Writers’ Marketing Mistakes (5) – Purposeless marketing

Marketing MistakesThis marketing mistake is a real marketing blunder, but it’s a mistake that lots of writers make.

It’s often the result of that guilty feeling you get when you know you’re not doing as much marketing as you should. Therefore, you decide to do something. Often the task is chosen more to salve your conscience than to achieve any clear marketing objective.

That’s the point. Successful marketing will have a purpose. Many writers’ marketing attempts don’t.

What purpose could you set for your marketing?

Many people – including writers – don’t have a defined and concrete purpose for their marketing efforts.

Of course, they want to do more business or to sell more books. They want to make more money from their books. However, these are aspirations.

You may wish to sell more books, but there are lots of factors outside your control that help to make sales. This means that noting how many books have been sold each time you check your royalties doesn’t really help you to work out how effective your own marketing efforts are.

You need to set some objectives to give your marketing purpose. You could begin with statements like the following:

I’m doing this marketing activity (specify) to help me to get more people to visit my website.

I’m doing this marketing activity (specify) to help me to get more sign ups for my newsletter.

I’m doing this marketing activity (specify) to help to get me more speaking opportunities (and the opportunity to make back-of-room sales etc).

The above statements are quite different from vague statements about selling more books – even if a number of sales is specified. They are beginning to define a purpose to your marketing, but there’s still more to do.

How will having marketing objectives help?

Once you say that you want more visits to your website you can ask a very specific additional question.

How many visits do you want over what period of time?

When you come up with an answer, that’s the point at which you can congratulate yourself because you’ve set a metric for your marketing.

You can now measure what you actually achieve against a defined target.

To begin with you’ll probably pick numbers out of the air. Later you’ll know better.

After a while you’ll know how many visitors you need to attract before one of them takes the desired action. (This could be to click through to an on-line bookstore. It could be to read a review of your work. It could be to take a look at the services you offer. It’s your choice.)

When you know that you need twenty, or two hundred, visitors to your site to get one click through to the next stage of the sales process, you have a much better idea of the volume of traffic you need to generate.

This knowledge will affect the marketing activities you plan. It will help you to make your marketing more focused and more relevant. It will help you to judge the success of your marketing.

How do you give your marketing purpose?

To give your marketing purpose try setting objectives which it is in your power to achieve.

For example:

I want to sell five copies of this book when I speak at the ABC exhibition on Thursday.

I want to sell five copies of this book when I give a talk at the DEF writers’ group on Friday.

I want ten new people to visit my website each time I have an article published in XYZ magazine. (You can set up a special landing page for readers of XYZ magazine so you will know that only magazine readers are visiting your chosen page.)

What all of this means in that your marketing now has purpose.

Measure your marketing success

Now you can measure your success with your marketing and work out if it is worth your while speaking at exhibitions such as ABC exhibition and so on.

It really is true that if you can’t measure something you can’t manage it. In the case of your marketing, if you can’t measure the results of what you’re doing, you’ll struggle to give your marketing purpose.

So the next step is clear. Decide what you can control in terms of your marketing and see how successful you can be when you set yourself measurable objectives that you can monitor and review.

You’ll be more likely to complete your marketing activities if you work in this way because now your marketing has purpose.

See also:

Marketing Mistakes (4): Outsourcing marketing

Marketing Mistakes (3): Token marketing

Marketing Mistakes (2): Telling yourself that marketing can wait

Marketing Mistakes (1): Not doing any marketing

Personal branding for writers

Every one in business wants to be remembered, and that includes writers. If the people out in the world don’t remember you, they’re not going to buy your books. They’re not going to seek out your articles. They’re not going to get in touch with you. They’re not going to look for what else you do.

To make yourself memorable you need to build a strong personal brand. You need to make certain that people remember you. You need to make sure they associate your name with what you want to be remembered for.

What sort of personal brand do you want?

The first step towards creating your personal branding strategy is to be clear in your own mind about what exactly you want to be remembered for.

In other words it’s important to brand yourself.

You want to be remembered for something specific. Is it the subject that you write about? Is it your approach to your writing? Is it the niche in which you write that defines you?

