Showing posts with label creating relationships. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creating relationships. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Book Marketing Video: How to Create Relationships That Sell Books

Last month I did an interview via Skype with Joel Friedlander of TheBookDesigner.com where I talk about book marketing, blog tours, Internet marketing, and author book promotions. Some of the details include:
  • How authors can use social media most effectively to sell more books
  • The 3 elements of effective book marketing
  • How to create relationships that really sell books
  • How to carry out SuperStar Blog Tours and other event blog tours that truly create impact
Watch this book marketing video here:



John Kremer

John Kremer is the author of 1001 Ways to Market Your Books as well as the developer of the following programs:

Book Marketing Magic: http://www.bookmarket.com/novelmarketing.htm - How to market novels, children's books, memoirs, and more. $48 special offer

15,000 Eyeballs Internet Marketing Program: http://www.bookmarket.com/15000eyeballs.htm - Ten lessons on how to get thousands of impressions for you, your book, your blog, or your website. $50

Real Fast Book Marketing: http://www.bookmarket.com/realfastbookmarketing.htm - How to sell 100 to 200 copies of any book in two weeks or less. $97

Blog Tour Palooza: http://www.bookmarket.com/blog-tour-palooza.htm - How to carry out a blog tour or virtual book tour that gets millions of impressions, builds your brand, and sells thousands of books. $297

Saturday, January 07, 2012

Book Marketing Makeover: Stupid Ways to Market Via the Internet

Blog post by John Kremer, Question from Cindy Bellinger

Question: I watched your short book marketing video clip at http://blog.bookmarket.com/2011/12/book-marketing-makeover-john-kremers.html.

You said the best way to sell your book is by marketing on the Internet, "but don't do it the stupid way most people do it these days." What is the stupid way? - Cindy Bellinger

John's Answer: Cindy, below is my short answer to your insightful question.

Here are four key stupid ways that you don't want to follow:

1. Too much social networking without measuring results. Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc. can be real time-sucking activities. Make sure you are getting results from what you do on any social network.

2. Not creating relationships with high-traffic targeted websites and audiences. Real relationships with highly targeted websites (to your topic or to your audience) is the most important way to market on the Internet, bar none. The most effective. The least time-consuming. The most productive.

Blog Tour Palooza virtual book tour program

3. Doing ineffective blog tours rather than SuperStar Blog Tours, Mega Blog Tours or BlogPaloozas. Do a real virtual book tour EVENT rather than the hum-drum blog tours most authors do. You can learn more at http://www.bookmarket.com/blog-tour-paloozas.htm.

4. Jumping on each new Internet marketing bandwagon rather than focusing on key measurable activities that have already proven to be effective. I see so many authors flitting from one activity to another, never settling down to mining the activities that really work. Such a waste of time. Be focused. Don't scatter your attention and activities.

There are more. I could write a book. But the above four ways are the major ones that really bog down most book authors' (and most other promoters') efforts in Internet marketing.

15000 Eyeballs Program

About the Author

John Kremer is the developer of the 15,000 Eyeballs Program and the Blog Tour Palooza Program - both intended to help book authors and others to get more attention and sell more books, products, and services via Internet marketing.

Friday, January 21, 2005

Making Friends: The Essence of Marketing

John Kremer speaking in Singapore

All of marketing ultimately comes down to one thing: creating relationships. If you don't understand this basic principle, you will ultimately fail as a book marketer. Indeed, you will fail in life as well.

Think of it: What is publicity? It is simply creating relationships with people in the media who, if they like your product, idea, or service, will pass on that information to their audience in the form of reviews, interviews, stories, or notices.

Think of it: What is distribution? It is simply creating relationships with bookstores, wholesalers, and sales representatives who will make your books available to retail customers.

Think of it: What are rights sales? They, too, are based on creating relationships with key companies and people who can exploit those rights better than you can.

Think of it: What is editorial? It is simply creating relationships with authors, literary agents, and other people who can bring you good material to polish, design, and promote.

All of book publishing ultimately comes down to creating relationships. Indeed, all of business operates the same way.

Wherever you look in business, relationships are what make things happen: networking, the old boy network, the new girl network, customer lists, sales reps visiting their customers, publicists talking with the media, luncheon meetings, conventions, trade shows, chat groups, newsletters, blogs, social networks, and more. They all have one thing in common: Their primary purpose is to enhance communication and further relationships.

To help you create better relationships and market your books more effectively, here are a few basic principles you should follow.

1. Create your Kremer 100 list. Don't try to be friends with thousands or millions of people. You can't do it. Focus on 100 key media and marketing contacts (if you don't have time to focus on 100, make the database 25 or 50 people). Develop this Kremer 100 database or list yourself. Find out what their addresses are. Also their phone numbers, fax numbers, email addresses, and URLs. Plus their cell phone numbers, perhaps even their home phone numbers. Your goal is to get to know their likes and dislikes, what moves them, and what they look for in a good story (if they are media) or a good product (if they are a buyer). You also want to get to know how they like to get info. Do they prefer email, fax, phone, or mail?

2. Be persistent. Once you've developed a database of key contacts, you must be in touch with them on a regular basis -- at least once a month. Tell them something new with each contact. If you ever get an opportunity to meet them in person, jump at the chance. But the key is continual follow-up. It makes all the difference in whether or not you establish a real relationship.

3. Create a word-of-mouth army. Since 80% of all books are sold by word-of-mouth, your primary goal in marketing your books is to create a core group of people who will spark that word-of-mouth. I like to think of these people as the officers for your word-of-mouth army, because what you ultimately want to create is an army of people talking about your book. In that army, you'll have privates, corporals, sergeants, lieutenants, majors, colonels, and generals. The moment someone meets one of your authors, they've self-promoted themselves to at least a corporal. If they get an autograph, count them a sergeant. If they buy ten books for other people, promote them to lieutenant. You get the idea. In my 1001 Ways army, I have at least two five-star generals: Jack Canfield and Mark Victor Hansen. They've earned every star. [Note: If you don't like the analogy of an army, then think of it as a parade, or fan club, or party.]

4. Become a people person. At home in Taos, New Mexico, I'm a quiet shy fellow. Here, few people know who I am or what I do. But when I go out to speak or to attend trade shows, I become a new person -- a people person. Fortunately I enjoy that interaction with the public. If you are going to become a successful book promoter, you, too, will have to cultivate that fun feeling when you go out into the public. If you genuinely care about people, you will have no problem facing the public. Just open your heart and let it out.

When speaking to the Women Writers of the West conference several years ago, I realized that when I talked about creating relationships, I was really talking about making friends. Because that is what every good marketer really does: They make friends. When you begin to think of marketing in this way, everything about marketing books becomes more fun. Suddenly there is no foreignness, no fear, no feelings of inadequacy. We can all make friends. It's a talent we've had since we were little children. Use it.
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