Please welcome guest blogger Myra Jolivet, who is a fellow member of the Sisters in Crime NorCal chapter. A bit about her follows her answer to this week's big Q.
Q: Does
Marketing Your Book Feel Oppressive or Liberating?
Vocational
irony is an alternative description of the shoe-less cobbler’s wife and
the cake-less baker’s
kids. When you promote and market others for a living, then find yourself with
a piece of you to market, it is liberating.
It’s not that
I don’t enjoy
building strategies for others to win political campaigns or using marketing
tactics to build client databases and influence; but once I had gathered the
guts to fuel my passion to create cozy mysteries, I had my own thing to pitch
and push. My brainstorm sessions happen now with my committee of me and we
argue about angles, differentiation and layered strategy.
I
hope that every author who bleeds at a key board can find creative release and
enjoyment in writing unique marketing plans. I have had incredible mentors who
helped to open my mind to my own purposes. I realized that book signings can
happen at unlikely places that may be mentioned in your story. Social media
communities are free, limitless resources for finding your readers both live
and on-demand. Imagine using Facebook live to present a targeted, virtual book
signing, internationally. Or using Google+ to define market segments tweaked to
your genre. Once you have them, you can send newsletters, poll them on plot
developments, ask their opinions on cover styles, and promote upcoming events.
You’ll notice
the key word is targeted. In the earlier days of public relations, finding
highly targeted market segments was much more difficult than it is today with
social channels. Back then, we used six-figure surveys, scientific focus groups
and huge manual efforts to find what can now be determined in an internet
browser search. Finding non-fiction, fiction, romance and mystery book clubs
can happen in minutes. Once you have a target audience, you can reach out to
them and connect them to your books. This excites me! It is liberating. The ability to connect,
directly with those who enjoy your work product, is a rush. The freedom to
experiment with marketing plans can bring creative satisfaction.
It
is work. Yes, it is work. But, if you’ve ever worked endless days pushing a
political candidate platform to disinterested voters or boosting a product you
only marginally like, the opportunity to participate in the marketing of an
extension of your time and talents, will feel like a luxury.
My
committee of me is currently trying to figure out how to connect with a
well-known vodka company because my amateur sleuth loves her martinis made with
their product.
If
marketing is not your vocation, it can become your passion when you consider
the available tools to find your audience. It can become liberating to consider
marketing your work, in your way, as the next step of your creation.
Myra
Jolivet
At 4 years old, I had an imaginary friend. I think my
storytelling began there. Later came a career in television news, politics and
corporate communications; more writing.
Working with writing coaches and editors, I began a series of
murder mysteries that connect northern California to the colorful Louisiana
Creole culture.
I am a Bay Area native with Louisiana Creole roots. In our quiet
Berkeley neighborhood, my parents often hosted gumbo Sundays seasoned with
hushed stories of relatives who spoke to the dead and had cast more than a
spell or two. Those "secrets" fueled the voice of mystery and humor
within me.
7 comments:
Welcome to 7 Criminal Minds, Myra.
Nice post, Myra! Thanks for being a Guest Mind!
Welcome, Myra. I'll be certain to grab your book right away.
Thanks for the inspirational words, Myra. Your novel looks and sounds intriguing!
Thank you so much, you guys! This guest shot is a great honor. I appreciate the welcome and hope you will enjoy my book. I will be reading your works, as well.
Great post, though I don't know if I will ever like marketing. But your enthusiasm is contagious.
Thanks so much. I know it's tedious and there is no such things as done. There's always something else to do.
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