Selling a book to someone who has just enjoyed reading one of your books is the easiest book you will ever sell. In business terms it’s called “picking the low hanging fruit”. If you have another book out, then it’s easy to do. You just put a link to the next book in the backmatter and the reader clicks on it and the sale is as good as made. But what if your next book isn’t out for a while? How will the reader know when it is out? You can’t expect the reader to go onto Amazon once a week to check and they may not follow you on social media, so how do you communicate with that satisfied reader 3 months, 6 months or even a year from now? No matter which book marketing guru you read, they all agree that email lists are one of the top 4 ways to sell books (the other 3 being ads on Amazon, Facebook and Bookbub). So, why do so few Indie authors use this method to communicate with readers and boost their sales? Every Indie author selling in the 6 figure income bracket (and higher) has an email list as long as the Norwegian coastline and they use it every time they launch a new book (and at other times in between, of course, but more of that later). It’s why they are 6 figure plus income earners. That should tell every Indie author everything they need to know about email lists. Yet still there is an incredible amount of resistance from Indie authors to building and using them. Here are some of the reasons that a lot of Indie authors give for not using email marketing (in no particular order), with our response beneath. "I don’t sign up for email lists, so no one would sign up for mine." You are not your readers. Lots of readers sign up for as many lists as they can because they are always looking for new book recommendations. "They are a lot of hard work to build and maintain." True, but without hard work, nothing happens – especially sales. "It is expensive to build an email list." Not true. While it isn’t free, as a marketing tool it is far cheaper than advertising (I’ll cover costs later). "I don’t have time for building and maintaining email lists." Nor did those 6 figure income authors when they started out, but they found the time and that’s why they are now 6 figure plus income authors. If you have your own pet objection which we’ve missed out, put it in the comments and we’ll be happy to respond to it., If, at this stage, you are still saying “email lists are not for me” then fair enough. Thanks for reading this far and we’ll get on with writing this blog for the benefit of the authors who want to make some decent money from their books. OK, now they’ve gone, we’ll admit that not everyone who uses email marketing is going to reach the dizzy heights of 6 figure plus incomes. But they can get to the mid to upper 5 digit levels. We know this is possible because we are already achieving that for our authors. So, what do you need to start? Well, you need something to attract readers to your email list. Some people call these “freebies”, some call them “reader magnets” and I know of one person (who I will name later) who calls them “cookies”, because she hands them out like cookies. I’m going to call it “content” because that covers a whole raft of possibilities. Some of these are:
There will be some work in creating that sort of content just for it to be given away for free but, to use an old British term, they are a sprat to catch a mackerel. If your email list grows at any sort of speed you will want to automate as much of the work as possible, or you really will find yourself drowning in emails, so the next few paragraphs talk about the businesses that can do that for you. You need an email list management service. There are many of these around, some of which have free packages with limited functionality, but even if you need to subscribe they have packages starting from around $9 a month (£7 – price correct at time of writing). Mailchimp and Mailerlite are the market leaders but there are smaller providers. A word of warning. Having used one of those companies I can’t say they are not the most user friendly when it comes to setting up automated responses and emails. You will have to spend some time watching their tutorials and even then you may have difficulties and have to email for support.. Then you need a delivery system to get your content to people so you can harvest their email address (ethically and legally, of course) for transfer to your email service. If you want to follow best practice you will also want to deliver new content to existing subscribers. There is no doubt about the market leader in the delivery field. It is Bookfunnel and we have no hesitation about mentioning them. All their packages cost money and you will have to go in at above the most basic subscription level if you want to capture email addresses. What Bookfunnel calls “Mid-List Author” has a subscription price of $8.33 a month or $100 annually (£6.50 and £78.33 - prices correct at time of writing) and that is the minimum package you need. When you compare those prices with what you might have to pay for advertising, you can see that email marketing is far more economical. You can easily spend $100 a week to run a Facebook or Amazon advertising campaign. The rest of this blog is devoted to how you use Bookfunnel to build your email list from scratch and you have to get a little bit creative to make that work. We’re not going to go into too much detail. You’ll find lots of videos on the Bookfunnel website to help you. The first way to capture emails is “Group Promos”, which offer a range of books by different authors for free, capitalising on the fact that they give readers a choice of content. In these terms a book doesn’t have to be a full length novel, but it usually excludes extracts and sample chapters. The second is more advanced and is “Author Swaps” where you promote a single book by another author in order to generate sales, and they do the same for you. Bookfunnel has a built in system for preventing cheating and not keeping your end of the promotional bargain. If you don’t promote other authors the way they are promoting you, you’ll find it hard to join