You must work this out.

If you don’t think carefully about your brand identity and your personal brand statement, you’ll be sending out confused messages or the wrong messages.

That’s bad for you as a writer and as a businessperson.

Of course, it will take you time to define your brand, but the sooner you start, the sooner you’ll know what you want to promote about yourself.

How will you promote your brand?

Writers often think this is an easy question to answer. Their writing is the medium through which they promote themselves.

However, your writing is only part of your branding strategy. There’s more to it than that.

Your website needs to reinforce your personal brand. Your blog needs to reinforce that same message. Your press releases, the topics you speak on, the topics you’re happy to be interviewed about and so on must all reflect your chosen brand identity.

If they do, people will start to have a clear impression of who you are and what you do. They will also start to see how you are differentiating yourself from other writers. They will begin to learn how to differentiate you from your competition.

Margaret Adams and personal branding

There are several components to my personal branding strategy. I’ll just deal with one here.

When I write for publication I write self-help, personal development and “how to” articles. I focus on helping people to deal with problems and challenges.

For example, during June 2010 I had half a dozen feature articles published. They were all about personal development issues and how best to deal with problems and challenges.

In Sec Ed I had three articles featured across a double page. Sec Ed is a newspaper for secondary school teachers. My articles made up part of a supplement for newly-qualified teachers, (NQTS).

The editor introduced my pieces with by referring to me as “SecEd’s CPD expert Margaret Adams”:

See CPD Focus within Sec Ed  for the articles which are introduced below.

Extract from SecEd editorial

The key component of my brand

Above everything I am a developer of people. The work I do on my other sites reinforces this brand image. My business is built around training, coaching and consultancy. My books are guides to help people deal with problems.

Once you know this about me, then it comes as no surprise to you to learn that when I was employed, I worked first as a teacher and lecturer. Later I was a staff development manager and management development specialist.

All of this information helps me to build a strong and consistent personal brand.

Do you have a strong personal brand?

So now you need to think again about your brand.

Can you sum up the key components of your own brand in a few words? Can you explain the essence of your brand to someone?

If you can’t, now’s the time to start to develop that personal brand statement.

See also:

Building your reputation

What do your tweets say about you?

Are you ready to tell the world how good you are at what you do?

Writers’ Marketing Mistakes (3) – Token marketing

Marketing Mistakes Token marketing is something that lots of people in business do.  They know they need to market. They know they ought to market.  They know their business success depends on their commitment to marketing.

They feel guilty when they fail to market – and yet they’d rather not.  Their solution is token marketing.

Are you guilty of token marketing?

Do you force yourself to do some marketing? Do you dabble with marketing, promising yourself that one day your agent or your publicist will handle all this for you?  Do you do a bit of blogging every now and then, or add a page to your website occasionally, when you feel you really must do something? Have you had a postcard or a bookmark printed to promote your book, but you haven’t given them out?

If this is your approach to marketing, then you’re definitely involved with token marketing.

Token marketing rarely works.

You already know that token marketing doesn’t work unless you’re very, very lucky.  You know that your efforts won’t pay off, because you’re only putting in a very small amount of time and effort.  You only do any marketing occasionally, and your heart just isn’t in the job.

If you’re honest with yourself you’re actually rather relieved when your marketing doesn’t work because you can now say:

“I tried ………….. and it doesn’t work.”

You don’t want it to work because you don’t want to spend your time marketing.

You’re the marketing manager

Unfortunately for your writing business you’re the marketing manager.  If you are only undertaking token marketing you’re not going to make progress with developing your writing business.  You’re not going to achieve the success you’re looking for.

Therefore, you need to change your approach to marketing.

Instead of token marketing think about the results you want to achieve.  You want subscribers to your blog.  You want visits to your website.  You want people to attend an event at which you’re speaking.  You want to sell books at an event you’re taking part in at your local library or at your local bookshop.

These things don’t just happen.

Think about your token marketing strategies and be honest.  If you put in twice as much time to making them work, would they deliver the results you want?

