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Top : Book Marketing : Page 5
Articles:
- Secrets to Keeping your Bestseller in the Top Ten List by Jason Oman
- Yes, the bestseller status is quite an honorable one and can change your life and the way you live forever. Not only can it change your life financially, but emotionally as well, giving you a tremendous amount of credibility in the eyes of strangers. So, what is the secret to keeping your book fixed on the top ten spot in the bestsellers list.
- SELL YOUR BOOK AT BOOK FAIRS, FESTIVALS AND TRADE SHOWS by Catherine Franz
- Play a bigger game with your book sales by expanding your audiences at local or nonlocal book fairs, festivals or trade shows. Can't afford a booth or table, rent a space on someone else's table and volunteer to be back for their book. In fact, rent a corner at various different tables in the same fair or show and triple your exposure.
- SELLING YOUR BOOK EFFECTIVELY by Robyn Whyte
- So for the first time author who knows how much people love books, the first months can be incredibly frustrating. You have a book. You are published. Look, there it is. Watch me flip the pages. It is a whole part of the person who wrote it and yet open to enjoyment and interpretation by all who read it. So what now?
- SEVEN SECRETS OF WRITING A BOOK THAT SELLS by Penny C. Sansevieri
- Ensuring the success of a book is something even the biggest publishers have never been able to guarantee. Mitigating circumstances, flash trends, and world events will all affect buyer preferences. That said, there are still ways to leverage the sales-factor in your favor and here's how you do it.
- Should I Self-publish or Pitch My Book To A Publisher? by Brian Scott
- You've spent many nights working on your book. You've rewritten it, edited it, and you used a professional proofreader to proof it. Your book is done – finally -- and you're ready to send your precious manuscript off to a publisher, thinking that writing it was the hardest part.
- TAMING THE BOOK PROPOSAL by Jill Nagle
- Even if you want to self-publish, a book proposal serves as a sort of business plan for your book. The time and energy spent on research, evaluation and comparison of your ideas at the outset pays off down the line many times over. After all, wouldn’t you rather find out now that someone else has said similar things more eloquently and have a chance to amend your manuscript, than publish the darn thing only to read terrible—or worse—no reviews?
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