I team up with experts to write about topics I know little or nothing about, so the marketing I do to promote the books usually has little impact. Unlike my coauthors, I lack the credentials and expertise to speak with a voice of authority on most topics we cover, and except for my mom, nobody’s going to show up for a Joe Kraynak book signing at the local Barnes and Noble.
Still, I try to contribute to in my small way to promote the books I coauthor. In this post, I share my “secrets” with anyone out there who may be able to make better use of them – especially my coauthors.
Register Your Own Domain
For about $10/year, you can register your own domain and then use it for your website and email. Take some time choosing a domain name that’s easy for people to remember and will give you a strong brand presence.
I register all my domain names through Bluehost, where all my sites are hosted, as well.
Tip: Create a Bluehost account before registering your domain name, so you can get the domain registration for free. If you already paid your hosting fee and Bluehost charges you an extra $10 for the domain registration, contact them to have the fee credited back to your account.
Build a Combination Website/Blog
A combination website/blog functions as your online base of operations. Once this is in place, you can branch out to other areas, including Amazon (if you’ve authored a book), Facebook, and Twitter more efficiently. Instead of posting individually to each one, you can set up feeds to automatically transfer content from your site to these other venues. To build a combination website/blog, I use the following tools:
- Bluehost for actually hosting the site. Cost: $6.95/month if you sign up for a couple years, but your $10 annual domain registration is free for as long as you keep using Bluehost.
- WordPress blogging platform, which is free. You can install it from the Bluehost Control Panel, making installation and setup a snap.
- Thesis – a commercial theme for WordPress that makes it easier (not necessarily easy) to customize the site design and includes tools to help with SEO (search engine optimization). Cost: $87 last I checked.
- WordPress plugins to add features to the blog and improve its performance. Plugins I use include Google XML Sitemaps (for SEO); Askimet, Peter’s Custom Anti-Spam, and Simple Trackback Violation (to keep spammers at bay), and Secure and Accessible PHP Contact Form (so people can contact me via email and I don’t have to stick my actual email address on the site). Cost: Most plugin developers ask for donations.
Create a Separate Page for Each Book
If you launched a site to promote your books, create a separate page for each book, describing the book’s content and providing links to various online bookstores where people can order the book.
Blog Regularly
Blog two to three times a week for maximum effect. This makes your site a bigger target for search engines and keeps people engaged.
Tip: Keep your blog focused on a single topic to send a clear message to visitors and search engines that your site is the place to go for information about your specialty. If you want to establish yourself as an expert in several areas, create a separate site for each. (Because I dabble in so many areas, I don’t follow this rule myself, but I still think it’s a good one.)
Create a Google Profile
Create a Google Profile and include a link to your site.
Tip: If you have a business listing on Google, make sure it’s up-to-date and includes your site address.
Add Your Site to Other Online Profiles
If you belong to any organizations that allow you to add yourself to a directory or create a profile, take advantage of it, make sure your information is complete and up-to-date, and be sure to include your site address.
Google Yourself
Google your name or business name, and check at least the first page of listings to make sure any information about you on the Web is accurate. Take any steps possible to provide complete and accurate information to the source.
Add a Signature to Outgoing Email Messages
Promote your site via email by adding a signature to the bottom of all outgoing email messages. You can use any text editor to create an HTML-coded signature file, something like this:
<strong>Your Name</strong><br />
Blurb about yourself and what you do. <br />
Phone: 555.555.5555<br />
Email: <a href="mailto:yourname@yourdomain.com">YourName@yourdomain.com</a><br />
Website: <a href="http://yourdomain.com">YourWebsiteName.com</a>
Save the file to your hard drive, and then add it to your email program. In Outlook Express, you click Tools, Options, and then click the Signatures tab to access options for adding a signature. Your email program will then insert the signature at the end of your outgoing email messages either automatically or only when you choose to include the signature. (Sorry, but too many email programs are out there for me to provide detailed instructions for all of them.) Your signature will look something like this:
Your Name
Blurb about yourself and what you do.
Phone: 555.555.5555
Email: YourName@yourdomain.com
Website: YourWebsiteName.com
Join Amazon’s Author Central
With Author Central, you can stake a claim on Amazon by posting your mug shot and bio. You can also set up an RSS feed to pull entries from your blog onto your Author Central page. Cost: Free, but you must provide contact information for your publisher so Amazon can verify you’re an author.
Send Review Copies of Your Book
Positive reviews and ratings go a long way. Send out review copies of your books. Here are some tips to get a better return on your efforts:
- Identify influential reviewers, if possible. Solicit a review from a big-name in the industry. Think of industry groups, publications, support groups, and other organizations where people are likely to share information about your book with one another, and then try to contact the leaders of those organizations.
