This tantalising article by Jesse S. McDougall, Published Author and Owner of Catalyst Webworks. In the post she discusses how the rise of social media presents new and powerful opportunities to
book publishers. The millions of discussions taking place on social
media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and across the
blogosphere all thrive on the new content. Like in the real-world, the
most popular discussions online are based on content that is original,
edited, and expert—exactly the content that book publishers produce
every day.
If done correctly, a publisher diving into the social media world will find:
- A vibrant community of readers
- A valuable word-of-mouth network
- Numerous market research opportunities
- Access to new media outlets for promotion
- New audiences for books and authors
A strong social media presence takes time and a sustained effort to
build. In light of this commitment, it is important that book
publishers begin with a clear strategy that has proven results.
Here is a quick list of five steps publishers will need to take to launch a social media strategy:
Step One: Define Your Niche
It is important that you have a clear idea of your niche before you jump into social media. If you publish books spanning several niches, you should consider setting up a social media campaign for each niche in which you publish. For example, if you are a publisher of a wide range of political books, you know all too well already that your conservative audience does not want to learn about your progressive books, and vice versa. Likewise, if you are a cookbook publisher, your cocktail books likely won’t fly too well with your barbecue audience.
It is important that you have a clear idea of your niche before you jump into social media. If you publish books spanning several niches, you should consider setting up a social media campaign for each niche in which you publish. For example, if you are a publisher of a wide range of political books, you know all too well already that your conservative audience does not want to learn about your progressive books, and vice versa. Likewise, if you are a cookbook publisher, your cocktail books likely won’t fly too well with your barbecue audience.
Drill down your efforts to a specific audience. Set up your strategies accordingly.
Step Two: Plan Your Content
The content you publish to your web site (see Step Three) and the social media platforms should not be promotional in nature (“Come read our latest book!”)—rather it should provide value to your audience in some way. However, the content should ALWAYS link back to your book’s page and author’s page. This way, as the content travels around the blogosphere and the social media networks, your links travel with it.
The content you publish to your web site (see Step Three) and the social media platforms should not be promotional in nature (“Come read our latest book!”)—rather it should provide value to your audience in some way. However, the content should ALWAYS link back to your book’s page and author’s page. This way, as the content travels around the blogosphere and the social media networks, your links travel with it.
Some quick content tips:
- mine your author community for videos, op-eds, interviews, etc.
- sidebars and callouts make great web content
- numbered lists (i.e. top ten lists) play very well online
Step Three: Your Web Site
Your web site will serve as the hub of this new social media strategy. All the content you produce should flow through a blog on your web site first—unless, of course, you have exclusive deals with other popular blogs. Your web site will become a resource for anybody interested in your niche. If your blog isn’t the main page of your site, feature it prominently.
Your web site will serve as the hub of this new social media strategy. All the content you produce should flow through a blog on your web site first—unless, of course, you have exclusive deals with other popular blogs. Your web site will become a resource for anybody interested in your niche. If your blog isn’t the main page of your site, feature it prominently.
Make your content portable by integrating it with social media toolbars from Facebook, Twitter, Digg, etc.
Step Four: Find and Listen to Your Audience
Once your blog is up and running, and the content is flowing through
it, you should begin exploring the largest social media platforms for
conversations related to your niche. Once you find people talking about
your topic area, listen. For two weeks. Before jumping into the
conversation, get an idea of the people involved, the social etiquette,
and the opinion-makers.
When you do jump in, relax your marketing muscles. No one joins
these networks for marketing messages. Establish your company the a
valuable and friendly expert in the group. Point folks to helpful
content from your blog.
Step Five: Go!
When you’ve finally got an idea of how all the various pieces work,
you can begin engaging in your new community in earnest. Invite your
authors into the discussions. Invite other passionate folks at the
company. Stay friendly, and stay passionate about your niche. Your
audience and community will grow over time. Good luck!
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