There are many sites out there, both regular social networking sites and sites meant for authors to promote themselves and their work. General sites would include Twitter, Facebook, and MySpace. Author Specific sites would include: Author’s Den, Red Room, Nothing Binding, BookBuzzr. There are many more, but I can’t possibly list them all. In addition to that there is the marketing power of Amazon itself. Where you can have an author page and blog as well as participate in many forums on the site itself.
One thing I’ve been personally guilty of is signing up for things like this as if that’s a mark of marketing productivity in and of itself. It isn’t. While it is true that the more places you can be found the better, and it is true that you will always have a trickle of people who stumble upon you and your work (especially if you use really good keywords and lots of description so people who search can find you)… Still… the big power of social networking sites both specifically geared toward authors, and more general sites, is using it.
This is where it gets tricky. You can spend an infinite time using all these various social platforms to socialize with people and get word about your book out there. And if you do spend infinite time doing this, you won’t get anything else done. I have eaten up whole days on Twitter and Facebook and I don’t see a giant surge of book sales as a result of this, mostly wasted effort.
I’m not sure exactly where the purchase point is for people, but the general idea behind social networking for authors isn’t to spam people with your book title. Really all people need to know is that you are a writer, and the genre you write in. Which can be obliquely referred to or spelled out on a profile. If someone likes YOU enough, they will seek out what it is you write. If they don’t like YOU, then it’s pointless to tell them what you wrote, because social networking is all about personal likeability.
That’s why it’s called SOCIAL networking. You hope that you say something funny enough or charming enough or whatever to start a dialogue, and that that dialogue fosters a sort of casual online friendship that may result ultimately in a reader gained. You hope this reader gained, because of the social networking exposure and your availability to them, becomes a TRUE FAN. A true fan will buy everything you write, and not only will they buy everything you write, but they will talk about your work, blog about it, tell their friends about it. They are what makes the word-of-mouth machine run.
There is a common idea of 1,000 true fans, that you need this many fans to be able to make a living as an artist, be it a musician or a writer, or whatever. Keep in mind that 1,000 true fans doesn’t mean only 1,000 people will buy your work. It means you want to cultivate 1,000 rabid screaming tell everybody they know and buy everything you create, fans. If you have 1,000 of THOSE types of fans, I believe you truly are set. Because those types of fans get the word out. Their enthusiasm for your work also is contagious.
While I agree with the math of 1,000 true fans, it’s almost impossible to measure such a thing. 1,000 twitter followers or facebook followers or even newsletter subscribers are not the same. I’m subscribed to some writers’ newsletters where I don’t buy everything they write. I don’t tell everybody and their brother’s cousin about it. I’m not a true fan, but I’m subscribed to their newsletter.
The 1,000 true fans concept may always only be a symbol of a truth, rather than something that can actually be literally measured. Meanwhile we’ll set our twitter follower and facebook follower goals, and newsletter subscriber goals, much higher than that, and hope that somewhere in all of that we connect with enough people to gain that magical number of true fans.
Which brings me back to this whole social networking thing. There are the two extremes: 1. Just signing up for a bunch of stuff but not doing anything with it. 2. Spending every waking second social networking. I don’t believe either is that productive.
So what’s the best way to deal with social networking for the best results? I’ve been throwing this idea around and here is what I have right now as far as a “plan of attack” for more effective social networking toward the end of helping you in your quest for true fans.
1. Sign up for everything. While it’s not enough to just sign up, and you don’t want to spend every waking second on all these different sites, if it’s free to sign up, you may as well. Some people will find you this way, and one thing I’ve learned from releasing KEPT is that you want your book in as many venues as possible, because not everybody goes to the same places. My book does much better at some sites than others, but I don’t really know the quality of those numbers. If I’ve gotten even one true fan from a smaller site, it was worth the effort of listing there.
2. Pick 3 sites that will get your primary focus. I can’t tell you how to pick your three sites (nor will I tell you you can’t just focus on one, or you can’t focus on 5. I’m trying to keep this simple to give people a starting point.) I wish I could analyze and say: “Okay this site is definitely worth your while and will draw to you a strong number of true fans if you work it, and this other site is trash.” But I can’t. Everybody is so different. Each person really has to figure out what works for them. But once you find 3 networking sites that seem promising, you’ll want to focus on consistently interacting in these three places and building relationships, hopefully with people who are likely to read your work.
3. While it’s important to interact regularly, you can’t “only” interact. There is a law of diminishing returns with social networking. You get to a point where it’s too much. Either you get to a point where repeated contact doesn’t help you, or it actually starts to hurt you. i.e. You know you’ve seen this person on the social networking sites, they post so often and usually but not always in the most self-promoting and obnoxious ways. You automatically delete emails from them, and after awhile you just stop following them all together. In the world of social networking, less can be more, as long as it isn’t so “less” that people forget who the hell you are.
It’s important to set a social networking limit. It’s easy to look at it as productive to your writing and use it as an excuse to procrastinate from other more pressing matters like writing and editing. Marketing is important, but you have to have something to market, and building a backlist is as important as building a strong core fan base.
Hopefully reading this has helped you to start to come up with a balanced way of viewing social networking and where it stands in the grand scheme of your marketing plan. I know writing it has helped me.
July 11, 2009 at 9:36 am
This actually confirms my own thoughts on the topic, after much trial-and-error and frustration with and pondering about social networks. I think you’ve struck the nail on the head. This is definitely the way to go and the only thing I’d add is that on any site where you can import your blog posts, you should, since you should be writing interesting blog posts and this is a good way to spread the word.
July 11, 2009 at 5:57 pm
Good idea, Frank!
July 12, 2009 at 1:03 pm
[...] Cross-posted at zoewinters.wordpress.com. [...]
July 17, 2009 at 6:50 am
[...]There are many sites out there, both regular social networking sites and sites meant for authors to promote themselves and their work. General sites would include Twitter, Facebook, and MySpace. Author Specific sites would include: Author’s Den, Red Room, Nothing Binding, BookBuzzr. There are many more, but I can’t possibly list them all. In addition to that there is the marketing power of Amazon itself. Where you can have an author page and blog as well as participate in many forums on the site itself.[...]
Linked to this Zoe on my own site. Nice piece.
July 18, 2009 at 6:08 pm
So, Zoe … I’m interested in knowing which social-networking sites you choose to spend your time with … and how you arrived at those decisions.
July 18, 2009 at 8:22 pm
desolationisland, I’m still at step two. I wrote this to help myself and then shared it because I thought it might help others.
September 26, 2009 at 9:29 pm
Hey, you have a great blog here! I’m definitely going to bookmark you! Thank you for your info.And this is http://www.bookmarkth.com site. It pretty much covers DoFollow Social Bookmark related stuff.
Thank.