Writing and
publishing your book is not the end of your literary involvement. When readers
have questions, authors have a responsibility to respond by email, mail,
telephone and in person at book signings and other events.
Use these
opportunities to gather material for the books revision or your next
book. Maybe you were not clear enough in your writing or perhaps the customer
is interested in an important area you did not cover.
Bernard (Bear)
Kamoroff, CPA, of Bell Springs Publishing, displays at book fairs and other
industry events for the express purpose of gathering user feedback for Small
Time Operator (23 revised editions and 53 printings in 21 years). At one fair,
a woman said the business book was not for her because she was self-employed.
So, Kamoroff added to the cover: For All Small Businesses, Self-Employed
Individuals, Employers, Professionals, Independent Contractors, and Home-Based
Businesses. Also, due to customer feedback, he has increased the index
from three pages to seven.
OhI listen more and talk less. You
can't learn anything when you're talking. Bing Crosby (1904-1977),
American singer and film actor. If people are asking questions,
they like your work. Note their questions and your responses in a
correction copy of your most recent edition and keep it on your
shelf so you will be able to easily find the updates when the inventory runs
low. Put the new information in your next revised editionand sell the
book to them again.
Listen to your readers. Your best customer is one
you have sold to previously.
Dan Poynter does not want you to
die with a book still inside you. You have the ingredients and he has your
recipe. Dan has written more than 100 books since 1969 including Writing
Nonfiction and The Self- Publishing Manual. For more help on book writing, see
http://ParaPub.com. ©