guerilla
marketing (n) - The art of promoting your book
in ways that revolve around ingenuity rather than money.
If you have read our newsletter for any length of time, you
know we frequently comment on how a self-published author’s work on their book does
not stop when the writing is done. It is entirely likely that you will spend
more time promoting your book than you actually did writing it. The key is to
learn how to promote your book effectively without either wasting your time or
going broke in the process. You need to find the promotional efforts that will
deliver the most bang for the buck.
This is where you turn to Guerilla Marketing
The term "guerrilla marketing" was
created by Jay Conrad Levinson author of a series of books on
the subject. The idea is to make as large of an impact as possible
without spending tremendous amounts of money. Guerilla marketing
goes deeper than just selling books, it’s about how to create
you and your book as a brand – it how you conduct your daily
life, interact with potential readers, and build relationships
with interested (and interesting) parties. Marketing is really
EVERYTHING you do, done on a REGULAR basis. From the title of
your book, to the name of your website, to the signature line
at the bottom of your emails – all are part of guerilla marketing.
Here’s a quick table of the differences between traditional
book marketing and guerilla book marketing
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Traditional
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Guerilla
|
|
|
|
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brick-and-mortar bookstore-centric
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non-traditional outlets (internet, direct sales, etc)
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Inventory based (get books on shelves)
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Sales to consumer based
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“push” books into the market
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“pull” books into the market
|
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High monetary investment / low return
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Low to moderate investment / high return
|
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Gross Sales / potential returns
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Net Sales / grow profit
|
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Shotgun approach
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targeted and focused
|
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Sporadic
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consistent and regular basis
|
Think about how you have thought about promoting your book –
or even the services or products you’ve considered purchasing to help in the
promotion of your book – on which side of this chart do they fall? Do the ideas
or materials you’ve thought about work for you, or will you have to work for
them to get sales? As Peter Drucker has said, “The aim of marketing is to make
selling superfluous.” Few authors relish the thought of becoming sales people.
So don’t - become guerilla marketers!
Here’s a short list of ideas that will help you build an
inexpensive, yet very effective and profitable guerilla marketing campaign for
your book.
- Guerilla Tactic #1- Stop
making the booksellers and wholesalers rich – get a web site and shopping
cart. Continuously giving away 40, 50, or 55% on your books just destroys
your profit. Your book MUST be available through all the “traditional”
outlets, but it doesn’t mean they are the only outlets.
- Guerilla Tactic #2:
Create a newsletter or e-zine centered around the topic / genre of your book.
This will bring “like-minded” readers to your site and build awareness of
you and your book.
- Guerilla Tactic #3:
Send postcards to everyone you can think of who might be interested in
your book. You’d be surprised to discover the effectiveness of direct
mail..
- Guerrilla
Tactic #4: Get involved in the online communities that deal with your
topic / genre. Participate in newsgroups and forum. Present unique ideas
or fresh perspective – but be cautious of “spamming” the group about your
book. Update your signature line in your email with your book title and
web address.
- Guerrilla Tactic #5:
Offer to give speeches to companies, schools or organizations about your
field of expertise. You can hand out business cards or brochures at most
events.
- Guerrilla Tactic #6: Present
readings or discussion groups at your local library, school, community
events, business gatherings and even nursing homes. The goal is to expose
readers to what you have to offer.
- Guerrilla Tactic #7: Find
a way to get in the news – get Press Releases about you and your book to
your local paper and radio stations. Create a perception of
“newsworthiness” by presenting yourself as an expert on your topic or
genre (or even “self publishing” for that matter...}
- Guerrilla Tactic #8: Become
a resource – if you’ve written fiction, review books in your genre,
business expert? Serve as a resource to your local media. Reporters work
under horrendous deadlines, and occasionally they may need something to go
to press quickly and your story might just be at hand.
- Guerrilla Tactic #9: Give
something away – at your reading, give away a book or two. Post your
favorite chapter on the web. If your book is non-fiction, offer a service.
Target your giveaway to the intended audience.
- Guerrilla Tactic #10: Above all, be creative – do
the things that no one else is doing. Our author Jillian Curtis did a
reading of her book – and her son offered to dress up like the main
character! Have fun –and make sure others are having fun too and you will
sell books.
These are just a few ideas to get you started – each author
and each book is unique. You need to tailor your marketing to what you can
physically do. Don’t get stuck on a single idea - guerillas use a wide variety
of marketing tools, all designed to work together. Launch multiple marketing
efforts simultaneously.
Let us know if we can answer any questions, and thanks
for reading
As always - if you like
this information (and found it helpful) please feel free to
post it on your site, put it in a blog, toss it in your newsletter,
or in general spread it around. Please just give us credit here
at www.dogearpublishing.net
May you have success in
your creative efforts!
Ray