By Susan Reichert, Editor-in-Chief, Southern Writers Magazine
Whether we as writers like it or not, we
must do marketing. One of the easiest ways for us to market is using the
internet. Online marketing has influence on consumers. It influences them in
what types of purchasing decisions to make. Which tells us why we need the
internet presence.
The consumer needs to see our name, they
need to see our products (books) so that when they decide to read a book our
name comes readily to mind.
The more they see our name, the more it
becomes ingrained.
If you sold dogs, you would market them
using their pictures, stories about them and you would tell everyone how great
they are. Well as authors, we may not feel comfortable telling the consumer how
great our books are, but we can “show” them. Isn’t that what we are taught to
do when we write? “Show don’t Tell?”
You can ask many authors and they will
tell you an online presence is one of the most important decisions you can make
for your career as an author. Agents look for it, publishers look for it and
our readers look for it.
Building an online presence there are
certain key things that must be done. Here are a couple I think that are
important.
Decide
what your goal is.
An author’s goal is to build relationships with people. There is a saying in
business that people do business with people they like. I heard that repeatedly
in the corporate world when I was a young woman working in marketing. This is
very true with authors and readers. If I
like an author as a person, I am going to buy his/her books.
Be
Real. Yes,
that sounds funny, but it is true. If we open ourselves up to people and show
caring and concern for others, they are going to reciprocate, and before long
you will find you are friends. No one likes to try to communicate with someone
who doesn’t care about them. Remember, it is okay to be vulnerable. You can
admit, that you are trying to solve a problem…especially if you are writing a
book. They would love to know that in your writing you are working on a scene,
name, setting or anything where they can give you their thoughts. Who knows,
you just find a nugget that can open new worlds for you.
The marketing that authors engage in is
called “soft-sales”. We aren’t selling cars! You want to keep your name out and
it’s okay to talk about your book. But it is much more interesting when you are
talking about your book to talk about why you wrote it; interesting things you
ran into in your research; problems you had gaining information…this type of
marketing draws people into conversation, intrigues them and peeks their
interest. They come to know you as a real person, and they are going to buy
your books.
The internet is our tool that introduces
us to prospective buyers who are readers. It also introduces us to agents and
publishers.
We as writers need the humanness from
others because it brings life to what we write.
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