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Jamie's Journey
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Getting more exposure
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Brenda
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Jan 13, 2019 06:29PM

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I have had luck though on Twitter and Amazon. I write a regular free column and i plug my book as much as I can. This has done far more than anything Goodreads has. I frankly think Goodreads hurts my book. The first review I got was a single star with no explanation and now my book might as well have leprosy. But meanwhile, on Amazon, I have 11 reviews so far. I see very healthy feedback and I have developed a relationship with my readers on Twitter and my mailing list. I can usually sell a couple of books a week no problem doing it this way.
I don't plan on doing another giveaway with goodreads. Nor will I be buying into their advertising programs. I don't think Goodreads serves authors that well. I hope this info helps other authors. My second book is in the works now. Good luck to all of you fellow writers! Find your muse and get it on. Talk about the same subjects you write about on twitter. Use people's feedback to hone your ideas and find new ones. Don't be afraid to get controversial either. Take chances, push boundaries. Readers respect you for it.

Thanks for the tip on Twitter, a much more human connection. Likewise, I had good responses, and reviews from Facebook and one great review from Alex Jones on amazon .com

Joy wrote: "Get a PA half the battle of any book is the promotion. One experienced author said the more giveaways the better. I am still trying to get my name out there with limited or no budget."
Thanks James, I will look into that. I published June 28 and have 137 books sold. I am almost sorry I used Create Space, now KDP. I have 17 ratings and a 4.91 star score. Only one from the giveaway and that was a 4, so 16 of my reviews were 5 stars. I have a blog, a FB page and do instagram, but not Twitter. Will look into Twitter. My book is on Amazon, but have not used Amazon for sales. Like Pam, my budget is limited, so I have to use it wisely. Someone suggested to me to try and get book clubs to read it, any suggestions on how? My thinking is a child's book is not book club material.


self-published books rarely get noticed without targeted marketing. You have to take your book to your specific audience–the people for whom you wrote the book. Here's what I do: First, I research my target audience. Second, I research where they are. Third, I take my book(s) to them. For example, my last novel was historical fiction about a woman. I researched "readers of historical fiction" and learned most readers are women, aged 34-80+. Then I researched locations where these types of women are found. Some were obvious by this point: beauty salons, book clubs, women's groups, i.e. AAUW, women's clubs, etc. I also researched "museums with women's themes" and found several. I then wrote letters to all of these groups. I don't have unlimited funds so they had to be reachable by car or air (within limits). I told them about the book, asked if they would add me to their annual calendars, and in lieu of a speaking fee, asked if I could sell books. To date I have sold hundreds of books; all are in our county library system and sold in women's museums. Word of mouth, PR from events at which I spoke, continue to sell books for me. That book published in 2016 and as of today, I have three author events booked for this year. Target marketing works. Do your research to find your readers and take your book directly to them. Good luck.

self-published books rarely get noticed without targeted marketing. You have to take your book to your specific audience–the people for whom you wrote the book. Here's what I do: First, I re..."






Cenarth, with that many authors you could hire a local community hall for the day.


none of the librarians I contacted asked if we were self-published. Perhaps we were lucky?
As for my own sales, most of them I sold direct, have been in places where my readers congregate. The last novel, historical fiction about a woman, sells at hair salons, AAUW meetings, woman's club events, women's museums. I sold the previous novel, an Army story, at meetings of mostly men: Kiwanis, Rotary, and veteran reunions. The novel I am working on now is commercial fiction, so I need to find venues that appeal to those readers. Not ready to do that yet!


Ask the parks and recreation department.
Ask the school district, or a single principle of one school to use their cafeteria.
Call the city, and ask for a space.
And go see the library director face to face, and ask for a room to have a writer's meeting, Author retreat for the day. Libraries are your civil rights!
Tell them you will only allow donations to be accepted, if that's a requirement. And please invite me to your next one. Thanks.
Toni Mariani, Author

I agree, and I was shocked that they started charging for us to give our products away! We don't have to use them, but they are a part of Amazon now.
Toni Mariani, Author


As for "determination" Americans typically are a plucky bunch!

All that is required is the willingness and discipline to invest the time, resources, and effort to access them. Even so, there is no guarantee of commercial success if the quality of and interest in the product itself does not meet the expectations and tastes of avid readers.

In Australia you are usually offered a price which includes insurance, or one that doesn't if you have your own insurance.

Wow, the libraries are turning their backs on you! Here on The Sunshine Coast of BC, we have some very active libraries who invite participation from 'indy' authors. Also I'm a member of the BC Federation of Writers and also produce events such as you described - but the libraries will support these events - even on site, but you can't charge admission for the event; although you can sell your books at the event. It can help to have an association of writers 'supporting' you ...


