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Self Publishing General Information
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Promotion, Publicity & Distribution Part 1 for book self publishers provided by Self Publisher Resources- Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth, Darwin, Canberra, Hobart, & Australia-wide!
Promotion, Publicity & Distribution
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Advertising
If you are going to pay to advertise your book, you want to be sure that you are spending your money effectively. You can pay to advertise your book to both booksellers and consumers, but if you have limited funds, you should concentrate on letting booksellers know about your book through advertising. Don’t advertise your book until you have finished copies to supply to booksellers Customers want to be able to buy something when they want it, and booksellers need to be able to have your book on their shelves in anticipation of customer demand.
Trade publications such as Australian Bookseller & Publisher www.booksellerandpublisher.com.au and the Weekly Book Newsletter are ideal places to advertise your book to booksellers. If you do decide to pay to advertise your book directly to customers, you should consider advertising in special-interest publications and bookshop newsletters as well as newspapers and magazines, as they may be less expensive options. You may also be able to purchase mailing lists from special-interest groups, so that you can ‘direct mail’ advertising material and order forms to them.
Australian Book Review
The Bookseller (UK)
Publishers Weekly (USA)
Bowker’s Bookwire (UK)
Good Reading Magazine
LOGOS
Weekly Book News / Australian Bookseller and Publisher
Chapter 4 – Selling Your Book
When publishing a book, consider whether or not you want to sell it, or whether you’d rather just supply it to certain people (say your family, friends, local library, people within your writing group). If you decide to make it available outside of this ‘circle’ – to retail outlets for example invest time and energy into promoting and selling your book. You may wish to pay a professional to handle either the promotion or distribution, or both, but even if you do, be aware of the options available to you. You will want to be confident that the person you are paying is doing a good job, and you may wish to do additional promotion yourself.
Distributing Your Book
All the promotion in the world will come to naught if you cannot follow through and provide copies of your book quickly and efficiently. You can choose to distribute your book yourself, or employ a distributor or agent to supply your book to booksellers for you. Download our Distribution List
Doing It Yourself
The biggest disadvantage of managing distribution yourself is that it takes time and is an ongoing job. You need to be easily contactable (by phone, fax, and, increasingly, email), and able to provide quick turnaround of orders. You will also need to be vigilant in your accounting and offer standard terms of trade to booksellers.
Read more: Marketing & Distribution Part 2
Chapter 5 Press releases
What is a press release?
What's a newswire?
A newswire is a service that sends your press release to newsrooms, websites, radio and TV stations and other media outlets worldwide. It's your best bet for getting your press release to a large number of media outlets that, it must be said, may or may not publish it or air it.
What newswires should I use?
Keep in mind that different services charge different fees, but some are free.
These ones are free services - www.pr.com and www.prleap.com and these two are fee-based services: www.prweb.com and www.prnewswire.com.
Who will receive my press release if I use a newswire?
In general, newswires reach online news sites, general search engines, syndication networks, newsrooms, freelance writers, magazines, etc.
Specific media reached by the different services: Pr.com reaches Google News, NBCi News, AskJeeves News, Topix News, MSN News, Yahoo!, and more.
Prleap.com reaches Google News, Yahoo! Search, msn.com, Moreover, News now, Technorati.
Prweb.com reaches Google News, NBCi News, AskJeeves News, Topix News, MSN News, Yahoo!, and more.
PRNewswire.com reaches Associated Press, radio, businessweek.com, national or regional newspapers, national or regional TV stations, etc.
What makes a good press release?
The most important thing to keep in mind are the editors who'll be getting your release. Hundreds of releases vie for their attention each week, so make yours relevant and accurate.
Here are some tips to help improve the chance of your release being used:
Write a headline that grabs attention and summarizes your main point. Then, because the first paragraph is often the only one that's read, make sure it covers the who, what, when, where, why and how.
Be brief. Keep your release to one page or 400 words. The end.
Love of Books provide a sample press release for your reference with book packages purchases.
Be available. Make sure you put your current contact information (E-mail, phone number, fax...) so that those that are interested can reach you.
Terms Of Trade
‘Terms of trade’ are the terms under which you supply your book to booksellers. If you complete your form for free listing of your publisher details in Australian Books in Print (see Chapter Three), you will be asked for details such as what discount you offer, whether you charge for freight, whether you have a ‘small order surcharge’, and what your ‘returns’ policy is. These are your ‘terms of trade’, and if you choose to supply your book yourself, you need to understand these terms and think carefully about them. Your terms of trade are very important decisions, and should be based on sensible business principles.
Freight – ‘FIS’ stands for ‘Free Into Store’, which means you bear all the costs of getting copies of your book (regardless of quantity) to the bookshop. ‘FIS + service charge’ means that you apply a set charge for supplying any quantity of your books. ‘Freight charged’ means that you charge the bookshop for the actual cost of sending the books to them. As a self-publisher without the distribution facilities of a large publisher, you will probably want to charge freight at cost.
Small order surcharge (SOS) – As the name suggests, this is a charge for supplying a small quantity of books, usually based on the number of copies ordered or the net value of an order. For example, a publisher may impose a SOS of ‘$5 on single copies’, or ‘$5 on invoices under $50 net’.
Returns – ‘All orders firm sale’ (FS) means that booksellers must pay for all copies ordered and cannot return them. ‘
Discount – You need to offer a discount to booksellers to sell your book for you. When planning to self-publish your book, you need to include this discount in your costing; if the GST-inclusive retail price of your book is $14.95, you will not, of course, receive that amount for each copy! Discounts may range from 10% up to 60%, but ‘standard’ discount is 33-40%. You may wish to offer a range of discounts based on the quantity of books ordered – see SOS above.
GST – You should ensure that the GST inclusive recommended retail price is quoted on all your promotional and other material.
Faulty copies – If your book is faulty in any way – for example, mis-bound, or damaged in transit to a bookshop – booksellers will expect to be able to return copies to you and receive either a credit or a replacement copy. As the publisher usually bears the cost of returning faulty copies, you may wish to specify that the bookseller can ‘return title page’ rather than ‘return whole book’.
At the end of the day, how can you not realize your dream with all that we have to offer!
*Self Publishing Success*
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