Two
Gun Hart has been available for pre-order for a month now and I’ve been doing
all the pre-release publicity for it.
Every day it’s been going out to various locations to get attention for
it. Since we’ve been in the first of
three months of promotions, I’ve been primarily focusing on places that need
time to have an effect. They include the
following:
Reviews: I went down the list of reviewers on The
Indie View (http://www.theindieview.com/indie-reviewers/)
and I listed each one that showed some interest in non-fiction historical. (Oddly enough, it’s a very small number. Most on The Indie View are interested in sci
fi and fantasy.) I then went through
each one on that list and followed their submission policy, sending the book
when requested. I was not very picky,
but I weeded out any that I figured wouldn’t have much of an interest. There was one, also, that I weeded out because
her instructions were written in a way that can only be described as “bitchy.” She almost seemed to be daring someone to ask
her for a review. I’m not afraid of bad
reviews, but I don’t have time for people who have a bad attitude from the
outset. I also sent the book to several
select places that would be interested in this subject, such as the Lincoln
Journal Star in Nebraska, and a couple places in Chicago. One of my next steps is to send it to
newspapers and other places with reviewers and hope that it can get reviewed in
time.
Speaking
Engagements: I’ve contacted a number of
bookstores and libraries to have talks after the book releases. I’ll be having an event here in Burbank when
the book releases in March. I’ll then be
heading to Nebraska and Iowa in April, and will have an event in Chicago in
May. I’ll then be speaking in San
Francisco near the end of May, and will have a couple more events in Nebraska
and one in Austin in October. Several
places are lined up, but I’ll have more specifics later on. In trying to plan these, I’ve discovered that
a lot of locations prefer to have multiple authors do readings/signings at the
same time, as individual ones don’t usually bring in crowds unless they’re
somehow a celebrity. As such, I’ve been
trying to emphasize the fact that I’ll be coming with the son of Richard Hart,
(and nephew of Al Capone,) via Skype.
Interviews: I’ve been following up former leads to do
interviews; people who have asked me to let them know when this specific book
was coming out. I wanted to make sure
they had the first opportunity to get the story before anyone else. One of the podcasts, Outlaw Radio, will have
an interview with me the weekend before it releases, (March 14.)
Goodreads
giveaway: I began a Goodreads giveaway
that will end on February 1st.
I will then get the book to those who won it so they can start talking
about it.
Press
release: I did a press release through
PRWeb and got a very good response. Tens
of thousands saw it, and close to 5,000 read the article. Then a few hundred ran the story. It said simply in the headline “Al Capone Had
Long Lost Brother Who was Prohibition Officer”.
That caught a lot of people’s attention, so it was easy to do. This is a story that is easy to sell to news
stations because it is real news. The
difficult part is then converting readers of those stories into buyers of the
book. It also helped that I purchased
the $250 level from PRWeb, which expanded the viewership. The only problem is that few people seem to
have purchased the book after the story ran.
I’m thinking it might have been a little too far away from the release
date. I’ll probably run one more story,
this one focusing on his involvement in getting the money back from the largest
bank robbery in history, closer to the release date. This time I’ll probably just use the $100
release.
Preparing
for Bookstores: I’ve been studying what
needs to happen to get books into bookstores.
The main ingredient is getting it listed with Ingram Spark. Ingram Spark makes it sellable at bookstores
because it will take returns. This
unfortunately means I have to pay $150 to register with Ingram Spark, and
another $125 for an ISBN. This ISBN can
only be used for one format, so I chose to have it be hardcover. That way the hardcover will sell at
bookstores, the paperback will be
available through Amazon, and the ebook will be available through Kindle, Nook,
Kobo, Smashwords, Apple, Google, etc.
Physical
pre-orders: So far, Amazon only allows
ebooks to be pre-ordered. However, I
want people to be able to purchase hard copies in pre-order. Therefore, I’m going to be having a
Kickstarter campaign which is not intended to raise money for the book, but
rather to have a place where people can order paperbacks and hardbacks. Getting the orders through Ingram Spark is
expensive and difficult, so the books for this campaign are being printed
through Lulu. It doesn’t come with a
barcode, but books going through them are only intended for giveaway type
situations.
So January comes to a close with the initial phases of beginning
word of mouth being done. Now it'll be time to start ramping up interest
in the push to release.
No comments:
Post a Comment