  • What else might work better than the approaches you’ve used thus far?
  • If you were to use two or three additional approaches to marketing what could you achieve?
  • If you applied your efforts consistently to your marketing, what might you achieve?


You probably know the answer.

Stop token marketing.  Start effective marketing.

Marketing for beginners

Here’s the list of things to do.

  • Allocate a budget of time to marketing.
  • Set a target for your marketing achievements.
  • Choose two or three marketing methods to try out.  Be prepared to add to them.
  • Start a marketing “campaign” that will last for at least two months.

Do the marketing and give it the same level of commitment as you give to your writing.

Then check the results.  How much better are you doing with your new approach to marketing . . . and what else could you try now?

See also:

I’d rather not . . .

Writers’ Marketing Mistakes (1) Not doing any marketing

Writers’ Marketing Mistakes (2) Telling yourself marketing can wait

Writers’ Marketing Mistakes (2) – Telling yourself that marketing can wait

Marketing takes up time.

Marketing can be expensive. Writers have lots of other things (better things) they could be doing with their time.  Marketing can wait.

Does that sound like you?

It’s very easy to make a case that marketing is a secondary activity and that it can wait.  I know that in the early days of running my own business I was very good at telling myself I had so much to do that I couldn’t possibly find the time to market myself or my business.

At that time I didn’t like the idea of marketing at all.   I thought of marketing as cold calling.  Of course, I would have done anything rather than cold-call anyone, so I always found lots and lots of reasons why I couldn’t do any marketing.  I just didn’t have the time.

I was wrong then and lots of people who write are making that same mistake today. As a result they are damaging their chances of building their business and their writing careers.

For every one who is tempted to say that marketing can wait here are three reasons why it can’t.

Marketing can’t wait because if you’re not marketing your business who else is?

Most writers are trying to do everything themselves.  That’s the source of some of their problems.

If you’re not promoting yourself, if you’re not getting your name known, if you’re not building up awareness of you and what you do, then no one else will be doing that for you.  (Not unless you have commissioned a publicist to do this for you, of course.)

The fact is that in every industry people buy from those they know, like and trust.  If you’re putting the marketing to one side, you’ll be falling at the first hurdle.  People won’t know about you, so nothing else can happen.   You’ll just remain on the sidelines in your chosen niche.

That’s not a place you want to be, so don’t ignore your marketing responsibilities.

Marketing can’t wait because you need to show that you value what you do

If you don’t let the world know what you do and how well you do it, then people will think that you don’t value what you do.

If you don’t put your hand up and say you do things well, then other people will get the work and the assignments that you could do.

You can’t afford to stand back and wait to be approached.  You have to let people know how good you are and that you are ready and very keen to take on jobs that customers need doing.  You can’t afford to wait for people to recognise your talents.  You need to help them.

Practise making statements such as:

“I have written a series of excellent blog posts for …”
“My articles on ………….. have been quoted in …………… because ……………”
“There was lots of positive feedback about my series of interviews with …..”

You need to blow your trumpet in order to show that you know you are up to the job.  That’s one task that can’t wait.

Marketing can’t wait because marketing is really about building long-term relationships with people.

Every one in business needs to build relationships with potential customers, with potential business partners, with potential advocates (people who promote them), with complementary businesses, with alliance marketing partners and so on.

Relationships matter so you need to spend time building them both on line and off line.

Use Twitter and Linked In.
Get out to the small business networking groups.
Find ways of meeting more people.

Get to know them and make sure they get to know:

  • who you are
  • what you do
  • who you help.

Along the way try to establish also how you can help them – without selling to them.  Doing this really is a basic marketing activity.  It’s also fun.

Marketing for the future

Far from putting marketing to one side and letting your marketing activities wait, they need to come at the top of your list of activities.

You may be a writer, but you’re also in business.

As a businessperson you know that nothing happens until something is sold, so that means you’re in marketing – and in sales, too.  It’s a big mistake to convince yourself otherwise.

See also:

Writers’ Marketing Mistakes (1) – Not doing any marketing

Writers’ Marketing Mistakes (1) – Not doing any marketing

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.

See also:

Promote Yourself

Entrepreneurship for writers