Posts Tagged ‘teleseminars’

During the past 10 weeks, I’ve been discussing different approaches to marketing your book, including list-building incentives, one sheets, and obtaining pre-publication quotes. (Here’s where you can review all previous installments.)

This week, I’d like to tie the previous 10 installments together, and close Part 3, Planning, by discussing the importance of creating a book marketing plan as early as possible.

As you’ll see below, the reason to start early is to set-up systems, like a blog with incentives and auto-responders, so that everything will be placed well before your book is published. Committing to a plan, even if you only spend an hour a week on marketing activities, will save you money and stress in the long run, paving the way for a successful book launch.

A marketing plan doesn’t have to be complicated to be effective! I believe in work worksheets, like the samples shown, but you can also create your own marketing plan worksheets using the tables feature of Microsoft Word. You can also use an online calendar, like Google’s, to assign starting and completion dates for each task identified in your book marketing plan.

4-stage book marketing

There are four distinct stages, or phases, of a successful book marketing plan:

  • Announcement. As soon as you sign a contract with your publisher, or- -if you’re self-publishing- -your printer, it’s time to announce your forthcoming book online and offline.
  • Pre-Launch. During the pre-launch phase, while you’re writing your book, you should be setting up the online structure for marketing your book and building a network of marketing partners whose efforts will culminate during your publication week book launch.
  • Launch. The week of your book’s publication, you won’t have much time left over for beginning new marketing endeavors; hopefully, you’ll be too busy with interviews and events designed to call attention to your book’s publication.
  • On-going. Things will settle down to a “maintenance” stage after your book’s publication. Your primary activities will involve keeping your book in the news, (and search engines), by commenting on reader feedback, encouraging reader reviews at Amazon.com, and blogging about new ideas that have emerged after your book’s publication.

Stage 1: Announcement

Here are some of the marketing tasks you should be addressing during the Announcement stage, right after you formally plan your publication agreement:

  1. Social media. Announce your book’s title, publisher information, and publication date on your blog, and social media like Twitter, Facebook, etc.
  2. Press. Prepare a press release and add it to your current website’s press center, as well as submit it online and offline to appropriate media.
  3. Special markets. Prepare a list targeting special, i.e., non-bookstore, markets that are likely to be interested in your book, and announce your book using postcards and special market catalogs like Brian Jud’s Premium Book Company.

As in the stages that follow, the best way to assure that the tasks are completed is to prioritize the tasks, and assign definite (and realistic) starting dates and deadlines for each task, as shown in the worksheet samples.

Stage 2: Pre-launch

The Pre-launch phase is the longest and, in many ways, the most important. Here, you’ll be preparing the structure that will roll into action as your book’s publication date approaches. Tasks include:

  1. Building anticipation. It’s never too early to start discussing your book using a series of podcasts, teleseminars, or videos describing why you’re writing your book, the topics you’re covering in your book, and how your target market will benefit from your book. Each podcast, teleseminar, or video enhances your search engine visibility and begins to attract prospective book buyers.
  2. Online marketing. Unless you’ve already set up a blog for your book, it’s important that you set up a blog with an incentive and autoresponder to capture the names and e-mail addresses of prospective book buyers. Online marketing also includes setting up an Author’s Page at Amazon.com, which can include audios, videos, and an RSS feed from your blog.
  3. Marketing partners. One of the most important pre-publication tasks is to identify others who sell to markets similar to yours, so you can set up a series of Launch Week promotions to introduce you and your book to their clients and prospects. The more work you do for your marketing partners, like creating landing pages and marketing messages for them to forward during your Launch Week promotion, the easier it will be to encourage marketing partners to promote your book’s publication, building advance sales and publication week sales.
  4. Virtual book tour. Bookstore signings, although valuable in your area, may not be as important as virtual book tours that consist of teleseminar interviews hosted by bloggers and marketers with a strong Internet presence. Elizabeth Marshall is one of the most experienced resources for setting up virtual book tours.
  5. Book covers and one sheets. It’s never too early to “encourage” your book publisher to begin working on a front cover design for your book. You’ll need a tentative book cover so you can produce downloadable and attachable one-sheets that describe your book, it’s contents, and its benefits to website visitors and the press.
  6. Pre-publication reviews and testimonials. Finally, you should be building your expert network as early as possible, and preparing a “quote package” that you can send to experts in your field, soliciting their pre-publication comments and testimonials about your book.

As always, slow and steady wins the race; consistent weekly progress, beginning as early as possible, creates the best results.

Stage 3: Launch week.

