Today I’m starting a series of posts about the marketing mistakes that writers make. Writers make marketing mistakes, just like every one in business.
These mistakes can severely impair their chances of success. Probably the biggest mistake is to deny that marketing is in the writer’s job description.
Are you tempted to say any of the following?
If you are, then you know you’re making one of the most common marketing mistakes.
Marketing – it’s not my job!
Whose job is it then?
You have books to sell and a personal brand to build. Your publisher – if you have one – is interested in making money from your books, just as you are.
However, your publisher can hedge his bets. He has lots of titles from which he can make money. You don’t have as many.
Therefore, you need to market your book so that your publisher will succeed with your books.
This will make publishing more of your work a good bet. It will also mean that when decisions are being made about where to put additional marketing resource, your books will be on the list.
Success breeds success. You need to make sure you succeed.
You will have taken a huge step forward once you accept that you’re in marketing, and in sales, too, for that matter.
Marketing – I don’t know where to begin.
Unless you come from a sales and marketing background then you’re in the same boat as a lot of other people.
We all have to start marketing somewhere.
We all have to start learning and experimenting to see what works and what doesn’t.
In the case of most small businesses, and I include writers in this category, the biggest problem is usually not using enough marketing strategies often enough.
If you’re using five approaches to marketing yourself and your work, increase the list to ten in the next month.
If you’re not really doing any marketing, then now’s the time to begin.
Make a list of ways you could promote your work and get started.
Marketing – it’s difficult.
Everything’s difficult when you’re an outsider making a start on something new.
The best way to overcome the difficulties is to have clear idea of what you would like to achieve.
For example: You want to get your book(s) mentioned in ten relevant blogs in the next six weeks.
Then think about which blogs and where you could look to get some publicity.
Also, do yourself a favour and look for writers who are marketing themselves successfully. What are they doing? Could you do that?
Is it worth getting in touch with them and so on? Learn from other people’s successes.
That way you’ll make progress quickly and avoid some of the types of mistakes that can set you back.
Marketing – it takes up a lot of time.
It does.
Most small business people, including writers, would rather spend their time on other aspects of running their business. Trainers would rather be delivering training. Writers would rather be writing their features or their novels.
However, nothing happens until something is sold, so marketing is a necessary part of business – and writing – success.
Every one in business is a marketer and a sales person.
As soon as you accept that and you start to become comfortable with that fact, you’ll definitely make progress.
So here’s one marketing mistake that it’s very easy to overcome.








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