It's Not Just About Writing: 14 Tips To Make Your Book a Success
Six months
ago, I published Disrupt Yourself: Putting the Power of Disruptive Innovation
to Work. I've since had a lot of people ask me for my best advice.
Here
goes:
1.
Write a book you are proud of. It should go without saying, but this will be your
calling card. This book can legitimize you with potential buyers of your ideas,
whether for speaking, consulting, advising or coaching. A well-managed
marketing campaign may get people to buy your book. You want people to read it,
love it, talk about it.
2. Edit,
edit, edit. The
difference between a good book and a great book is editing. As you'll note in
the acknowledgements to my book, I hired two conceptual / line editors, and I
asked eight professional colleagues / friends from a variety of disciplines to
read the manuscript. Their primary objective was to make sure the book made
sense and was jargon-free. This was all before I sent it to my publisher for
editing.
3. Obtain
8-12 endorsements from
people who have standing with the audiences you want to reach, aiming for both
men and women. In a perfect world, potential endorsers are already in your
network. If they aren't, first try asking someone you know and who can vouch
for you to broker the introduction. If you reach out cold, write a personalized
note on why you admire them, what aspect of their work you like. If they've
written a book, read it beforehand. And offer to provide them with a draft
blurb so they have something to work with.
Once the book is published, send your endorsers a signed copy, to say thank you. Support them on social media. My book gained traction in part because my endorsers were willing to step up and say they liked it. I am indebted to them, and will continue to find ways to support them. Do my book's endorsers need my support? Probably not. But I need to give it. To show my appreciation.
Once the book is published, send your endorsers a signed copy, to say thank you. Support them on social media. My book gained traction in part because my endorsers were willing to step up and say they liked it. I am indebted to them, and will continue to find ways to support them. Do my book's endorsers need my support? Probably not. But I need to give it. To show my appreciation.
4. Show up. About three months before the
launch, my husband said to me, you say you want a bestseller, but you aren't
really allocating your time like you do. This 'showing up' is a lesson I've struggled to learn.
6. Start
building a newsletter now. I didn't start building mine until early 2015. Way, way too late.
Start now. There are lots of pundits who will tell you to export all of
your e-mail and Linkedin contacts. I am not comfortable with that. This may
mean your list is smaller, but the people who receive your e-mail will want
them. (Note: if you are going to send a blast e-mail to your list of contacts,
do it once. Only once.)
7. Get
active on social media–today. Pick 1-2 platforms you enjoy and figure out where
the people who would want to 'hire' your book congregate. For some it may be
Twitter, others Linkedin, for others Instagram, or even Snapchat. If social
media isn't your thing, hire someone.
8.
Reach out for help–personally. Write or call 1-on-1. Everyone you know. What
kind of help you ask for depends on who you are asking and what is easy, no
sweat, for that person. Maybe it's buy the book, write an Amazon review, give
some social media love (e.g. Thunderclap, which I loved.) I started the
individual outreach too late and ran out of time. (See #3). But think
about it. When someone e-mails you personally to ask for help, aren't you much
more likely to lend a hand?
9. Get
at least 200 pre-orders on Amazon. This signals to Amazon that they need to take a look
at your book. I suspect that is what got them to review Disrupt Yourself, which
led to it being a Best Business Book of the Month for October, 2015.
10.
Ask for bulk book buys. If you are looking to be on a bestseller list, then
you likely need bulk buys. Depending on the week your book is released, you
would need to sell somewhere between 8,000 - 15,000 books for the NY Times
bestseller list, for example. In one week. By different buyers, in different
places. You likely will need / want to trade book buys for speaking. In
an ideal world, you will not only have bulk buys, but also a massive network
that you can galvanize for onesies and twosies. (See #5 and #4)
.
11. Say
'yes' to requests. When
people ask to interview you, to guest blog, to speak, say 'yes'. From an S-curve
perspective, you are at
the low-end of the curve. You want as many people in as many places possible
into read your book. To get your book in the right hands. You just never
know.
12. Narrate
your audiobook, if
possible. Especially if you want your book to launch you into speaking, thought
leader-types of opportunities.
13. Say
thank you to the people who helped. Yes, you have an opportunity to thank people in the
acknowledgements (see #3), but especially take time to thank those that were
not compensated in any way, but just pitched in. It's now been six months since
I launched Disrupt Yourself. I've finally made my way through the list.
You will no doubt forget someone. I'm confident that I have. Do your
best.
14. Write a
book that you love. Yes, I'm repeating myself for emphasis. It's excruciating and
exhilarating to pour your self onto the page. But whether you sell 1 book or 1
million books, when you say what only you can say, you can feel satisfied
you've done it right.
It's Not Just About Writing: 14 Tips To Make Your Book a Success
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