Showing posts with label Book Promotion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book Promotion. Show all posts

Friday, March 4, 2022

NEW KDP A+ CONTENT BOOSTS BOOK PAGE

Those of us who are self-published (which is almost everybody I know in science fiction romance) will look for just about any opportunity to advertise and sell our books without spending a lot of money. So when such a chance comes along from a major marketplace AND it happens to be FREE, well, I, for one, am not going to pass it by.

I’m referring to KDP’s A+ Content, offered for any books you list through KDP on Amazon. With A+ Content, you can produce graphics for your book’s sales page on Amazon using photos; quotes from your book; reviews from major publications, review services, or well-known fellow authors; or any other kind of promotional material you can think of (that meets KDP guidelines).

I used several photos I already had in my files, including some that were used for my paperbacks’ back covers, and, using the A+ Content module software, added quotes from the books in overlays. In other modules, I highlighted review quotes that had only been in the front pages of my books before. You can add several different modules and mix and match to suit your needs and style. It helps to have some experience with putting together computer graphics, but if you can do a blog post or work with simple PDF editing, you can easily do this.

Screenshot of A+ Content for Fools Rush In: Interstellar Rescue Book 3

The book sales pages already had a spot to add a video, but producing a trailer is an expensive proposition, and I don’t consider myself to be a particularly brilliant salesperson onscreen. So, I’ve never taken advantage of that feature. The A+ Content, though, is easy to do and adds a visual punch to each page that’s unique to each book.

Whether it will help sales remains to be seen, but surely it can’t hurt. Try it, you may like it!

Cheers, Donna

Friday, October 4, 2019

RETHINKING REVIEWING AS AN AUTHOR


I just finished a big campaign for my Interstellar Rescue SFR series with a promo group called Itsy Bitsy Book Bits. The company’s founder, Colleen Noyes, and her team provide a full range of promotional services for authors, including organizing social media blitzes on Twitter and in Facebook reader groups, and recruiting reviewers. They can help launch a new book, or as in my case, generate new interest in books that have been out for a while.

I had used IBBB when I first launched one or two of my titles, so I called on Colleen again as I was starting over as a self-published author. And the results were great! Colleen has a sizable stable of volunteer reviewers to draw from, and I gained 20-25 or so new reviews for each of my books, posted not only on Amazon and Goodreads, but on BookBub, too.

I didn’t really write this post as an ad for IBBB, though I highly recommend the company if you need promo help. All this has been a long lead-in to a mea culpa and a vow to do better myself when it comes to reviews.

Everybunny should write reviews, including me.
Yes, I know, I have urged folks for years to PLEASE REVIEW the books you read. Authors thrive on reviews like flowers thrive on sunshine. In fact, we can’t survive without them. But the sad truth is, although I read dozens of books every year, I write very few reviews. (The exceptions are for friends' book launches, or by special request, or for a great book that seems to have attracted little notice.) Time is a factor, of course. But, as many other authors will tell you, Amazon actively discourages writers from reviewing other writers, at times even removing reviews and sending nasty emails if you dare to post a review. There are ways around the Evil ’Zon Gnomes, but I won’t say what those are.

So I often duck my duty. Then my reviewers started posting on BookBub. And I got this message: To grow your following and get more exposure, post recommendations 1-4 times per month. Huh. You mean, you want me to recommend books by other authors? Well, yes, that makes sense, but usually no one outside the writing community recognizes that cross-promotion is a good thing. Competition has always been the key to success according to the Powers That Be. Thus the NY Times Best Sellers List, the fight to get to the Big Five publishers and Amazon in all its crazy glory.

Then there is Goodreads. A lovely idea, really, which has had its own problems from time to time. I won’t go into those drawbacks here, except to say I haven’t experienced any of them, perhaps because I’ve stayed under the radar. But, since I read a lot, I get messages from the GR folks, too. “Now that you’ve finished Title X, what did you think of it?” “Update your progress!” “What will you read next?” And so on. Helpful, but a little creepy.

Still, since everyone knows what books I’m reading (or have read) thanks to the kind GR folks, it stands to reason I should say something about those books. And, who knows, those readers who follow me may then want to read those books, too. If nothing else, they will learn something about me, which helps shape my “brand,” whatever that may be. (The problem is my reading tastes are very eclectic—from historical nonfiction to romantic suspense, Regency romance to Stephen King. What readers are supposed to deduce from that I don’t know.)

