Christian Book Buzz Online

Marketing the Message at the speed of LIGHT

Archive for June, 2010

National Christian Writers Conference 2010: The #1 Conference for Christian Writers!

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Online Branding and Social Media with Pam Perry, PR Coach

www.MinistryMarketingSolutionsblog.com

www.pamperryonlinepr.com for entire audio presentation

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National Christian Writers Conference

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Ten Steps for Developing a Social Media Marketing Plan

www.pamperryonlinepr.com

Ten Steps for Developing a Social Media Marketing Plan

by Dana Lynn Smith

Marketing through social media can be a great way to promote yourself and your book, but you’ll save time and be more effective if you do some planning before you dive in. Below are ten steps for developing an effective social marketing plan.

1. Think about the other promotional tactics you are already using and how social media fits in with them.

2. Decide how high a priority should be placed on social marketing, compared with your other marketing activities. How many hours a week can you devote to it?

3. Determine what target audiences you want to reach through social marketing. For example:

  • Potential new customers
  • Key influencers (people who can introduce/recommend you)
  • Peers and other experts in your field or genre
  • Publishing and marketing professionals

4. Set objectives, describing what you hope to gain by marketing through social media.  Here are a few examples:

  • Increase visibility and name or brand recognition
  • Establish yourself as an expert in your field
  • Develop relationships with others in your field or genre
  • Drive traffic to your website (directly and through enhanced search engine optimization)
  • Sell books and other products and services
  • Develop relationships with potential joint venture partners

5.  Based on your objectives, set specific, achievable, and measurable goals for your social marketing activities. Here are some examples:

  • Add five new incoming links to your website this month
  • Double the traffic to your website within two months
  • Increase your opt-in mailing list by twenty five percent within three months

6. Develop your branding

  • Get a good quality headshot photo, in low-resolution format, to use in all online marketing activities.
  • Decide what “user name” you want to be known by online. Nonfiction authors should also develop a short tagline that reflects their specific area of expertise.
  • Write standard bios in several lengths.
  • Create an online signature for emails and online forums. Include your book title, company name if appropriate, website and blog address, and one or two social networks.

7. Determine which social marketing tactics are the best fit for your book, your audiences, your objectives, and your available time. Social marketing activities can include:

  • Social blogging (commenting on blogs, doing blog tours)
  • Social networking (Facebook, LinkedIn)
  • Microblogging (Twitter)
  • Virtual reader communities (Goodreads, LibraryThing)
  • Online forums
  • Expert sites and wikis (Squidoo, HubPages)
  • Media and content sharing sites (YouTube, Flickr)
  • Social news and bookmarking (StumbleUpon, Digg, Delicious)

8. Decide how you will measure the effectiveness of your social marketing efforts. What metrics will you track and what tools will you use to measure them. Below are some examples of metrics you might track:

  • Friends or followers on social networks
  • Sales of books and other products and services
  • Business contacts (peers, influencers, media, potential partners)
  • Weekly unique visitors and return visitors to your website and blog
  • Subscribers to your mailing list and blog
  • Visitors to your website and blog
  • Inbound links to you website and blog

9. Implement your chosen social marketing tactics, one at a time.

10. Evaluate your progress periodically. Can you tell which activities are generating the best results? Are some activities taking up too much of your time? Make adjustments to your strategy as necessary.

Excerpted from The Savvy Book Marketer’s Guide to Successful Social Marketing by Dana Lynn Smith.  For book marketing tips follow @BookMarketer on Twitter and get a free copy of the Top Book Marketing Tips ebook on Dana’s book marketing blog.

Successful Social Marketing book:

http://bit.ly/socialmediasavvy

social media marketing with pam perry, pr coach

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Publicity and Publishing Today – The Battle Between Old School Versus New School

Those Golden Days of Publishing are Gone!


In the golden days, an author would secure a book deal through an agent, publish the book, go on tour escorted by the publicist or media escort – and if they scored enough publicity, they’d become a “best selling” author.

Or at the very least, the author’s book sales would cover the tour, pay back the advance and make the publisher some money. Profit was the name of the game – and the system was working – until about 2005.

