These days, most successful book promotion campaigns include social networking. Even those authors and publishers who don’t have legions of fans, followers, or online friends usually have relatives and former classmates who are willing to brag that someone they know and love has a new book out — and word can spread pretty quickly through cyberspace. It’s not exactly the viral marketing campaign that, say, turned us all onto Jib and Jab — but, in fact, letting your followers at Twitter and your friends at Facebook, and so forth, know about your current or upcoming work is just a smart, core component of a comprehensive book promotion campaign.
Back to book promotion
It’s the Monday after the Fourth of July weekend. That means it’s back to book promotion. This book publicist is back in full force, and I’m trusting the media decision makers will be back at their desks, too, and gearing up for new pitches.
Here’s one promotion opportunity I wouldn’t wish on anyone: finding greatly exaggerated rumors of your death on one of the social networks and then refuting those rumors. It happened, according to a recent article on CNN, to actor Jeff Goldblum who, in a promotional coup, was given the opportunity to read his own obituary on “The Colbert Report.”
A book publicist takes the Twitter plunge — for real!
I’ve finally done it. I was sending an email to a client and, for the first time, I added my Twitter handle (@bookpr) to my signature.
I’ve been tweeting for awhile, and I’m pleased to count bookstores, libraries, reporters, reviewers, literary agents, authors, and producers among my followers. And I’m getting into a rhythm of letting fellow tweeters know about my clients’ bookings and bylined article placements — all of which, I imagine, will have to add to their online book buzz.
“Twitter must be part of every book promotion campaign you do.*
A publishing professional just called (yes, he called me on the telephone) to alert me to a CNN.com article about social networking and to make his argument that, henceforth, Twitter has to be part of every book promotion campaign. “Twitter has become its own newsfeed,” the publishing professional enthused. “That’s how people are getting their news now! Tweets reach people before Associated Press stories do! If you’re not tweeting, you’re not promoting your book!”
Well, maybe. But I’m still not convinced.
More confessions of a book publicist
This book publicist has to confess something: this morning, she wrote on a wall. But it wasn’t vandalism or desecration. No. The wall in question was a Facebook feature. And another thing: this book publicist was invited to write on it, and that makes a difference.
At least, I think it does.
In the spirit of full disclosure, I am not only a book publicist. I am also an adult, and in a perfect world, I wouldn’t have to ever log onto Facebook, mySpace, or any other social networking venue. I could beg off and let the young’uns play in their virtual world while I limited my communications to, well, the real world.