Hawking Your Book in a Crowded Sky

by James Scott Bell
@jamesscottbell

Obsessive Marketing Disorder (OMD)

Sheesh! With over 4,000,000 books (mostly indie) published last year, how the ever-loving heckfire does an author hope to get noticed, let alone make any lettuce at this gig?

I recall two historical events converging at around the same time—the explosive growth of Twitter and the eruption of indie publishing via Amazon. I got in on both around the same time, and I remember a number of writers who had the idea that millions and millions of people would see their tweets, so the best strategy was repetitive messaging that was a variation on buy my book, really buy my book, really buy my book right nowI

That quickly grew stale. It didn’t take long to discover that social media is not a direct marketing tool. So authors began to use Twitter as part of their brand-building enterprise, which for many included several other platforms. That takes a lot of time and mental energy away from the writing, and can result in an affliction I call Obsessive Marketing Disorder (OMD).

To avoid this malady, let me offer my personal take on where to focus your energies. I invite your take in the comments.

Your primary marketing tool is your books, written with the best craft and care you can bring to them. Because word-of-mouth has always been the most effective way to sell books over the long-term. So spend most of your time doing what you do—producing pages and getting better at your craft.

Set up a website, of course. A full treatment of this subject is beyond the scope of this post, so start off by reading the advice of industry expert Jane Friedman.

Next in importance is the email list. By going direct to a growing base of satisfied readers, you build a career. But how, you may ask, does a newbie create such a list? Well, first, satisfy readers with your books! (See above). Then offer a reader magnet, a healthy chunk of free content in return for an email address. I use BookFunnel for this ($10 a month) offering a free novella.

Now, how do you interact with your list? With pleasant to read emails. What I mean is, offer your list something they’ll enjoy reading on its own merits, not just a sales pitch. One author who does this well, IMO, is a guy who is bound to break out soon. His name is Dean Koontz. One recent email “From the Desk of Dean” begins:

Dear Readers,

It’s been a month of chaos here, with real life intruding into Koontzland in ways that I simply refuse to tolerate. In my frustration, I was dismayed to discover there is no Bureau of Real Life Control to which we can turn. More than one officious federal bureaucrat, hearing my complaints during multiple phone calls (I do not give up easily) said, “You’re on your own, you idiot.”

I was further dismayed to discover there is no Bureau, Office, Agency, or Department that will soundly thrash bureaucrats who call model citizens like me an “idiot,” and will not even teleport them to a retraining facility on the moon, which I’d be willing to help fund. It seems that if I am to maintain my quality of life in Koontzland—with its sugar-cake buildings, candy-bearing trees, and herds of unicorns—I will have to take extreme measures, which I am still formulating.

He goes on for a couple of paragraphs, then deftly drops in his pitch:

I am smiling now with true delight when I tell you that the first three Jane Hawk novels—The Silent Corner, The Whispering Room, and The Crooked Staircase will be reissued for the first time in trade paperback by Bantam Books in June and can be preordered as soon as you’re wise enough to do so. The fourth and fifth Janes are coming in September. They all have dazzling new covers.

He finishes off with:

To calm myself, I will go running now in the company of unicorns through the vast meadows of wild orchids here in Koontzland, through the forest of muffin trees, to the great Fountain of Longevity. One drink of that fountain’s flow of cherry cola grants another century of life. It’s another century in real life, but I’m counting on a world run by benign robots that will spare us from the problems and annoyances that now plague us. How could they not?

Warmest regards from everyone here in Koontzland,

Dean Koontz

To see more of Dean’s mailers, go here. Please note, don’t try to imitate Mr. Koontz. It’s his tone. Find your own, one that would be welcome at a party, which means don’t become just another boorish ranter. We have way too many of those now.

As for frequency of mailing, I’d advise once a month. What might you talk about?

  • Your WIP
  • Your process
  • Your research
  • Early look at chapters
  • Cover reveals
  • New deals

If you enjoy writing about a certain subject, you might consider a newsletter. I have one of these via Substack, which you can sample here.

As for paid advertising, I’ve never cracked the CPC or CPM code, and trying to figure it all out while shelling out dough can induce OMD all on its own. I have had some success with promotional services like BookBub and Written Word Media.

My bottom line is, don’t stress about marketing. Keep the main thing the main thing—producing quality fiction. Set up an email list. Move outward from there, watching for signs of OMD as you do. If you feel it coming on, go outside, take a deep breath, come back in and write another chapter.

Comments welcome.

19 thoughts on “Hawking Your Book in a Crowded Sky

  1. Good morning from the East Coast (well, sort of. Indiana). My newsletter is called Rigsby On The Road and is my monthly update on what it’s like to live full time in a motor home. At the end, I give an update. “What I’m writing now,” or “What’s coming out next.” Sometimes I’ll write a review of a book that I couldn’t put down. The funny thing is, I get the most comments back when I include photos and info about our cats!
    The marketing that has worked best for me is The Fussy Librarian and BookBub. I have yet to crack the Amazon code.

  2. I have a monthly (more or less) newsletter where I include brief bits about what’s happening on my mountain, a brief note from Feebie, my dog, and then sections about what I’m working on, what’s new, a recipe, and something special for my subscribers, often a contest.
    You know what gets the most clicks? The recipe.

  3. I have a monthly newsletter that includes what’s happening in my corner of the world, an update on my writing, a jigsaw puzzle and a Wordle that I created. I also highlight another author and book. Sometimes I include a recipe. The puzzle gets the most clicks that take the reader to the puzzle on my website.

  4. Jim, for years I’ve followed your sage advice to write more books instead of chasing social media and marketing trends. I now have 10 books published which gives credibility as I pivot to more teaching and speaking gigs.

    I could be selling more books and be miserable, suffering from OMD.

    Or I could be happily writing more books and incidentally gathering readers I meet at confs, book fairs, workshops, etc.

    I choose the second option and will continue to follow your advice. Thanks for your wisdom.

  5. Loved seeing a totally different side of Mr. Koontz in that excerpt, Jim!

    All of these excellent points bear repeating, especially to us newbies. I guess I’d have to say I’d rather be in the business of writing than marketing. I know selling is important, but I gotta have a product to sell, right?

    🤓

  6. I second the notion for monthly communication. When authors constantly bombard my inbox they get dropped. Less is more.

  7. I crafted a thoughtful and pithy response and the algorythm told me I’d already said the same thing. So . . . thanks for your post.

  8. A couple of the replies above reminded me of my years at the University of Arizona, which coincided with my time in commercial broadcasting. After the military I earned my first‑class radio license, which allowed me to work as an engineer at KTKT, the Top‑40 powerhouse in Tucson at the time. I started as a babysitter for DJs who didn’t have a license, and during that period the station ran a lot of contests.

    One thing always struck me: you could offer listeners $1,000 for being the third caller, or you could offer them tickets to a concert, the Shriner Circus, or any local event — and the phones lit up far more for the events than for the cash. Even back then, $1,000 was a big prize, but people consistently responded more to things they could do rather than money they could have.

    I notice the same pattern in the comments here — crossword puzzles, Wordle, recipes — the activities always draw the strongest engagement. There may be a lesson there for all of us trying to bring our creations to the largest audience.

  9. Thanks, Jim. Photos of my cat are a big draw, along with my orchids. I’m not Nero Wolfe, but the orchids do rebloom nicely. (I quietly remove the failures.)

Comments are closed.