As authors we generally have one
goal, apart from writing books . . . and that’s to sell them. If you accept
that as a key goal, then one thing is vitally important, and that is getting
the message out there that your books exist. Without some form of marketing,
your book will just reside on Amazon’s server as a Kindle file, and do nothing
more. So what do I mean by an author having a brand? The picture below
represents arguably the best known brand on the planet.
Certainly, if a company called
Interbrand are to be believed, the Coca-Cola brand is the most valuable in the
world, with a current estimate, for the brand alone, in the region of
$67billion. No, that’s not a typo. It’s valued in billions of US dollars. Why?
The answer to that is quite simple, although the calculation Interbrand use is
very complex. Wherever you go in the world you’ll generally be able to buy a
bottle, or can, of Coca-Cola. Compared to a ‘local cola’ or supermarket ‘own
brand’ cola, Coca-Cola is more expensive. So it sells more than any other cola,
and sells at a higher price than any other cola, and the logo is recognised the
world over. That’s the value of the brand.
Now as an author you’ll never
compete with Coca-Cola. Not even JK Rowling comes close, and neither should
she. It is a different product, in a different market. But let’s get back to
the Coca-Cola logo for a minute. It has remained unchanged for decades - hence
why we immediately recognise it. So if Coca-Cola advertises on the TV, in the
press, on poster sites, the logo is consistently the same. I now want to raise
the question . . . what is YOUR logo? It can’t be your book cover, unless you
only write one book, and most authors write several. Most marketing of books,
particularly indie books, is done on the Internet, using, in the main, social
networks, such as Twitter and Facebook. If you do use Facebook, make sure it’s
an ‘author fan page’ you use to market your book, not your page which family
and close friends connect with you. Sure, mention the odd success on the
latter, but leave the marketing to your author page. I digress slightly, but
within intent. Your logo needs to be YOU! Until your books become a brand in
their own right, like Harry Potter, the only common theme running across your
books is you.
So how do you build a brand
around you? The first thing is create consistency across all marketing
platforms, and one way to do this is use the SAME photograph of yourself on
EVERYTHING related to your books. Now, I loathe having my picture taken, and
the photo I use is one taken by my youngest daughter (using my camera!) when I
wasn’t looking. It probably looks posed, but I can assure you it wasn’t - but
it’s the one I chose to use. You’ll not see another photo of me on anything
linked to my books. I use it on Twitter, Facebook, my website, other websites
which promote my book, etc. I know other people who do the same, and it helps
me enormously. If I’m interested in their tweets, and I can see their face on
my Twitter feed, I’ll click on the tweet. The same goes for Facebook, when I’m
scrolling through the latest updates. However, if they change their profile
picture, and many do, I’ll easily miss their message, and what’s the point of
messaging in the first instance if you give people a barrier to seeing it.
So for me, rule number one is -
select a picture you are happy with (or in my case find acceptable), and STICK
with it. (Leave the profile picture changing for your family and close friends
on your personal Facebook account.) Don’t hide behind a book cover, or some
other artwork. People interact best with people, and are more likely to trust
you if they can see what you look like. I very rarely follow back ‘Eggs’ on
Twitter, and I certainly don’t start the following process with them.
Rule number two is - ensure you
maximise the potential of your bio on Twitter. If you are an author, tell
people that. Use the limited number of characters wisely, and also come across
as a real person. I’ve had many people tweet me after following, making an
observation about my bio, and in particular my comment about getting 100,000
words in the correct order. (Although that has since been updated to promote this blog.) I’ve seen some authors with just the
word ‘author’ in their bio, and nothing more. If that’s as creative as they can
be, do I want to look at their books, let alone read them? Probably not. Your
bio should also provide a link to your website, not your book on Amazon. Your
website gives people the chance to find a little bit more about you and your
work. They can always go to Amazon from your website, if they like what they
see/read. (See the post about AIDA to understand more why an Amazon book link on your blog isn't ideal.)
By creating a common ‘theme’
across all the marketing platforms you use, you will start to become more
recognised, and recognition will, if established correctly, build a good
reputation. That good reputation will then help to sell your books.
Finally, at the beginning of this
article I drew your attention to the Coca-Cola logo at the top of the page. So
ingrained is that logo in our brains, you probably didn’t spot the subtle
mistake in the one I used. (See if you can spot it.) When you can see and
recognise a logo, and not immediately see a subtle mistake, you know that logo
is part of a very strong brand.
4 comments:
I really enjoyed your post Clive...and know what you mean about having your picture taken. My social networking picture happened much the same way...my daughter snapped it during breakfast one morning. ;)
A great presentation on a very important topic for all authors ... Thanks Clive for a great effort :-)
thank you very much for your information! I think it finally just clicked what our brand should be! thank you for your post! It finally made sense.
Thank you for this! I now understand about 'branding.' I know I've been going about it the wrong way.
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