This was a talk I went to yesterday, aimed at writers with small publishers, or self-published. I took as many notes as possible but, inevitably, missed a lot. The main gist was to think local and regard national coverage as a bonus.
The pattern of buying by the bookshops is changing, as we know, with fewer reps and more central buying. The chains will only allow reps from the biggest of the publishing conglomerates to visit stores. Surprisingly (to me at any rate) WHS are more open to local authors than they are to publishers’ reps. So are Ottakars, but that could well change in the near future.
Two growth areas in book selling:
1) the internet: Amazon, own website, etc. Make sure the cover looks appealing on screen. With Amazon specifically, make sure they have all the info they need – image, synopsis, get the classification right, and get some good reviews posted up.
2) book groups. The Richard and Judy effect. Apparently there are now more than 2000 established book groups. Word of mouth is a very powerful force. Get your book onto a few book group lists and it can snowball. Get it into local libraries and ask them to feature it in any reading events they hold. Ask them if you can help organise an event.
Write publicity material to suit the target audience. (For instance, there’s no point in sending photographs to your local radio station.)
Arrange interviews with local radio and newspapers, local and specialist magazines. Print out your material, quote from it, and leave a copy with the interviewer. Have soundbites and quotes ready, also a couple of amusing anecdotes. Keep mentioning the title! Always be available for interviews and be friendly – if they like you, they’ll remember you.
Arrange booksignings/talks at bookshops, local tourist venues, schools, festivals. Watch out for anything related to your book – for instance, if it’s about life on an organic farm, watch out for farmers markets, organic events, country fairs.
That’s about all I can dredge up at the moment. If I think of any more, I’ll add it. In the meantime, here’s a few useful links:
http://www.booktrade.info
http://www.booksellers.org.uk
http://www.sfep.org.uk
http://www.publishing-services.co.uk