- Contact prospective reviewers first via email or phone to let the person know when you’re sending the book.
- Include a letter with each book you send out expressing your appreciation for the review and requesting specifically that the person post a review on Amazon.com in addition to whatever publications the person has access to, such as the organization’s newsletter. (Even if your readers ultimately buy the book elsewhere, they’re likely to check Amazon’s book reviews before making a purchase decision.)
- Ask the reviewer to email you a copy of the review along with permission to post the review on your website. After posting the review on your website, email the reviewer with a link to the review and your sincere thanks.
Create a Facebook Fan Page
If you have a Facebook account, you can create a Facebook Fan Page to promote yourself or a book you’ve written. Don’t worry, it’s free. Just login to Facebook, head to the bottom of the screen, click Advertising, click Pages, click Create a Page, and follow the onscreen instructions. Be sure to include a picture of whatever you’re promoting.
Where’s my Fan Page?!
After creating a Fan Page, you may wonder how to get back to it to edit it or change settings. The easiest way is to pull up your Profile, click the Info tab, scroll to the bottom, and click link to your Fan Page.
Feed Blog Posts to Your Fan Page
Now that you have a page, populate it with content or nobody will care to look at it. The good news is that since you already have a blog, all you need to do is create a feed to pull posts from your blog onto your page. To set up a feed, open your page, click Edit Page (below the photo box), Edit, Import a Blog (under Notes Settings), and follow the onscreen instructions.
Promote Your Fan Page
You have a Fan Page, great, but nobody knows about it. To attract fans and enlist them in spreading the good word about you, promote your Fan Page:
- Become your own fan. Access your page and click the Become a Fan button (to the right of the Page title). This notifies your Facebook Friends, via their Newsfeeds, that the Fan Page exists and you’re a Fan of it.
- Invite your Friends. Send a Message to your Friends you think will be interested in the Page.
- Link your Page to Twitter. Open a Twitter account (see the following section), and link your Fan Page to Twitter. This way, whenever you post something to your Fan Page, or a new blog post is fed to the Page, Facebook can “tweet” it for you!
- Place a Fan Box or Page Badge on your website/blog. Open your Page and click Promote with a Fan Box (below the photo box). Click Fan Box or Page Badges and follow the instructions. This gives you a code you can copy and paste into the code for your website/blog to display the badge of box.
- Place a Share icon on your website or blog. Facebook can provide you with a Share icon for your blog, so people can click the Share icon on your blog to share your posts with their Facebook Friends. However, if you’re using WordPress, consider using a plugin instead, like Add to Any: Share/Bookmark/Email Button, which enables users to share your posts via email, Facebook, Twitter, Digg, or a host of other social media sites.
Give your Page its own vanity URL. As soon as your Page has a certain number of Fans (the minimum number seems to be a moving target), go to facebook.com/username and claim a vanity URL &ndash a Web page address that more clearly and simply reflects the Page title.
Tweet About It on Twitter
Twitter is another popular social media venue where you should establish a presence.
Head over to twitter.com, set up an account, and start tweeting… which may be easier said than done. Tweeting is easy. Tweeting regularly isn’t, at least for people like me who think Twitter is for the birds.
If you’re not fond of tweeting, or even if you are, consider automating the process at least partially:
- Link your Facebook page to Twitter.
- Install a blog plugin that automatically tweets your blog entries.
- Use a program like Ping.fm to update all your social networking sites from one place.
Promote Your Tweets
Add something to your site to promote your presence on Twitter. This informs Twitter users that they can find you on Twitter, so they can choose to follow you and hopefully help you pass along your tweets to other users.
To obtain a Twitter widget or button for your site, head to Twitter’s home page at twitter.com, scroll to the bottom of the page, click Goodies, and follow the onscreen instructions.
Offer to Write an Article
Publishers and organizations are constantly in need of quality content for their magazines, newsletters, and websites. Identify the high-profile outlets and offer to write an article for them. Be sure to add a credit mentioning yourself, your website address, and whatever it is you’re trying to market, such as your most recent book.
Create an Amazon Associates Account
Some authors sell books on their own, collecting the money and shipping the book to readers. That’s fine, but it’s not something I do. Instead, I set up an Amazon Associates account. If someone clicks one of my links (usually to order one of my books), I earn a small commission. I haven’t earned a whole lot, but it covers my Bluehost bill and then some.
Now it’s your turn. If you have a tip or trick of your own for promoting a book or something else on the Web, please share it with me and others. And please post a comment to let me know whether you’ve found this helpful.