With systems already set in place by the time your book’s publication date approaches, you’ll be able to focus on putting your best foot forward as you promote your book in the following ways:

  1. Teleseminars and speaking. Hopefully, your book’s publication week will be occupied with a full schedule of local and online events. Each night, as you prepare for bed, you should review the talking points you want to weave into your interviews and responses to audience questions.
  2. Acknowledging key supporters. As soon as your advance copies of your book arrive, you should send copies, accompanied by hand-written notes, to all who contributed pre-publication quotes and reader testimonials.
  3. Encouraging reader reviews. Whenever possible, you should encourage family, friends, and key supporters to submit Reader Reviews to online bookstores like Amazon.com and others. You can also encourage these in your blogs and newsletters.

Traffic to your blogs and websites should be growing during your book launch week, as autoresponders and other online tools do the work while you reap the rewards of the marketing systems you’ve put in place.

Stage 4: On-going

Things settle down even more after the publication of your book. Promotion never “ends,” and you’ll undoubtedly discover new marketing opportunities as you move forward.

During the on-going, or maintenance, stage, a single blog post a week calling attention to your book, possibly referencing current events or new information, may be enough to maintain your book’s momentum and search engine visibility.

Setting yourself apart

The above 4-stage marketing approach, with the emphasis on the third, or Pre-Launch, stage will provide you and your book a significant competitive edge over your competition.

Many authors simply ignore the realities of book marketing, trusting their publisher or the fates to market their book for them. Most authors still begin to promote their book too late, i.e., after their book appears!

But, you can be far ahead of your competition if you’ve done your homework during the Announcement and Pre-launch stages. The benefit? While others are just getting started, you can be working on your follow-up titles, or leverage your book into highly-profitable back-end products and services.

As always, a little planning goes a long way!


In many ways, teleseminars are the ideal tool to launch your book to great success. Teleseminars make it easy and affordable for you to generate advance orders for your book, leading to a successful book launch.

Why teleseminars?

Here are some of the reasons teleseminars work so well for nonfiction authors:

  • Free. Let’s start with the obvious; most teleseminar services are free. Combine this with the “free market” opportunities of e-mail and social marketing (blogs, Twitter, etc.) and you have a dynamite marketing tool that far surpasses the free tools available to authors in previous decades.
  • Easy. Teleseminars are easy to prepare and deliver. All you need to do is prepare a simple outline, or mind map, or outline, of the topics you want to discuss.
  • Personal. Teleseminars build enthusiasm and early “buy in” for the launch of your book. Teleseminars not only build familiarity and trust, but listening to you discuss your book as you write creates a community that wants to see your book succeed.
  • Pre-publication testimonials. Discussing and sharing drafts of your upcoming book with teleseminar attendees will inevitably lead to live and e-mailed pre-publication quotes which you can use on your website and for promoting your book.

But, perhaps the most important benefit of a teleseminar series about your book is the opportunities they offer for pre-selling copies of your book before it appears.

Advance sales

There are two benefits of advance sales. If you’re self-publishing, advance sales can generate cashflow before your book appears. To benefit from advance sales, you’ll want to create a meaningful incentive- -beyond just a pre-publication discount- -such as audio copies or transcripts of your calls, or PDF copies of bonus content, such as special reports or worksheets.

Advance sales are equally important if your book is being published by a trade publisher for bookstore distribution. Bookstores pay careful attention to advance orders; titles with strong advance sales on Amazon.com and other online retailers. Bookstores will view advance orders as evidence of strong market interest in your book, increasing the likelihood they will increase their initial orders.

In addition, evidence of strong advance sales might also free up some additional marketing support from trade publishers.

Promoting your teleseminars

Promoting your teleseminar series is easier today than ever before.  Today’s authors have access to a wide selection of free, online, marketing tools that will make it easy for you to promote your teleseminars.

You’re probably already using most of the tools, such as:

  1. E-mail marketing
  2. Blogging and guest blogging
  3. Social media, like Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn
  4. Online press releases

Your ability to manage your time is an important predictor of teleseminar success. Success comes from promoting your teleseminars the same way you use tools like a Google Calendar to schedule your writing time. Successful authors view their writing time as time commitments, or appointments, they make with themselves. A couple of 30-minute sessions each week should be enough to use e-mail and the Internet to promote your teleseminars and promote the launch of your book.

Teleseminar Planning

Preparing for your teleseminars

Most authors find teleseminars easy to prepare, since it is often easier to talk about a topic than it is to write about it.

There’s no reason to “script” your teleseminar, as this will inevitably cause you to speak in a “reading” voice. Instead, prepare an outline, or a mind map (download sample), that displays the topics you want to cover, and in what order.

Avoid sentences when planning teleseminar content

Resist the urge to include full “subject, verb, noun” sentences in your outlines or mind maps!

Instead, simply list the keywords, or phrases, you want to cover. Include enough information to jog your memory, and keep you on track, but keep your notes as short as possible. This will result in a much more lively teleseminar for both you and your attendees.

After all, your teleseminar attendees are adults; they’re not children who want you to read to them, they want to hear your talk about your upcoming book, and be able to comment and ask you questions!

