Hey, Short email today as I have a hot date with a leaking roof. But that's okay because I only have one simple thing for you to think about this week, he says to near-universal relief. Never waste an opportunity to convey your book's genre. That's it, your big takeaway today, the one simple thing for you to read, consider, internalize, and then carry forward into all your book marketing efforts. What? You want more? FINE. After you push a marketing message out into the world – whether that's an email, a social post, or an ad of some kind – the first challenge it faces is to get attention… and then that precious click. But not just any click; you need the right clickers or you won't close that sale. Those tasks are near-impossible if you don't effectively communicate what kind of book you're selling in your marketing messages. And you must do that efficiently too because people won't dawdle when they are scrolling through their feeds or clearing their inbox. One thing that will really stop them in their tracks is a giant literary bat signal because readers are curious beasts – as you might have noticed. Tastes are just so defined these days that readers often love "their" type of book and respond to everything else with a giant meh, or even outright hostility. There's a reason they call it balkanization, yo. Which means the most effective way to cut through the noise is to plant your flag and tell readers exactly what kind of book you have written. Your instinct might be to sand down the edges, broaden your appeal, reel in as many people as possible and hope that your prose wins them over (when it's not truly the kind of book they would normally purchase). Ignore this instinct. Embrace your edges, niche downwards, align your marketing, then find your true readers. What do I mean by "align your marketing?" It's simple. Your book's cover, blurb, title, and sample, as well as assocaited website, newsletter sign-up pages, Facebook ad text, email welcome sequences, social posts, whatever – everything should align, everything should clearly communicate your genre. Conveying genre is not your only concern when creating marketing messages, of course, but consider this email a strong reminder to keep genre front-and-center when designing these materials. For example, if you are trying to choose between a few tasty review quotes to drop in a Facebook Ad – either overlaid on the background image or perhaps in the ad text itself – then definitely go with the quote that doubles down on genre. This can be an on-the-nose specific mention of the niche of the book, like: "The best post-apocalyptic zombie series going." Or it can simply talk about things which are super important (and obvious) to passionate readers of that genre. "OMG this are the steamiest scenes I've ever read." I've said this before but it's worth repeating: The biggest sellers, the most effectively marketed books, all tend to have an x-factor, a secret sauce. And that is something which transcends genre, and applies to almost every single kind of book. Because it's a simple harmony in the messaging. It's this marketing alignment, where every single touchpoint along the customer journey tells readers exactly what kind of book it is. And if the message is aimed at the right people, it will be specifically telling them "this is exactly the kind of book you're looking for." Never waste an opportunity to convey your book's genre. Dave P.S. Writing music this week is Greta Van Fleet live and unplugged with Black Smoke Rising.
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Friday, October 28, 2022
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