Archive for the ‘unusual marketing ideas’ Category

Targeting Podcasts Instead of Radio

Tuesday, December 20th, 2005

Angela (my partner/wife) ran across this today:

Author Paul A. Toth seeks established writers who want to tell their stories on TothWorld: The Paul A. Toth Podcast.

It started me thinking that podcasts could be an excellent outlet for the self-published author.

A podcast is kinda like TIVO, but for radio. People create and record audio programs with their own equipment, then put them on the Internet as a downloadable audio file. There is special software (or in the case of iTunes, the iTunes software itself) that looks for new files and downloads them automatically to the subscriber’s computer (or in the case of iTunes, their ipod).

So, for example, if I were a subscriber to a certain podcast, my iTunes software would pull down the audio file each time the podcast creators put up a new program. The software then automatically puts it into my ipod so I can listen to it whenever I want. That is what’s cool about it. I don’t have to remember to visit the site and download the latest show. The iTunes software does it for me.

And unlike live radio, I don’t have to be listening at the time the program is recorded. (That is what makes it like TIVO.).

Home-grown programs have been around since last year. But the phenomenon exploded this past Spring because Apple made podcasts part of the iTunes music store. So now millions of people are getting exposed to this format. And lots of mainstream media programs are putting their shows in podcast form too.

If you don’t have iTunes, you can use other software to download these programs. Juice (formerly called iPodder) is probably the best.

http://juicereceiver.sourceforge.net/index.php

Here is a directory of podcasts programs:

http://www.podshow.com/directories.html

Authors can promote their book by finding the creators of these podcasts and pitching interviews. Or, if they are so inclined, creating their own podcasts.

Amazon Affiliate Campaign

Wednesday, December 7th, 2005

I’ve been tossing around a book marketing idea for a while. I’m going to throw it up here and ask for some feed back.

For lack of a better name, I call it an “Amazon Affiliate Campaign”.

Before I go into the details, though, here is some background info to help you understand where I’m coming from.

A long time ago we used to do a thing call a reciprocal linking campaign (or just “linking campaign” for short). The idea was to search out sites and ask them to put in a link to your site if you, in turn, put in a link to their site.

Back in the egalitarian days of the Internet, this strategy worked pretty well. But those days have been gone for a long time. People just don’t link to strange sites anymore without good reason.

So here is my twist on this…find Amazon Affiliate stores that contain books on the same subject as the one you are promoting, and make a request that they add your book to their store.

Quick side note here to explain an Amazon Affiliate, for those who don’t know. Amazon.com provides a program whereby sites can list books in Amazon.com’s inventory and get a cut of any sales that result. No one outside of Amazon.com knows for sure how many affiliate stores exist, but the estimate is in the hundreds of thousands. So there are plenty of prospects to choose from.

The big trick, of course, is how does one go about finding Amazon Affiliates to approach. There is no public list (at least that I’m aware of). But I think I’ve figured it out.

Enter this into the advanced search screen of Google:

In the blank labeled: with all of the words, enter these words (include quotes):

“In association with Amazon.com”, bookstore, (KEYWORDS DESCRIBING YOUR BOOK.)

Then go to the heading labeled: Domain, change the pull-down menu value from only to don’t, then enter “amazon.com” in the blank.

What this does:

It tells Google: “Find pages that have the keywords “amazon.com”, “bookstore” and (YOUR KEYWORDS), but don’t show me anything from amazon.com itself.”

You should get, among other things, a list of Amazon Affiliate bookstores that have books on subjects similar to your book.

For example, let’s say your book is about birds. Entering the following:

“In association with Amazon.com”, “bookstore”, “birds”

and

“Don’t return results from the site or domain: amazon.com”

Will yield results like this:

http://www.parrotparrot.com/bookstore/
http://www.surfbirds.com/Book%20Store/bkstoreindex.shtml
http://www.hikingwebsite.com/stores/books/

You then approach these people. Tell them your book is listed on Amazon.com. Ask them if they will put a link to your book in their store.

Some variations on the search:

+ substitute: “In association with Amazon.com” in the search string with just: “amazon.com”.

+ try the search with a variety of keywords related to your book, not just one or two.

Some caveats:

1.) Not every result will be a bookstore, or a site you’ll want to deal with. You’re going to get a lot of junk and duplicate sites. You’ll need to pick through the rubble to find the gems.

2.) You might need to send the store owner a review copy before he or she agrees to add your book. Personally, I think this is a better use of review copies. The likelihood someone will actually look at it is much higher. Most review copies sent to traditional book reviewers end up in the garbage.

3.) These instructions call for using Google as your search tool. You’ll get more refined results if you use metasearch software – basically software that sends the search query to multiple search engines at once and deletes the duplicates before showing you the results. The best tool for Windows PCs I’ve found for doing this is Arelis. It is actually a tool specifically for doing traditional linking campaigns, but it can be easily adapted for this specific purpose. Unfortunately, there isn’t as good a tool for the Mac crowd (of which I am now part). The best tool I’ve found so far for the Mac is DEVONAgent.

This strategy is much better than simply asking a bunch of sites to link to your book. You are helping people make more money and improve their bookstores versus asking for a free link. Plus it is easy. Adding an additional book to their store is trivial since the book is already in Amazon.com’s database.

I’d love to hear feedback on what authors think of this idea. Add them to the comments section below.

Amazon’s Search Inside The Book and The Google Print Program

Thursday, December 1st, 2005

An author wrote us today suggesting we participate in the Google Print Program, since a competing POD publishing company does. This is the program whereby Google will scan your book and put its contents into its index. If people search on terms that are in your book, it will come up with some sample content and general info about the book.

Publishing people are pissed about this. In fact, the Author’s Guild has filed suit against Google. Many, however, don’t seem to see the problem – pointing out that Amazon’s Search Inside The Book is essentially the same thing.

The problem with Google’s approach is that they are just doing it regardless of the copyright holder’s wishes. Google Print is an “opt-out” service – the copyright holder has to tell them expressly not to include the book.

Amazon, on the other hand, is an opt-in program – you have to specifically request the book be added to their search system.

I think this is why the Amazon program was so much better received than the Google program.

In any case, though, we (BookLocker) cannot submit the books to either Amazon or Google. The authors have to do it. You have to be the rights holder for the book and we don’t take any rights in our contract. Not sure how other POD companies are legally doing it. They must have a clause in their contract in which authors grant them specific rights to the book.

Here is the info for Amazon and Google:

Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/subst/misc/search-inside/publisher-info-dispatch.html

Google:
http://books.google.com/intl/en/googlebooks/publisher.html

By the way, we’ve had other authors put their books into both programs and there has been no significant increase in the sales of those title. Admittedly, this is only anecdotal evidence, but my gut still tells me this is no magic bullet. It might be worth doing, but don’t base your entire marketing strategy around that alone.

Setting Books Free

Tuesday, August 26th, 2003

C4 News – World – Culture – Set your books free!

Here is a different idea. Leave a book in a public place with a note encouraging whomever picks it up to read it, log their opinions at this site –
http://www.bookcrossing.com/ - and then leave it somewhere new for another person to discover.