a group promo the next time. Bookfunnel calls it “reputation”, but that is all we are going to say on the subject. Feel free to email us if you want to know more. Every month there are a number of Group Promos in the most popular genres that allow a newbie to join without an established “reputation”. Of course, the group will mainly be made up of other newbies, but that doesn’t matter. You are all in the same boat and are all there for the same reason – to get email addresses. To join a Group Promo you need at least one bit of content to give away and most promos are capped to a set number of books per author (typically 2 - 4) so that no one author dominates the promo. Now, if you don’t have an email list, how do you actually send out the link to the promo? Some promo organisers (anyone can be one of those) even insist that you have a minimum number of email addresses in your list in order to join the group. This is where you have to get creative. For a start, the promo organiser has no idea how many email addresses you have in your list. I’ll just leave that hanging there and let you decide what to do with it. Secondly, all anyone is really interested in is those clicks, so it doesn’t matter where the reader saw the link that takes them to the promo. It could have been in an email or it could have been written in crayon on the back of the door of a public toilet (public bathroom if you’re American). So long as the click is made, nobody is any the wiser. Nor do they really care. So, instead of using your non-existent email list, you post the link on your social media instead. Don’t worry if you have only a small number of followers (I’d suggest a minimum of 1,000 on Twitter/X). You only need a handful of clicks in order to start to establish your reputation and you will also get an email address every time someone chooses your content as the one they want to download. Now, you do need to be a little bit creative about how you post the promo link. Just saying “free books” and inserting the link isn’t going to attract many link clicks. There is a video available on Bookfunnel on what sort of content to use in your promo emails or posts, so I’m not going to repeat the lesson here. Group Promos typically run for between a fortnight to a month and I suggest you join 2 groups a fortnight but no more. Joining too many promos at once could lead to things becoming unmanageable. There is a reason for joining two groups, though. I’ll call the two different groups Promo A and Promo B. When you start to get email addresses for downloads of your content as part of Promo A, you can send the link for Promo B to those addresses, providing the promo is still running. And vice versa for Promo B, of course. The advantage of doing that is that you are sending the promo link to people you know are likely to click on it – because that’s how you got their email address in the first place. If you get 10 email addresses from each promo, 20 in total, and you do that twice a month, that may give you 40 email addresses. If your content was a series starter, there is a good chance that 50% of those people will then read through the rest of your series. If your book is a trilogy, that’s 20 sales of Book 2 and 20 of Book 3. And every month you are likely to get the same results again, so you are selling books you wouldn’t have otherwise sold, at the same time as you build your email list for future marketing campaigns. That will more than cover the cost of your Bookfunnel subscription. But don’t forget to put links in all the right places in your series starter. And if you put some different content onto Bookfunnel, you can put links in all the books in the series to get more sign-ups in exchange for that free content. That is called “organic” growth. But, more importantly, you now have 40 email addresses to which you can send the next promo to. You can still use social media for your promos too, as that increases your “reach”. In fact, I would continue to do that even when you have 10,000 addresses in your email list. Now you have to learn how to use those email addresses in order to build engagement with those readers. You will notice that I didn’t say “sell your books to those readers” and that is because selling is the last thing you should be doing. What you should be doing is using your email list to send out newsletters which build engagement. The sort of engagement that makes the reader feel they are part of an exclusive club. And that means providing them with exclusive content. This turns a reader into a “superfan”. Not only will they buy everything you care to write, but they will tell everyone they know about your books at every opportunity. These people really exist, and newsletters are the way they are found or created. Now, I’ll be the first to admit that I’m not an expert in the craft of newsletter writing – but I know someone who is. You will recall that I mentioned someone earlier in the blog who refers to her free content as “cookies”. That lady’s name is Tammi Lebrecque and she is one of the acknowledged gurus of email book marketing. She has written two books on the subject and they are called “Newsletter Ninja” and “Newsletter Ninja 2”. I highly recommend reading both books BEFORE you start trying to build your email lists, as they will save you a lot of time and heartache. The first book gets into the nuts and bolts of list building and engagement and the second book takes a closer look at what makes a good “cookie”. So, that concludes our brief (or maybe not so brief, looking at the word count for this blog) tour around emails and list building. It really is one of the foundation stones of a marketing strategy and if you don’t have an email list it is unlikely that you will ever reach the dizzy heights of a 6 figure income. If you have enjoyed this blog, or found it informative, then make sure you don’t miss future editions. Just click on the button below to sign up for our newsletter. We’ll even send you a free ebook for doing so.
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November 2024
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