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Monday, June 26, 2017

4 TIPS TO MAKE YOUR eBOOK STAND OUT



The immediacy and convenience of ebooks and digital content has had a marked impact on how people today read.

Authors are beginning to realize that they can publish freely and digitally distribute their work 

for nothing other than their time and a bit of their money.

Readers are beginning to realize that with an eReader, they have access to a small library of books in their purse or their backpack 

whenever they need something to do while waiting for any number of things.


BUT HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF eAUTHORS ARE OUT THERE HAWKING THEIR BOOKS!  HOW DO YOU STAND OUT?


1.) BE MAGNETIC -


 

Daniel Craig, dressed in a tuxedo, walks into a crowded room of middle-aged, used car salesmen.  Who will draw your eye?

People do judge a book by its cover.  You have to catch the eye with mystery, danger and color.

A good cover can be a great marketing tool for an ebook. 

You want your cover to make someone scanning through a website, stop and click your ebook. 

You don’t want to be tacky or overbearing, but the cover should draw attention.

In the wide-open publishing world, a cover gives readers their first impression of what to expect from an author’s book. 

For now, the quality of a cover is a good indication of which authors have invested more time into their work than others. 

Did the cover for DEATH IN THE HOUSE OF LIFE's sequel, 

THE STARS BLEED AT MIDNIGHT (right sidebar) draw your eye?


2.) BE READER FRIENDLY -

The easier you make the purchasing step for your customers, the better. 

This can be done by making your ebook as visible as possible. 

Every time you mention your book or yourself online,

provide links to make it easy for people to find your content or more information about you. 

Let’s say you just put up a book trailer on youtube. 

That youtube page needs a link to your book’s webpage or blog and your blog needs a link to the video. 

This is called cross-linking


3.) THE THREE MUSKETEERS had a point -


The best marketing tactic is to write more than one good book.

Each new title will broaden your name recognition and generate more sales for all your previous ones.

That’s because many readers are “binge readers.”

They find an author they like, and they then seek out and scoop up every single title that the author has written previously.


{Only 99 cents! What a bargain, right?}
(The isolated Hollywood film crew for the first talking Western is hunted by Nightmare )

Every successful author out there agrees:

The single best “marketing tactic” that you can employ, by far, is to write and publish your next book.

In fact, many of them counsel that you shouldn’t even bother to begin doing any promotions until you’ve written and published at least three books.

Success in indie publishing is a marathon, not a sprint.

Each new book released will attract new fans, prompting them to go back and buy all the prior books in the series.

That’s how bestselling authors expand their audience over time, often geometrically.


(Again, only 99 cents!)
BURNT OFFERINGS 
{Find out what happens when the Nameless Ones catch McCord 
wounded and left for dead}


4.) WHAT'S THAT BURNING?  OH, IT'S YOUR BRAND -

Brand yourself and your book.

Carve out a narrow, distinctive “niche” in the book marketplace based on some catchy concept, theme, or image

that will appeal to your target readers, but simultaneously distinguish your work from all others in your genre.

As Alex Cavanaugh says of my linked books:

They exist in a common mythic universe is Lovecraftian in scope and design -- 

one minor character in one book becomes a major one in another.


The setting of a haunted jazz club in the French Quarter in New Orleans whose stories go back (so far to 1834) is unique. 

I flit from time period to time period sometimes even from one exotic locale to another.

McCord is a supernatural Paladin as Victor Standish is a paranormal KIM.

Bottom line: 

Find some catchy, distinctive concept that works for you.

Next, use your “brand” in everything you do to promote your work:

book covers, author photos, blog designs, promotional copy, business cards, etc.

That kind of focus and integration will guarantee that your “brand” will become uniquely identified with you,

making you and your work memorable for your target readers.

My header is done, as are many of my covers, by the incomparable Leonora Roy.

Their design is crafted by the artistic Heather McCorkle

When you see my book covers, you know at a glance it is from me.

So there you have some ideas.  I hope they were helpful.

SAMUEL McCORD's SAGA
in chronological order:
{Though each book stands on its own}

 1.) DRAGONS OF THE BARBARY COAST
 2.) RITES OF PASSAGE
 3.) ADRIFT IN THE TIME STREAM
 4.) TALES OF THE LAST WOLF
 5.) The NOT-SO-INNOCENTS ABROAD
 6.) The NOT-SO- INNOCENTS AT LARGE
 7.) DEATH IN THE HOUSE OF LIFE
 8.) THE STARS BLEED AT MIDNIGHT
 9.) HER BONES ARE IN THE BADLANDS
 10.) FRENCH QUARTER NOCTURNE
 11.) CREOLE KNIGHTS
 12.) HUNTER's MOON
 13.) BURNT OFFERINGS

VICTOR STANDISH 
in order:

 1.) THE LEGEND OF VICTOR STANDISH
 2.) UNDER A VOODOO MOON
 3.) THE RIVAL
       Much of the action occurs in 1834 New Orleans

*) END OF DAYS
      Victor is a "soul echo" in this, and the tale is narrated by his ghoul friend, Alice Wentworth -- and has all my major heroes in it.

 4.) THE THREE SPIRIT KNIGHT

Go to 6:34 for the meat of this video

10 comments:

  1. Hi Roland - be true to ourselves and our content or books; while as you say being reader friendly ... building your audience - and that cover with its branding - set it up before one publishes ... loved reading this -good luck with all your books - cheers Hilary

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    1. My internet has been down and work a little pressing so I have not been able to visit. Sorry. :-( Thanks for visiting anyway and being my friend.

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  2. Hey, that was me!
    While I haven't pumped out the books very fast, they are consistent in their genre and theme. Covers all have a consistent look as well.

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    1. Each of us must walk our own path. And, yes, you are the Man to have written that of me! :-)

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  3. You have magnetic covers! I always love looking at them. I'm not sure I agree about pumping out books as the way to be successful, but then I'm not sure what successful means. It's so different for each of us.

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    1. One of the most frustrating thing for a new fan of ours to discover is that want to buy more titles from us, and there are only a few! :-)

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  4. You're so right about a professional cover! I paid a rather hefty sum and had to wait six months (the artist has that long a waiting list), but my two Charity MacCay covers are gorgeous.

    And yes, they will finally be out in July.

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  5. Thanks for the McCord list, now I know which books I missed. I really like the cover for The Last Shaman Trilogy and it looks like there are some new covers for older books. They are all really great.

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    1. Heather McCorkle did a fantastic job on THE LAST SHAMAN TRILOGY, didn't she? The newer covers are for the print versions of my older books :-) I need to visit your blog but work keeps getting in the way!! I am so drained lately!!

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