Presentation tips

Here are a few teleseminar tips that have helped me over the years:

  • ŸMuting. Always mute your callers to avoid distractions like vacuum cleaners, dogs barking, background conversations, or- -worst of all- -answering machines.
  • Beginning. Always begin by describing the relevance of the information you’re about to share, and how it aligns with your book and your market’s information needs.
  • Middle. Don’t try to tell everything about your book in a single teleseminar. Instead, focus each teleseminar on a single chapter, or topic, covered in your book. Limit teleseminar content to 3 main ideas, followed by a short bullet list of tips. Avoid spending too much time on any one point.
  • Question & Answers. Never end your teleseminar with a request for comments and questions. If callers don’t respond, your disappointment and discomfort will be obvious, and it will sap the energy of everyone on your call. Instead, open the lines with an invitation for questions and comments well before the end of your call.
  • Resist the urge to panic when callers don’t immediately respond. No one wants to be the first caller to comment or ask a question. Give them time to respond. Once the first caller asks a question or comments, the others will follow.
  • Conclusion/call to action. End your call with a summary of the important points, and a call to action. Your call to action can be an invitation to pre-order your book, or you can direct callers to a landing page where they can download a bonus PDF and learn more about you- -or take advantage of your latest offer.

Teleseminar frequency

As in so many other aspects of marketing, success rarely comes from an individual teleseminar; instead, success typically is the result of a series of teleseminars that build on each other and reinforce each other.

It’s up to you to decide how far ahead of your book’s launch you want to begin your teleseminars. There’s nothing wrong with committing to a pre-publication teleseminar series to launch your book the day you sign your publishing contract or the day you begin writing your book. However, once you commit to a teleseminar series to promote your book and attract pre-publication sales, set up a schedule of events at consistent intervals. The commitment of a scheduled teleseminar series will ensure the success of your book launch promotion.

Visit Roger C. Parker’s Active Garage resource center, where you can download mindmaps and resources available only to Author Journey readers. (No registration required)

When you begin to write your book, you may be pleasantly surprised to find that you’ve already made significant progress….especially, if you’ve been active in your field for a long time.

Because you may have already written a lot of your book, the first writing step you should take is to take a fresh look at your hard drive, looking for content just begging to be included in your book!

Existing content takes many forms

To help you locate contents you already wrote, I’ve added a copy of my Existing Content Inventory Worksheet to my Active Garage Resource Page which you can download without registration.

My Existing Content Inventory Worksheet will help you keep track of content like case studies, examples, ideas, opinions, perspectives, procedures, resources, shortcuts, tips, and warnings.

Where to look for ready-to-use content

Look for existing content you can reuse for your book in files originally created for projects like:

  • Articles & newsletters
  • Blog posts & comments
  • Books, e-books, & previous book proposals
  • E-mail
  • Memos & reports
  • New business proposals
  • Presentations & speeches
  • Press releases
  • Teleseminars, webinars
  • White papers

As you review your previous client, prospect, and writing files, you may be surprised at the content richness waiting for you.

During your exploration, you might want to search your hard drive for key phrases and words that might take you directly to the content you’re looking for.

What to do after locating existing content

Once you consolidate the titles, relevance, and locations of existing content onto copies of the Existing Content Inventory Worksheet, you can address questions like:

  • What type of content is it? Is the content an idea, a process or a technique, a case study, an interesting anecdote, or a tip?
  • Where does the content belong in my book? Which chapter?
  • How much of the content is useful? Where will it appear within the chapter? Will the content be used as part of the text of your book, or is it more appropriate as a sidebar interview or tip?
  • How literally can I reuse the content? Can I simply copy and paste the content, (assuming you have copyright ownership of the content)? Or, do I need to paraphrase the content? Do I need to expand the content? Do I need to verify the accuracy of the content?
  • Do I need permissions for quotations? You may not need to obtain permission, for example, if the quote appeared in a published magazine or newspaper article. You might have to get permission, however, if you quoting an individual’s comments in a recorded teleseminar interview you hosted.

In many cases, of course, you may have originally written the content in long-forgotten articles, blog posts, or newsletters.

Of course, if you already knew, or suspected, that you were going to be write your current book, you’d- -hopefully- -have tracked the content using a mind map like the one I prepared for this blog post series (among other free resources).

Conclusion

Writing a book doesn’t have to mean a time-consuming endeavor requiring you to write every word from scratch! If you’ve been active in your field for a long time, you may have already written a lot of your book! Even better, if you used tools like mind mapping to organize your content and track your writing, you may be pleasantly surprised to find how much of your book has already been written.

Roger C. Parker helps business professionals write brand-building, thought-leadership books. He’s written over 30 books, offers writing tools at Published&Profitable, and posts writing tips each weekday. His next book is Title Tweet! 140 Bite-Sized Ideas for Article, Book, and Event Titles.