
Sorry I’m late this week. It was newsletter week and I felt like I’d already written the blog. They got to see the many phases of the cover for my third book. I have been busy this week. I have been networking with authors from a site I joined called AllAuthor. It’s a place for authors to discover new books. It was there that I realized I had more reviews than just what was on Amazon.com. I have even better reviews from other sites like Amazon.ca and Amazon.co.uk. I asked Amazon if they would combine my reviews. The other sites also have a link to the reviews on Amazon.com, so they can see them all. But Amazon.com does not. That really stinks. Anyway, there is a page where you can follow other authors on their social media and then check a little box that notifies the author that another author has liked their author page. Almost all the authors that I contacted got back to me.

I was asking them about what to put in a newsletter and how to get reviews. Nobody had any new ideas about reviews, but I did brainstorm with a few ladies about newsletters. When I first joined Booksweeps, I joined a giveaway and received a list of 449 people who’d signed up to win my book and be on my mailing list. What was I going to give to these people? I had no idea.

I have no problem writing my blog every week, I always come up with something to say. But I tell you guys all about my writing life, so what do I tell my subscribers? Do I just recap the month? I don’t want to just send them the blog posts I missed. They need exclusive, fresh content. So we came up with the following list. If you have an idea, or one of these sparks an idea, do us all a favor and respond to this post. Let’s make the list bigger!
1.Newsletter topics:
2. Simple re-cap of the month
3. Talk about your writing group, or class, or book club. Have photos? Include them.
4. Special events like book releases, cover reveals, etc.
5. Events like appearances. Places you’ll be like someone else’s launch, or a class, or a book fair, or the library.
6. Anything you’re excited about.
7. What you’ve learned this month about writing, or your business as an author, marketing, editing, writing tips.
8. Maybe you see a necklace that goes with your character. Take a picture and explain what it is and why it relates to your book. Is it a restaurant? A painting? Something on Pinterest?
9. Use Pinterest for photos and things. Show them the character inspiration pictures you have.
10. Does your story have maps? Show the maps, or other book maps that relate to your. Show photos of Earth destinations that resemble your world.
11. Give them a sample chapter that you’ve been working on.
12. Tell them your new story ideas.
13. Add teasers.
14. Have them vote on things like which blurb they like best, or which character name to use.
15. Show them your inspiration board, or your wall of post-it notes, or your ring of index cards, maybe your desk and workspace.
16. Tell them the story of your book and how you got the idea, and how you wrote it. Tell them about your structure or anything different you did with plotting.
17. Tell them why you wrote a book. What inspired you to do it? How do you manage your time? Things that are a part of the writer’s life that others don’t know, or writers will be able to relate to.
18. And finally, why you wrote THIS book. Did it come in a dream? Is it about your great aunt Agnes in the war days when she nursed a soldier back to health and he ended up becoming your grandfather. I just made that up. Not bad. Lol.
19. Basically, give them yourself and what you think. Authors brand themselves, not one of their books. Get used to having fans. People who want to know.
But I’m not a bestseller or anything! It doesn’t matter. Have you ever read a truly great book and wanted to look up the author, but there was nothing there? It seems unprofessional, doesn’t it? You want to know more about them and more about the book. You want something.

It’s normal for a fan, and anyone who reads your book and likes it enough to read another one of your books just because you wrote it, is a fan. Everyone wants fans. So make sure they can find you.
I met a lady at the library’s grand opening last week and found out she was a local author as well, so I grabbed her book. It was a YA fantasy, like mine, so I checked it out. The story ended up to be good, there were a few issues, but nothing major and I wanted to talk to her again. Actually, I wanted to invite her to my weekly writer’s workshop.
But I couldn’t find her. Her book had no contact information. And I couldn’t find her on ANY social media channels with the exception of a few articles written about her. Still, they were outdated and had no contact information. No website. Even Google brought up nothing. I wanted to tell her what I enjoyed in her book. I could always leave a review and I will when I’m finished, but that’s not the point. If you are an author, fans want to find you.

They may never say anything, but they may peruse every line of every page in your website. They may just want to follow you on social media to see when your next big thing comes out. They may want to read your blog. You can’t know who your fans will be, but take a look at your target audience. You can get an idea of where your audience hangs out. Put yourself there. Make it easy for them. Some people, like me, will hunt until they find it. But most will try two or three things and then give up. Especially if you write YA. Teenagers do not have the attention span or patience to dig for information you should have available if you are a professional author.