They’ll probably notice I’m pretty positive in my reviews, once I get down to writing them. It's rare when I pick up a dud, but it happens. Still, I’m a Southern girl; my mama always said, if you can’t say something nice, don’t say anything at all. So when it comes to a Did Not Finish, all you’ll hear from me (publicly) is the sound of crickets chirping.

Cheers, Donna

Friday, August 30, 2019

SOME SHORT SHOTS BEFORE THE WEEKEND


Since we’re coming up on Labor Day weekend, there are not one, but TWO hurricanes on the horizon, and everyone has other things on their minds, I’ll make it brief this week with just a couple of newsy items.


First of all, if you aren’t a member of Romance Writers of America® (or you have a life), you probably missed the kerfuffle over on the Fantasy, Futuristic and Paranormal Chapter online forum about the possibility of requesting a change in RITA® contest categories. You may remember I had suggested this very thing when the RWA® leadership was looking for input on what to do about diversity a few months ago. Science fiction romance needs its own contest category to encourage more SFR authors to submit entries and to allow paranormal authors and SFR authors to judge each others’ work.

Well, it was a very lively discussion for a while on the forum, until it degenerated into the old debates about “what is SFR, really” and “do enough people actually write it” (both questions which have been answered over and over in our own Science Fiction Romance Brigade). Then somebody began to hurl insults about how romance is nothing but “trash,” (on a romance forum?) until the moderator was forced to call a halt and the RWA® president felt compelled to remind people to play nice.

I only bring this up to say that anyone here who is a member of both RWA® and the Brigade might consider contacting the RWA® leadership directly to let their voices be heard on the issue of a separate contest category for SFR. The more RWA® hears from us, the more likely they will be to consider splitting SFR off from paranormal and fantasy. Brigade members Lizzie Newell and Jean Walker/Veronica Scott (and others) were quite vocal in our support in the forum. I’ve already let my opinions be known. I think the time is right to make the point.

ON TO MORE SHAMELESS PROMOTION

I recently had a chance to give a video tour of my workspace and do an author interview for the LoveRomanceReads blog. I won’t be taking the v-blog universe by storm, but it was fun anyway!

Check it out here.


And, until next week, have a great holiday weekend and stay safe!

Cheers, Donna

Friday, August 16, 2019

A FACEBOOK PARTY? A FACEBOOK PARTY!


I was a latecomer to the world of social media. In truth, I had to be dragged kicking and screaming into the land of posts and scrolling, tweets and Likes. This blog was one thing, Facebook and Twitter were something else again. But I take my author work seriously, and an author’s gotta do what an author’s gotta do to make reader friends and influence reader people.

Some of that work is surprisingly fun, though. Facebook parties, for example. I’ve got one coming up on Saturday, August 24, the Science Fiction Romance Soiree, sponsored by my friends at LoveRomanceReads.com. I’ll be participating with a number of other SFR authors (including frequent Spacefreighters guest blogger Lea Kirk, Lexi Post and others).


But what exactly is a Facebook Party, you ask? Besides being the best way for an introvert to interact with new folks without having to leave the comfort of her office or change out of her jammies, it’s a fun way for readers and authors to get to know each other informally. The party takes place on Facebook on the event link from noon to 6 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time, with each author assigned a half-hour segment. Trivia contests are popular, as are photo posts, swag offers and giveaways. But the real fun is in the comments from readers and fans tuning in to meet and talk with their favorite (or new-to-them) authors.

My segment runs from 4:00 to 4:30 PDT, and I plan some STAR TREK talk, some Q&A about my books, and a few giveaways. (Please note: any giveaways are NOT associated with or sponsored by Facebook or LoveRomanceReads. Prizes will be awarded by random drawing performed by my cats. You must be 18 or older to enter or win. You must have a valid email and Facebook profile to enter.) Giveaways often include signed books, tee-shirts and even Amazon gift cards!

How can you get in on the action? It’s easy! Go to the Science Fiction Romance event link on Facebook and click “Going” on the page. The Facebook minions will take it from there, reminding you at intervals that you have an event upcoming. Depending on your time zone, you may have to interrupt your lunch, or your nap time, or your dinner, for a few minutes to tune in for your favorite author (and/or for me, I hope!), but the segments are short and you don’t have to be “present” to win the drawings.

Best of all, you don’t even have to change out of your jammies, your cut-offs, or your swimsuit to join this Facebook Party!

Cheers, Donna