book marketing strategy

On the Internet, you will see a lot of claims and promises and wonder how people get away with this.

Actually, many don’t!

And unfortunately, I have seen some HONEST business go down because of a small error in the way they present themselves online.

You need to watch what you say, tell the truth, and have the proper legal disclaimers on your sites. Getting a lawyer to review your site and prepare the documents could cost a lot, but not having these protections could cost you much much more.. and maybe shut down your whole business.

A Low Cost Solution

Now my friend Mike Young has put the tools you need into a very low cost software solution

How To Protect Your Internet Business In 17 Minutes Or Less

website legal forms generator software

There is only one attorney I recommend to keep you out of trouble on
the Internet. I suggest you look at what Michael Young has here:

Grab this today. It may save you thousands in future legal expenses

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Here’s an interview I did Kim Beasley Paige Eissinger at Views from the CoopTechnorati Tags: , ,
Deb Micek and I are writing a book on Twitter.com call Twitter Handbook

We decided from the start that the book would be open source, we want to do whatever we can in public, using Twitter and social media to connect with Twitter users and those who want to know more about social media.

This week will be our 3rd Twitcast (a broadcast on Twitter). It’s actually just the two of us working in public. After a few minutes, Deb and I hardly get anything directly back and forth, there are so many more people involved.

Last time, we tried to get Twitter users to post comments to our blog, most just wanted to add their 140 characters right on Twitter. So this time we are using BlogTalkRadio where Deb and I will chat with those that want to call in, while reading and responding to Tweets.

Not the quickest way to write, but a lot of fun.

Read Deb’s blog post and join us Friday live on Twitter.

Follow @BookWarren and @CoachDeb

I’m in Dallas today, meeting with speakers and authors who are attending More Heart Than Talent. I’ll post some photos and new ideas for book marketing soon.

I met up with a very good marketer who strangely hadn’t heard about Robert Cialdini’s Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion. The must read book for serious marketers.

So just in case others have missed my reviews and references to Cialdini. I thought I’d post it one more time. Get a copy of Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion and study it carefully. Then read it again and study the six principles of influence. If you write to persuade (and who doesn’t) than this book is should be studied often.

Funny how things converge in your mind while you read a book.

This evening, I sat down to finish reading The New Influencers by Paul Gillin.

I met Paul a few weeks ago and realised I hadn’t finished his book. I’ve been picking it up once every couple of days and find I get so many ideas that I only get through a few pages at a sitting.
My kind of book!

Part of this effect is in the multitude of new areas I’ve been researching. We have projects going to put a lot of reworked content up on the web, I’m uploading videos every chance I get (have you seen the $1 trial at http://authorsvideo.com/?) and at the same time I’m trying 47 new social networking sites.

Add one more factoid to the mix. I just went through an overhaul on our author database and identified those authors that communicate with us most actively. I was certain that an email target only to these subscribers would be opened by twice normal open rate we get for mailings to the full list… instead, the response to emails to this section of the list.. and all the list is off by more that 50% this week.

I heard it was a busy week.. but 50% less readership?

How does this all relate?

Like the major corporate advertisers, my direct marketing friends, the media themselves.. we’re all seeing less results when we attempt to “communicate at” our readers with a one way stream of messages.

Every day, it becomes more an more important to have a two way conversation with your readers. This group will be smaller.. not everyone will respond at the same time and they won’t respond in any way you can predict.

The opinion leader of today may be gone tomorrow. The next blog swarm may come from a post in a 3 reader blog that posted something just interesting enough to get one of those readers to hit DIGG with keywords that got picked up by another reader who tells a friend, etc. etc.

We have some systems in place to get the word out about new books, generate publicity, and start a buzz in the marketplace. When we keep at it, a good book gets noticed and the buzz grows.

I compare it to kicking over a beehive. You know there will be a lot of buzzing.. but you can’t predict exactly where the swarm will go.

Cinny Little, EVP at Digital Influence Group said what I’ve been feeling for some time..

“The biggest misconception a lot of companies have is that some engine will provide you with one definitive “ranking” of a blogger, a community site, or an area of a social network.

At the end of the day, you have to consider both quantitative and qualitative measures, and you still have to build relationships. You have to learn who the influencer are and understand what’s relevant to them”

I laugh when I talk to some people about Facebook and they ask “can I make any money on it?” like their mailing list or existing business is too successful to bother.

What will they do when the market stops responding?

The social networking sites are still in their infancy. Reminds of 10 years back when people wondered why I was recommending the ugly new search engine called Google.

Still a lot to learn. Just don’t try too hard. You can’t know for sure and likely you’ll never again “control” what goes out about you. But if you encourage the conversation, become as transparent as you can and remain “genuine” you’ll do fine.

If you’ve been following my blogs for long, you’ve likely seen this before.. my supposed obsession with Harry Potter.

It all started one Summer night in 2005 when I was hating Harry Potter because our book promotions always fell short of beating him.. even for a day. But I started noticing how hard Scholastic works at selling more and more Potter books, and decided that there might be something to learn from these guys.

So I attended a Harry Potter Launch Party and ended up writing a series of articles on what I learned on my Marketing Secrets of Harry Potter Blog

Tonight, I’m writing from a Borders book store. The party and the promotion is much bigger.. there seems to be not end to Potter