The other thing we talked about this week was getting reviews. My post last week was on getting reviews, if you missed it, it’s here. I spoke mostly about the value of reviews and some ideas of things to do. To re-cap a bit, here are a few things you can try:
- Blog tours with a review request
- social media ads
- price reduction promos
- book giveaways
- email list sale
- back of the book promo
There are so many sites to see though!! How do you know which ones to use and which not to use? I was making a spreadsheet for myself (and to share with all authors), but I don’t know if I have time to do all the researching it needs. Sometimes I wish I still had interns who could do that kind of thing for me. Lol. If anyone wants to volunteer… No? Maybe?
Some more ideas might be:
- Hire a PR group
- Author Interviews on blogs- get trusted reviews
- Onlinebookclub.com ($97)
- Ramp up social media – include: facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, Tumblr, vine, snapchat
- Connect with author groups- #supportindiewriters
- put book name in your email and online signatures with your amazon link
- do guest blogs- advertise on social media
- become active in the reading community
- start a local book club – website MeetUp or FBevents
- reach out to nearby book clubs
- submit to book clubs- write cover letter
- Give a book to your old high school or college library as an accomplished alumni
But what about the sites?! How do I know what they all are? It’s impossible to know them all, but I will give you the list that I have. First of all, when I was marketing my first book I thought of book clubs, like the online kind, might be a way to go. Here are the book clubs I found:
DoubleDay |
Newbridge Executive |
Black Expressions |
Book of the Month Club |
Crafter’s Choice |
Quality Paperbacks |
Children’s BOTMC |
Literary Guild |
Mystery Guild |
Rhapsody |
Science Fiction |
Audio book club |
DearReader.com |
Progressive |
Scholastic Teen |
360 youth |
Student Marketing Group |
History book club |
Readers Subscription |
Prevention |
Fantasy book club |
U of MO |
Shameless book club |
OpraH |
Ellen |
Book Browse |
From left to write |
www.booksarefun.com |
Onlinebookclub.org |
Readers Digest |
Writers Digest |
Shameless book club |
amazon book club |
booktalk.org |
bookmooch.com |
bbokclubreading.com/add-your-book/ |
Brilliant Books |
Direct Brands Book club |
Read It Forward |
National Book Club |
Teenreads.com (20somethingreads) |
Reading Group Choices.com |
www.booklistreader.com |
Booklistonline.com |
Great Group Reads |
Nationalreadinggroupmonth.com |
IBPA-online.org |
Netgalley.com |
Then I looked up all the marketing/promotion sites I could find. The idea is to keep the list and fill it in as I use each service, or check them out, I should say. But I haven’t gotten very far with the list. If you have any more information on these sites, and/or you have more sites to add to the list, just comment or reply, if you’re shy, and I will add them. Here are the sites:
Advicesbooks |
Allauthor |
Amazon Ads |
Arkbound |
Armadillo Books |
Artisan Book Reviews |
Ask David |
Author Buzz |
Author Marketing Club |
Authors Cross Promotion |
Awesomegang.com |
Babs Book Bistro |
Bad boy romance |
Bargain Booksy |
Bestseller Trailers |
Bknights |
blip.tv |
Book Angel |
Book Barbarian |
Book Blast |
Book Bongo |
Book Brag |
Book Cave |
Book Circle |
Book Deal Hunter |
Book Doggy |
Book Goodies |
Book Gorilla |
Book Lemur |
Book Ninjas |
Book Praiser |
Book Preview Club |
Book RAID |
Book Reels |
Book Riot |
Book Review Buzz |
Book Trailers 4 kids & YA |
Book Trailer Tuesday |
Bookbub |
Bookcaster |
Bookgrabber |
BookHippo.uk |
Bookish |
booklikes.com |
bookmarketingtools.com |
Bookoftheday.org |
bookreviewyellowpages.com |
Books Butterfly |
Books Go Social |
Booksends |
Bookskill.online |
BookSweeps |
Booktastic |
