad Yates pushed for the quick release of our audio teleseminar called “Money Beyond Belief.” While I felt his quickly done site, well, sucked, I agreed. Result? Few sales. Brad was disappointed.

I advised him to add some endorsements, pictures, and bonuses, and to clean up the copy. He did. I then announced the site again. The result? Eighty-five sales almost instantly. Keep in mind going from almost zero to 85 is good for anyone, whether you're BMW or Brad or me. It's *not* great, but it's better than nothing.

The site still isn't the best, but now there's enough copy there to get the job done. But how could Brad make the site even better? What could he do to really bring in the sales? Here's where the real lesson begins.

I told Brad to compare his site to my site on how to attract a new car. I told him to note the differences. The new car one rakes in the sales. Why?

It's loaded with strong copy, long copy, convincing endorsements, a slew of bonuses, terrific pictures, powerful headlines, several PS's, a clear guarantee, subtle convincers, price comparisons, bold headlines and hypnotic sub-heads -- and much more.

The attract a new car site is probably 100 times better than the money beyond belief site. See for yourself. Look at both of the sites:

money-beyond-belief.
attract-a-new-car.

In fact, print them both out. Study them. Put them side by side. Which do you think is better -- and why?

This is a great education in marketing. And it's yours freeeee. Go for it. — Dr. Joe Vitale

I get no affiliate income if you buy from either site. I just think that actually looking at both sites side by side will provide you with a superb education on how long copy, well-written copy sells. That's something we all need to learn more than once. Not just you but me as well.


My Revenue Sources: Fred Gleeck Reveals All

My friend Fred Gleeck has a one-page web site that simply lists his sources of revenue. Why did he create such a site? Because, as he says, “people always want to know where I make my money. At my seminars and events I always hand out a sheet that explains where my money comes from. I've gotten asked this question enough that I've now put it up as a site at: http://www.MyRevenueSources.com.” I love the idea. And it's interesting to see how a good information marketer gets his income.

His site is probably the only site on the web outlining where all the income is coming from. All in one page.


The Author Connection

Reader's Suggested Web Site: "A service that you should add to your site that has worked very well for me is http://www.TheAuthorConnection.com -- This site provides a network of sites that charge a resonable bundled fee with 100% money back if they don't deliver. I've had 4 authors use them and all 4 were very, very happy. I thing AC should charge more for what they offer but in talking with one of the owners they said it's against what they are about. They don't gouge. You should really push this company."

Well, so here I do. Check them out. It seems like a reasonable program.