Suddenly bookstores, media properties and publishing houses began to crumble. The internet was the “game changer” and the traditional book publishing and promotion process have become ineffective.

Up until this point, the world wide web was for those techy-geeky folks and had no real impact on book sales. But now Amazon.com, print-on-demand, viral marketing messages, social media and powerful online communities have leveled the playing field.

Bookstores, agents, fat clunky press kits and publicists scoring traditional media are not the keys to an author’s success anymore.

There are tons of self-published or independent books that have made history – and surprised the publishing world. Like The Shack, a Christian novel by William P. Young was originally self-published in 2005. And as of February 2010, over seven million copies in print worldwide, spent seventy weeks holding the number one spot on the New York Times bestseller list, and it continues to remain in the top ten to date.

The success of The Shack demonstrates what word-of-mouth and community networking can do for a self-published book, but more interestingly, the market strength of religious books in the United States, within and without the book publishing industry.

So let’s compare old school and new school way of doing things:

Old School: Traditional hard and soft-cover books
New School: Digital books, ebooks, Kindles, iPad and other wireless reading devices are on the way!

Old School: Book tours
New School: Blog tours & webinars

Old School: Getting reviews in magazines and newspapers
New School: Getting reviews on Amazon and in book communities where readers hang out like Shelfari, goodreads, librarything.com, rawsistaz and more

Old School: Web 1.0 (webmasters needed for HTML and complicated stuff)
New School: Web 2.0 (freedom – just a blogger blog or WordPress.com blog) Two-way communication!

Old School: Mailing out ARCs, books and big press kits
New School: EPK(electronic press kits) and ebooks

Old School: Media Escort
New School: Virtual Assistant

Old School: Press releases emailed and mailed to media
New School: SEO press releases sent or using online media matching service like Pitch Rate or Reporter Connection

Old School: Printing, stamping and mailing newsletters to mailing list accumulated over the years
New School: Sending out eNewsletters & continual email marketing campaigns using autoresponders and broadcast emails

Old School: Creating & updating media lists
New School: Capturing emails of interested readers using an “opt-in” database program like AWeber

Old School: TV interviews
New School: Creating book trailers, viral videos and streaming LIVE online

Old School: Authors visiting reading groups and libraries
New School: Teleconferencing or streaming live to many groups at the same time from the comfort of your home via Skype or a bridge line

Old School: Postcard mailings to readers, bookstores and organizations
New School: Eblast postcard to thousands using email marketing services like Goodgirlbookclub, BlackGospelPromo, ChristianPRGroup or DetroitGospel

Old School: Radio Interviews
New School: Podcasts and internet radio shows (heard online or downloaded via itunes)

Old School: Magazine features
New School: Ezine Features

Old School: Writing a column in newspapers
New School: Syndicated articles submitted on article directories like Ezine using keywords and generating web traffic or writing a regular blog

Old School: Stigma that self-published books “didn’t cut it” and that’s why they’re not with a major house
New School: Savvy self-published authors are doing it big, getting noticed, making money and living a successful career doing what they love – writing!

Old School: Generating publicity in media outlets and getting no immediate input from audiences
New School: Building relationships, getting direct response from readers and creating communities online

Old School: Getting radio, TV, Newspaper and magazine reviews
New School: Creating thousands of followers, friends and fans online who interact with you and are connected with you through your whole career

Ministry marketing pioneer, Social Media Expert and PR Coach Pam Perry helps African American Christian authors garner publicity and leverage online strategies. As a 20-year PR veteran, she is also the co-author of “Synergy Energy: How to Use the Power of Partnerships to Market Your Book, Grow Your Business and Brand Your Ministry.”

For a free MP3 of “What Every Author Should Know,” go to http://www.PamPerryPR.com She’s also the creator of the ChocolatePagesNetwork, a social network for Christian authors and the Chocolate Pages Show at Blog talkradio. She offers free help at her blogsite: http://www.MinistryMarketingSolutions.com with her monthly Ezine and teleclasses.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Pam_Perry

pam perry

www.pamperryonlinepr.com

http://www.pamperrypr.com

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