Booktrib.com |
Bookvids.net |
BrazenBookshelf.com |
Buck Books |
Buzz net |
Chick Lit Café |
Choosy Bookworm |
Cinematic Book Trailers |
content buzz |
Current tv |
Daily Free Books |
Daily Motion |
Devour |
Digital Bookend |
Digital Book Girl |
Digital Book Today |
Dump a link |
Early Bird Books |
eBook.ws |
ebook deal of the day |
eBookaHolic |
ebook bandit |
eBook Booster |
eBook Hounds |
eBook Island |
eBook Lister |
eBook Mountain |
eBook Roulette |
eBook Soda |
eBook Stage |
eBookasaurus |
eBooks Free Daily |
eBooks Habit |
ENT |
eReader Café |
eReader IQ |
eReader News Today |
eReadergirl.com |
Facebook Ads |
Fantasy Book Reviews |
Fiverr bknights |
Flix wagon |
Flix YA |
Flurl |
Flurries of Words |
Free and discounted books |
Free Booksy |
Free Kindle books and tips |
Fresh Fiction |
Fussy Librarian |
Good Kindles |
Goodreads giveaways |
Heyspread |
Humanmade- books promo |
I love book trailers |
iBook promos |
IBPA |
Ignite Your Book |
Indep Author Network |
Indies Unlimited |
Ink Arcade |
Inkitt |
Instagram ads |
It’s Write Now |
JamesCalbraith.com |
Just Kindle Books |
Kboards Book Discovery |
Kindle Book Review |
Kindle Books & Tips |
Kindle Countdown |
Kindle Natioon Daily |
Kindlenation Daily |
Librarything |
literary Me.net |
LitPick |
Love,Lust&Lipstick stains |
Lulu |
Manybooks |
Masquerade Crew |
mediabistro.com |
Medium |
Motion box |
Mix |
Momma Says Read |
Natasha is a book junkie |
Netgalley.com |
NewInBooks.com |
newfreekindlebooks.com |
Nurture Your Books |
Online Book Club |
Peoplereads.com |
Photo Bucket |
Pillow Talk Books |
Pinterest Free eBooks |
Pixel of Ink |
Pretty Hot |
Promotemine.com |
Rainys Book Realm |
Read Cheaply |
Read Freely |
Readers in the Know |
Reader’s Favorite |
Reading Deals |
Reddit Free Ebooks |
RedFeatherRomance.com |
Riffle Select |
Robin Reads |
Romance Rock Stars |
services4authors.com |
Shameless Book Deals |
Shelf awareness |
Smashwords |
Story Finds |
Storycartel.com |
Story Origin |
TallPoppies.org |
Teen reads |
The Book Cave |
The Book Geek |
The Book Hookup |
The Booklist Reader |
The Digital Ink Spot |
The Midlist |
The page-hungry bookworm |
The Reader Café |
The Reading Café |
The Sweetest Romance |
theindiereview.com |
Trailer Shelf |
Tumblr |
Twitter Ads |
Uniweb productions |
Video Wednesday |
Vimeo |
With Love for Books- Annie K. |
Written word |
YA book central |
Your personal website |
Youtube ads |
Some of those sites do reviews, and some do book trailer marketing. They were color coded in my spreadsheet but I can’t seem to do that here. I’m sure you can tell it took me a lot of time to find them all, look them up, make a table, and color code it. I just wish it had copy/pasted with the original format. Sheesh.
The point is, I haven’t figured this out yet. There are people who have, and I will find out what the secret is, if it kills me. I just don’t have $5,000 to learn… yet. It’s like the chicken and the egg. I need the knowledge to make the money, but the classes all cost money I’m not making. One thing you DON’T want to do is to throw your net wide and invest a tiny bit of money everywhere buying ads and pushing posts. You want targeted marketing. I just can’t tell you who the targets are yet. But I’m excited for the day when I can share it. And I will, eventually.
In the meantime, keep writing!

~jenn

An impressive share! I’ve just forwarded this onto a co-worker who had been doing a little homework on this. And he actually ordered me lunch due to the fact that I discovered it for him… lol. So let me reword this…. Thank YOU for the meal!! But yeah, thanks for spending time to talk about this topic here on your internet site.
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You’re welcome for lunch! Lol. I hope it was something delicious. So happy to be helpful.
~jenn
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