An author is seen as a naïve, gullible individual with a target on their back by SO many vendors selling the same material over and over again via cheesy sales letters. Okay, I just had to say that first sentence. Frankly, it makes me (and other legitimate authors) mad that so many vendors are promulgating material that an author can receive in this “How to Write a Book” series, charging upwards of thousands of dollars. If there is another author you believe will benefit from this introduction, please forward…
No author should purchase any product that is tied to an affiliate program or not written directly by the individual practicing what they preach. I am working hard to incorporate several ideas that I’ve learned in the last two months into my business…it’s a lot of work and not easy, but the results are looking promising.
I do extensive research and talk regularly with active mid-list and bestselling authors, as well as book promotion personnel…we’re all fed-up with the trash being sold ostensibly to “help” an author write or sell books. Suggestion: a full-time author writing and selling quality books is the best help for any aspiring author. Do not pay attention to most publishers (most publishers have a personal agenda and the industry is leaving them behind completely confused) and, most of all, filter out all those hucksters who create cookie-cutter books and conduct programs designed to help others sell books (all they do is sell programs). An author practicing what they are preaching with some level of success IS the go-to source. Now, on to book marketing…
Where the Hell is Matt
I just love this guy’s approach. Years ago, Matt took a chance, a small digital camera, belongings in a backpack, and traveled internationally filming a “jig” dance in the countries he visited with “locals” standing nearby…putting his dancing segments online for entertainment. His videos have been viral for years. Matt came back to the United States broke from his first trip (international travel doesn’t come cheap) with LOTS of fans wanting more video.
Fast forward. Matt, from “Where the Hell is Matt,” now has sponsors, money, travel, book and a promotional platform. His family has to be proud (and relieved). An author can brainstorm similar ideas incorporating their personality into a short, quality video that has good possibilities of “going viral” online.
What is it that you enjoy doing as an author? Do you, as an author, have access to a boat for short videos around a marina or in bluewater activities doing offbeat and fun things? Is your book about cooking where visiting chefs in their kitchen and having a short online video makes sense? An author should think of a “hook” from their book that takes place in an environment where readers would say “’aha,’ this engages me” from watching a short, catchy video from the author (with the book title and contact information included in the video).
Catalog Sales
There are more than 10,000 printed catalogs being circulated (and many online, as well). Book genres that do best in catalogs are: general interest books, cookbooks, children’s books, self-help/how-to titles and coffee-table books. Hardcover books work well because catalogers like the high price point. With paperbacks, a “bundle” (e.g., “volumes one to three at this special price”) creates an attractive set.
Catalog sales are attractive because:
a) all books catalogs buy are nonreturnable (this should be enough to convince any author). No inventory risk for an author.
b) most catalog houses pay within 30 days (book distributors usually take 60+ days).
c) catalog houses make repeat orders.
d) rarely do catalog houses require “exclusivity.” Multiple catalogs selling the same book(s) pay for many a mortgage.
e) catalogs usually pay freight to their warehouse (FOB, (your printer)).
f) catalogs provide an author exposure. Not all catalog readers will buy through a catalog, but will visit a bookstore, book club, website, etc. and purchase your book.
g) catalogs welcome “backlists.” Backlists are books that are not the newest published books…two or more years old…and usually not being promoted actively. Backlist books are the bread and butter income for publishers.
Valuable resources for an author building a catalog prospect list include:
a) “National Directory of Catalogs” merged with “Directory of Overseas Catalogs” and,
b) “The Directory of Mail Order Catalogs”
These two directories are expensive. Larger libraries will have these references and is an excellent choice for access.
Most catalogers will want to perform a test first. Most catalogers will purchase a few dozen copies to as many as 1,000 copies for a large catalog. An author whose book passes this test will receive a rollout order of a few hundred to as many as 50,000. Smaller orders will usually be in the 50 percent discount off retail price, with large orders and large catalogers seeking discounts as high as 80 percent.
Be patient when developing relationships with catalogers. Call and request copies of catalogs that match your book target market. Study, consume these catalogs and relate each catalog to your book’s topic. If an author believes that a catalog truly matches their book’s key topic, contact the buyer at the catalog and request submission forms and guidelines.
Complete the catalog’s forms with benefit-oriented sales language. An author should add the book sales sheet, book cover or photo and important testimonials or reviews. Write a catalog blurb in the buyer’s style to make their job easier. Follow up two weeks after the buyer should have received your package with a phone call and find out when the decision-making committee (for products to be in future catalogs) will meet and offer to send a sample book. Follow up two weeks after the catalog committee was to meet if you haven’t heard anything. Don’t get discouraged…be patient. This is a long-term process.
When a catalog buyer send an author a “Vendor Information Sheet” (or equivalent), the buyer is serious about your book. As an independent author and publisher, you have an advantage over the mainstream publishers because you care more about the outcome. Does the catalog need a cover transparency? How many books does the catalog expect to sell in what period of time? Does the catalog need a customized book blurb or will the blurb an author has adequate? When will the catalog with the book drop in the mail?
Publishing is exciting today like never before. An enterprising author CAN earn a good income from book sales…with quality writing and intelligent selling. Stay tuned…
Mike McCann
Mike-at-GlobalBusinessCafe.com