Promote Your Book Through Magazine and Ezine Articles
by Patricia L. Fry
The editor of a writing-related ezine said to me the other day,
"I don't know why more authors don't offer us articles. We almost
always publish them along with their bio. It's great publicity
for their books."
Why not promote your book doing what you love best -- writing?
Here are several examples to help get your started.
Many popular magazines and ezines use book excerpts. Of course,
they generally want excerpts from books that relate to their
magazine -- cooking magazines want excerpts from cookbooks, a
travel magazine will quote travel books and poetry magazines want
to excerpt poetry books.
Use your imagination to come up with more possibilities. If your
book features Native American art in Southern California, for
example, a California history or travel magazine might be
interested in publishing your chapter on California tribes. An
excerpt from a book on tax tips for home-based businesses might
provide a good article for a writer's magazine.
Submit articles on topics only remotely related to your book and
still promote it. I wrote a book called "Creative Grandparenting
Across the Miles" and I've promoted it through articles featuring
storytelling techniques for grandparents, how to teach
grandchildren money awareness, how grandparents can uphold family
traditions and tips for helping grandparents bond with their new
grandbaby. But I can also plug this book even if I'm writing an
article about snails. I might mention, for example, that when I
was writing the grandparent book, I met a grandfather who paid his
5-year old grandson a penny apiece to catch garden snails.
I've also used articles to promote my book, The Mainland Luau:
How to Capture the Flavor of Hawaii in Your Own Backyard. There
are the obvious articles: "Eight Ways to Roast a Pig," "Recipes
for Your Backyard Luau," "Fresh-Flower Lei-Making," "The Family
Reunion Luau" and "Tips for Learning the Hawaiian Language." And
there are the obscure: how about a piece on early culture
comparisons for an ethnic or history magazine; flower arranging
for a floral or gardening magazine; examining the lost continent
of Lemuria (now the Hawaiian Islands) for a travel, history or
New Age magazine or the mechanics of writing a how-to book for a
writer's magazine? Do you see how I could promote the luau book
in any of these articles?
You can almost always get a tagline at the end of an article. Use
this as an opportunity to promote your book. I often write:
Patricia Fry is the author of several books including Creative
Grandparenting Across the Miles: Ideas for Sharing Love, Faith
and Family Traditions (Liguori Publications). If the topic of
the article more closely relates to the luau book, my
journal-keeping book, my writing books, the metaphysical book or
one of my local history books, I promote those instead.
The most effective articles for marketing your book are those
relying on your expertise. I've written articles as an expert on
the importance of grandparents in a child's life, how to be a
better grandparent, tips for traveling with your grandchildren,
long-distance grandparenting, how parents can help strengthen the
relationship between their child and the grandparents and how to
choose gifts for grandchildren. Anyone interested in reading one
of these articles may also want to read my book.
Most magazine and ezine editors will reject articles that
blatantly promote a product, so keep your article from sounding
like a sales pitch for your book. Simply write a useful and
informative article suitable to a particular magazine and mention
your book where appropriate.
Expect to be paid anywhere from $50 to $1,000 for an article
based on your book. You might also be asked to give away some of
your promotional pieces. And why not, if it means having them
published in a national magazine that's read by anywhere from
20,000 to 500,000 people?
By now, you probably have dozens of ideas for marketing your book
through articles. To come up with even more:
- Study a variety of magazines from cover to cover.
- List as many topics related to your book as you can.
- Brainstorm with friends and family.
Do articles sell books? I believe so. I've sold dozens of
articles based on the luau book and have, as a result made a lot
of book sales. Less than a year after self-publishing "The
Mainland Luau," I reprinted it. A year later, my stock was
running low again and, because of my good sales record, I had an
offer that I couldn't resist from Island Heritage Publishing
Company in Hawaii. Now they publish and distribute this book
under the new title, Entertaining Hawaiian Style.
Writing a book is fun. Promoting it can be terrifying and
intimidating. That's why I recommend to authors that they start
their book promotion efforts doing something they love -- writing.
Copyright © 2003 Patricia L. Fry
Patricia L. Fry has been writing for publication for over 30 years,
having contributed hundreds of articles to about 250 different
magazines and e-zines. She is the author of 25 books including
A Writer's Guide to Magazine Articles for Book Promotion and
Profit and The Right Way to Write, Publish and Sell Your Book (Matilija Press). For more inspiration, information and
resources from Patricia Fry, follow her blog at http://www.matilijapress.com/publishingblog/.
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