Tips and Tricks for Book Promotion, Part 1
If writing and publishing our books is one of the most exciting things we do; then getting them sold is frequently the most challenging. Weโve spent months toiling over words, plot, and character; fixing pacing problems and plot conundrums. Then we, have a great cover designed and a gorgeous interior layout. We get out books into Amazon et al. and then the real work begins. Selling!
The trick is to remember that โsellingโ begins the first day you put pen to paper. Maybe even before!
In this article, Iโll provide a few book promotion tips and tricks that should help the โpost-publication blues.โ
Letโs talk about your โauthor platform.โ
That term has been bandied about for years but is best summarized as your virtual presence online. I say โvirtual presence,โ as your author platform means more than your website but your entire presence on the internet … website, Facebook, Instagram, and even your author central page on Amazon!
However, itโs not just where you are but who you are and who you reach (your audience). In corporate parlance … your BRAND.
TIP: Itโs best to pick one or two MAIN avenues of exposure and conquer those; THEN expand into other avenues.
Being a โweb guyโ I often focus on the website portion of an author platform first.
Your website is your headquarters for all of your book promotion work. Your website helps you connect to your audience at a deeper level (because you are not limited in space nor scope), increases interaction, increases your profitability, and provides the greatest flexibility to explain, promote, and grow. Your website also helps you build your all-important mailing list,
TIP: Choose a domain name that contains the best possible searchable words: your name, book name, book series name.
MORE is often better!
Donโt be afraid to invest in multiple domain names and multiple websites.
For example, you may have AuthorName.com, BookName.com, and SeriesName.com. BookName.com can be used for marketing and points to the page on your AuthorName.com site. Same for SeriesName.com. You can, and eventually should, build individual sites for each.
For example, thereโs MargaretDuarte.com. Margaret has a series, Enter the Between. So, letโs create EntertheBetween.com.
TIP: Google loves content. Google loves links. Combine the two and you have a winning approach.
Get Searchable
Think about the phrases โ two to four words โ that you think people would use to find you and your book(s). Think also about the phrases you WANT to be found for on Google. โVisionary Fictionโ is not a common phrase; by using it liberally on your site and in your posts, youโll have a high likelihood of being found on the first couple pages of Google!
Example: โI am a writer of visionary fiction and ….โ โMy newest book is firmly rooted in the visionary fiction genre with ….โ
TIP: Try to use the 3×3 rule when writing content. 3 key term phrases three times on a page or post.
Be Consistent
Write a new post every week or every other week; even once per month is fine as long as you always post and/or send to your list the same date and time. Your fans will begin to expect your posts and thatโs where you want to be.
When youโve written an article/post splash that puppy all over! Post it on your website, send to your email list, post to your Facebook pages (You do have more than one right?), and anywhere else that is relevant.
TIP: ALWAYS include a key term phrase that is linked to your website.

Some solid advice. Never heard the 3×3 rule before–I’ll try it.
yes, definitely useful advice. thanks, aaron!
Thank you for the wonderful advice, Aaron!
The idea of spending the kind of money it would take to follow this advice is a little overwhelming for me at the moment BUT I’m definitely going to keep it in mind for the future. Not being a ‘web guy’, I’m already overwhelmed with having one, undeveloped web site! I guess I’m easily overwhelmed! LOL! Thanks Aaron.