I took the initiative!
Toni Mariani, Author

Thanks for this. I've witnessed this repeatedly and mention it in Can I be honest about your writing? (Part 8 - Self-Pubbed v Non-Self-Pubbed, is that the question?) - "Let me share a third sad truth based on my experiences: Many self-pubbed and non-self-pubbed authors create a line at that "non-" part. I've seen it repeatedly."

Whoever said this, what does it mean!
Toni

Whoever said this, what does it me..."
That one's mine. It's in my Can I be honest about your writing? (Part 8 – Self-Pubbed v Non-Self-Pubbed, is that the question?) blog post. The full paragraph is:
Let me share a third sad truth based on my experiences: Many self-pubbed and non-self-pubbed authors create a line at that "non-" part. I've seen it repeatedly. Self-pubs find out someone is non-self-pubbed and they pull back, become guarded, distant. Non-self-pubs find out someone is self-pubbed and they become aloof, guarded, distant. A kind of "Couldn't make it, huh?" or "Didn't have the right stuff, huh?" attitude emerges.
Hope that helps.


Fascinating and sad. I wrote in Can I be honest about your writing? (Part 5 - Could you provide examples of suckness?) that anyone completing a book to their own satisfaction should be congratulated; they have gotten off the couch, as in "Your speed is not important. As long as you're moving, you're lapping everyone on the couch."

Good for you!! That's using your resources well and finding your audience!! That's great.

Anyway, does anyone have tips on marketing to teens? I am on FB, Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Amazon, and GR. I have small folowings on FB and Pinterest. I am not sure how to advertise on Amazon. I saw that mentioned previously. How is that done? I cannot afford a giveaway on Goodreads anymore, but it sounds like those don't bring much revenue. I need help.
Are any of you near the Kansas City area? We could combine forces?



Toni Mariani, Author

I also need to do some kind of canvassing for local authors. Any ideas on how to find all the local authors, you guys?
I'm not averse to doing the work, I'm just not sure where to start.
I have put in a request to have my book in the local library, but I haven't heard anything about it. I know my book is in Mid-Continent public libraries, though.
I am also part of the greater Kansas City area, so finding local authors can be a really big place and finding people who want to drive to meet can be hard, too. I guess I could have two lists.
If any of you have brilliant ideas on finding ways for local authors to find me, or for me to find them without saying, "scour all the indie magazines to find maybe one." I have 5 children and a writerlife and I need ideas that yield decent results per amount of time.
I hope that makes sense and doesn't just sound like I'm being b*tchy. I'm really not. I'm just short on time. Promise. :^D
~jenn

A online business that claims to want to help authors connect to others locally and help you get exposure by reaching out to libraries and bookstore in all cities. Sign up and put your books on your towns group page.
Toni Mariani, Author


I just put out a blog post on this subject. www.jenniferhaskin.com
Good luck!


I have learned to treat writing as a hobby, steadily doing it when inspired. Keep your day job, but don't stop doing what you love 💘.
Then, join your cities recreation programs, the parks and entertainment center so that you can know about fairs and summer fun days, craft fairs etc. Get a stand, booth or table and get a few marketing tools from Vistaprint, so you will be noticed. Definitely keep business cards and pass them out with your books on the face, or at least info about your books.
Go to your library and take your books 📚 gift wrapped and present the gift to the director, the top person. Tell them you want to join the book club, volunteers team and writing club there.
Then, call the school principal office, and ask to volunteer to read your works and help in any way you can, especially if they have speakers and guest authors night.
Be creative and innovative and take the initiative. Carry your books around in your trun
k and offer them to bookstores, either on consignment or sale. Ask them to order your books to be sold. Take in a copy to show them off. Put a couple around town, in salons, barber shops, doctor offices and clinics, asking the administration office of its ok; especially the business you and your family use and frequent.
Research summer book fairs in surrounding towns, and music festivals often have writers there too.
Congratulations on being a writer, and never devalue your work, just because you haven't been noticed yet.
Set up a Facebook page for selling your books 📚. The world awaits you!
Toni Mariani, Author

thank you so much I will and your advice has reminded me that, this is a long road and yes anything worth while is hard work. I am forever at your service!!

I have learned to treat writing as a hobby, steadily doing it when inspired. Keep your day job, but don't stop doing what you love 💘.
Then, join your cities recreation programs, the pa..."
Wow, I feel like I just hit the lottery of advice! Thank you so much for your amazing comment and you have given so many more ideas to market my books! I am forever at your service!

Thank you Jennifer for your comment, and honestly, your advice is inspiring, and I will heed all that you have given to me. Yes Marketing is a full time job but thanks I am forever at your service!!

A online business that claims to want to help authors connect to others locally and help you get exposure by reaching out to libraries and bookstore in all cities. Sign up and put..."
So far they've invited me to buy stuff but no indication of sales, no marketing of my books other than having them on their site (and not easy to find).