Content Marketing: How To Find The True Value Of Your Marketing Funnel
Book Publishers: Present and Ubiquitous. Generating Awareness for Books and Brands In Real Life and Online
1. Presented by Sean Cranbury
Books on the Radio, Real Vancouver Writers’ Series, The Interruption [collab with 49th Shelf]
email: seancranbury@gmail.com cell: 778-987-8774 twitter: @seancranbury instagram: @cranbury
BOOK PUBLISHERS
PRESENT AND UBIQUITOUS
GENERATING AWARENESS
FOR BOOKS AND BRANDS
IN REAL LIFE AND ONLINE.
2. By way of an introduction
My name is Sean Cranbury
and I am a life-long
independent bookseller.
Here’s some stuff that I do/have done:
- Executive Editor of Books on the Radio:
radio show, blog, podcast, incubator for
literary projects.
- Founder, co-Artistic Director of Real
Vancouver Writers’ Series: curated inclusive
independent literary programming since
2010.
- Steering Committee for Canada Council’s
National Forum on the Literary Arts
7. Consider this approach to generating awareness
The author is the first point of contact for
readers and fans in real life and online, the
publisher puts the author on display via media,
reading series, festivals, industry contacts.
Both parties agree to cross-pollinate.
This scenario can work only when:
- everybody is committed to the success of the book.
- the time-bound promotional strategy is clearly
articulated ahead of launch. Is collaborative. Roles
are assigned and understood.
- everybody is committed to communicating clearly
and being responsive to opportunities.
- the author and publisher are both present and
responsive in the ubiquitous communication
channels that support and promote books and
literature. In real life and online.
8. Publishers support the book & writer
Create the strategy, connect the
writer to media, support the
writer in all phases, help the
writer succeed on their own.
Publishers can help the writer by:
- creating an awareness strategy that starts 6
months BEFORE the book officially launches.
- drives traffic to the author site via promotion
and social media support.
- work with the author on a collaborative and
responsive strategy that develops over time and
includes discussion of analytics.
- prepare shareable media like video or audio
links that help friends, fans, colleagues, media to
generate awareness and tell the story of the book
and the writer on your behalf.
9. Activating Authors to connect
Authors are the centre of the strategy. They
have all the details. They are the creators.
They know where the book came from and
how it got to where it is. They need help in
getting it to where it can go next.
Authors should…
- have an up to date personal website
- be connected to and active on at least one major
social media channel [fb, twitter, instagram, etc…]
- take responsibility for being visible, active, and
present during all stages of marketing and awareness
generating strategy.
- be willing to learn and maybe even master the arts of
talking to the media and giving a good public reading.
- care about the public life of their book and the
reputation of their publisher.
- remember their limitations
10. Authors on the web
Stay active and up to date, share other
people’s work, collaborate, do things
that benefit the whole community,
participate in the conversation.
After the creative cycle an author should:
- join their publisher in generating awareness of
their work on the web and IRL.
- have an active and up to date website
(yourname dot com) & social media channels.
- ensure that readers can buy ebook or real book
from site with minimal clicks.
- cultivate relationships with media and
independent taste makers.
- reach out to reading series, festivals, arts groups
- support other writers and literary projects to
increase awareness and reputation.
11. The Public Reading
Be prepared, be yourself,
have fun, say thank you.
Fundamentals of a good public reading:
- thank the host before and after the reading
- thank the host by name during the reading
- thank the volunteers who sell your books
- make eye contact with the audience
- speak into the microphone, don’t wander
- do not EVER go over your allotted time
- introduce yourself to the other authors
- meet audience members that you don’t know
- share your contact information
- tell people where they can find out more about
you online and elsewhere
12. Speaking to the media
Be prepared, stay loose,
speak in complete
sentences, say thank you.
Fundamentals of a good media interview:
- mention the book title
- mention the publisher
- thank the host
- clearly articulate what the book is about
- practice describing the book in three simple
sentences
- know how to describe why you wrote it,
where and when, for whom
- prepare stories about creative process,
collaborators, the editorial process, etc…
13. The elegance of the podcast: simple to create, easy to share
Simple, shareable content
Audio is a powerful way to
provide friends, fans, and
media with a taste of the
author’s work. Creation,
editing, posting can all be done
with a smart phone.
14. The elegance of the short video: audio + visual cues for audience engagement
Simple, shareable content
Video is a powerful way to
provide friends, fans, and
media with a taste of the
author’s work. Creation,
editing, posting can all be done
with a smart phone.
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20. Thank you for your kind attention
I am a very easy person
to get in touch with:
Connect with me and/or my projects:
email: seancranbury@gmail.com
twitter: @seancranbury
instagram: @cranbury
web: seancranbury.com
booksontheradio.org
realvancouverwriters.org