How to Promote Your Books Right Now

Now is a weird time to promote your work as a creative person. Unless you’re wealthy and don’t need to worry about how to make a living, or you have a gig that’s unaffected by COVID-19, we still have stuff to sell. As authors, that means we still need to sell our books because we have bills to pay, too. The kink in the chain comes when buyers, in this case, readers, are also affected because they don’t have the disposable income they may usually have to spend on books.

On one hand, we don’t want to appear to be opportunistic with constant BUY MY BOOK! tweets and posts (and please, if you have learned anything from me, you really shouldn’t be doing that anyway). I mean, come on. People are sick and dying. This is a terrifying reality and not the time to be flaunting our wares.

On the other hand, we are writers. Storytellers. Artists. Books are a wonderful diversion from real life. And real life right now is anxiety-provoking and difficult.

What to do?

How To Promote

 

  • 1Free or low-price (aka, 99c) ebook promotions.*

Far from devaluing our work as writers, going free for a limited time (e.g., via KDP Select or some other method) or offering our ebooks for 99c is a win/win because we share our work without worrying about profiting on misfortune, and our work is reaching a wider audience it may not have without these promotions.

  • 2Giveaways

Now is a great time to offer signed, print copies (or ARCs, if you’re close to launching) of our books, especially considering that most retailers (aka, Amazon) don’t see print books as ‘essential,’ so giving them away is especially generous. Add gift cards? Golden. For the author, having people go through various steps (e.g., follow me on Twitter, sign up for my newsletter, etc.) builds even more connections.

  • 3Launch Parties

A Facebook Launch Party can be great for building connections with one’s demographic IF done properly and IF your expectations are realistic: that you’ll likely not sell a lot of books, yet you’ll connect with your readership, and build relationships and visibility for future sales. If you have a FB Street Team (more on that below), you’ll gain new membership and new followers on other channels and newsletter subscribers. Have realistic expectations with launch parties – I’ve yet to see a launch party sell a large number of books.

  • 4Summits or Other Online Events

Now can be a great time to set up some kind of free course or summit. In my case, May 1-15th is year three of #NaNoProMo (National Novel Promotion Month) here on my website. NaNoProMo is a completely nonprofit event to help writers learn how to promote their books, where I bring in experts daily for those two weeks (via blog posts) and offer giveaways from the experts. If you’ve participated the last two years and won some of these amazing giveaways, you know exactly how beneficial these events are.

  • 5Street Teams

If an author doesn’t have a street team, now is a great time to create one, however, I caution any author to not jump into this unless they have a body of work behind them. I didn’t start my street team until I had published 4 books. Now I have 6 books out, and 2 more coming out this year. Street Teams are a great way to share insider info, create giveaways just for them, and you have a built-in group of beta and ARC – readers. That said, if your book is on a topic that readers can relate to or really get behind (e.g., a health issue, pets, cooking), or the author has a recognizable name already, it’s possible to create a Street Team and people will jump right in.

  • 6Twitter Chats

See if there’s a chat already on your topic – if so, participate in it yet don’t be a ‘know-it-all’ and be self-promotional – hosts hate that. If a topic doesn’t exist, create one. Be forewarned though, chats take coordination and commitment. I’ve created two weekly chats, #SexAbuseChat every Tuesday, 6 pm pst/9 pm est, and #BookMarketingChat, every Wednesday, 6 pm pst/9 pm est. I’ve been doing these chats every week for about 5-6 years. You need to pick a weekly topic, research it, invite guests, and share summaries (I also create blog posts from the chat). This can help immensely in your Twitter growth and author branding.

  • 7Author Q&A

You can schedule these in your own Street Team, or coordinate with an author influencer on Instagram, FB, Twitter, or YouTube to do these live. Invite readers to attend and ask you questions about your inspirations, writing process, books, writing life, cats, etc.

  • 8SMM Tool

Manage your time. That means both marketing and writing. Schedule in your social media using some kind of social media management tool. I’m a long-time user of both Hootsuite and Buffer. I prefer Hoot because I can reply and RT right from the dashboard, though I find Buffer’s analytics easier to use and prefer their mobile version. Both offer free trials so people can try them and see which they prefer.

  • 9Hashtag Memes

Create a hashtag with a purpose. Example: I created #MondayBlogs about 8 years ago because I wanted writers to have a way to share our blog posts and get out of the book self-promo rut. Now, 10-15K people participate each week. Anyone can participate, not just writers – the goal is to share blog posts on Mondays. No book self-promo. It’s easy and people benefit from it. This helped brand me as that chick who helps other writersWriters are my demographic. Win/win!

  • 10Email Marketing

If you haven’t started email marketing, now is the time. More people read their email than read a spammy “Buy my book!” spammy DM, so spend your efforts connecting with readers through interesting, value-added emails. Again, now’s not the time to be shoving your book down their throat; instead, share how you’re coping, what you’re reading, watching, listening to.

How to Promote Your Books Right Now by @BadRedheadMedia #promote #promotion #BookPromotion

The bottom line with all of these strategies: be authentic. We’re all human, and we’re all struggling to deal with this massive change to our daily lives. Want more ideas? Read this list from Constant Contact.

How NOT To Promote 

  • If you book an event, don’t back out at the last minute (unless of course, for an emergency). They’re a lot of work for everyone involved.
  • If you schedule a Facebook Launch Party and aren’t sure how to do one, hire someone who does. There are lots of ins and outs. I don’t offer this service – I hire a coordinator who handles all the details. They’re A LOT of work.
  • Now is not the time to start spamming your book links on social media. The conversion rate is quite low, anyway. Use social media to build relationships and connect with readers, publishers, industry insiders. Listen, learn, interact.
  • If you start a weekly Twitter chat, COMMIT to it.
  • If you create a hashtag meme, be consistent and make it something people want to participate in.

Keep in mind, this crisis will end sooner than later. Making a ton of money on your book sales might not be realistic and that’s okay. Take this ‘quiet’ time to write if you can AND do the marketing you say you don’t have time to do when you’re not stuck at home.

Read more of my tips on Jane Friedman’s latest Hot Sheet!

What are you doing to sell books right now? To connect with readers? Please share your experiences and ideas below. Have you signed up yet for my newsletter? If not, sign up now to receive my 10 free blogging tips!

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*All of my eBooks are either 99c or $2.99 right now. My bestselling eBook, The BadRedhead Media 30-Day Book Marketing Challenge, is only $2.99 (regular price: $7.99). Click here to download the updated 2020 edition!)

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  1. […] Gardner discusses how to handle social media during a pandemic, Rachel Thompson talks about how to promote your books right now, and Frances Caballo has a book marketing […]

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