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Make
Big Money On Your Book - 10 H*O*T Tips |
by:
Susan
Harrow |
Wouldn't
it be nice to write a book, get paid handsomely
for it and be considered a top expert all
at once? It's possible--if you know the
rules.
1. Study the publishing industry.
Today celebrity books rule. Books that catch
a quick trend come in second. Take chick
lit, for example. Nobody cared about hip
books for women ten, or even five years
ago. But women buy the majority of books--and
actually read them. It's not to say that
other book genres aren't viable. Of course
they are. The big categories of fiction
and non- fiction will live on forever. But
even self-help is on the wane according
to some sources. And, as a literature savvy
friend of mine said, *Plots are passe.*
There's much more to know about the industry.
Like what agents look for and how publishers
decide on what will be profitable.
2. Understand that publishers don't buy
books, they buy ideas.
Many new authors think they need to write
a book to sell it. Not so. You develop an
idea (fiction excluded) and give publishers
a taste of what's to come. They decide whether
your idea has a large enough market for
them to make money on it. You must prove,
without a doubt that they can. Lots of it.
3. Think of your proposal as the business
plan for your book.
Map out the life of your book in the marketplace
for the next five years. Plan on devoting
at least that much time to promoting it.
4. Have a huge platform.
A platform is simply YOUR ability to sell
books to the audience that you have said
will buy--from you. Are you already a *personality*
people recognize and love? How many organizations,
companies, groups do you speak to every
month? Do you write regularly for newspapers,
magazines or the Internet? Do you have prestigious
clients who can sell your books in bulk
to their corporations? You get the idea.
You must *look* like a mover and shaker
in your field.
5. Be a media star.
If you're not already a familiar face on
TV, a vivacious voice on the radio or a
person who appears in print often, not to
worry. If you can show you have the potential
to become a star, that's a start. Maybe
you've been on local TV and had rave reviews.
If so, mention that.
6. Speak.
A major publishing house hired me to media
coach one of their rising star authors.
Her book was getting major national press--but
she was dull. And they were worried that
her lackluster personality would effect
her book sales. We worked until she got
comfortable on camera while talking vividly
in 15 second soundbites.
7. Get media coached.
With some media coaching you can morph into
a mediagenic maven. But it does take practice
and sincere commitment. You can work on
your pizzazz factor by studying great interviewees
and modeling the behaviors you liked. If
you can't afford a media coach, get out
that video camera and do mock interviews
with friend. A lot can be revealed and ironed
out just by seeing how you appear to others
on the big screen.
8. Develop your platform.
When I interviewed editors at top New York
publishing houses like Simon & Schuster
& HarperCollins they told me repeatedly
that the most important thing a writer can
have today is a strong *platform.* A platform
is a plan of how you are going to reach
your audience to sell books.
Prove you have a following. Publishers want
to know who has bought your books or products
in the past-- and they want to know how
many. Can you show that you have a track
record of selling your goods to people across
the globe, or at least in your community?
Maybe you're not as far along in your career
as one of my clients who is a $12,000 an
hour speaker who put in his proposal the
fact that his audiences range from 100-10,000
people, and he speaks 250 times per year.
His speaking bureau typically sells his
video and audio tapes to those audiences
in advance when they book his talk. What
you want to show is how you can secure sales
in large quantities to people you know will
buy from you--because they have bought already.
Or how audiences similar to the ones who
have purchased are primed to buy your book.
9. Get high profile endorsements.
To instantly establish your stature put
these accolades on page number one so they're
the first thing an agent or editor sees.
Endorsements need to be from celebrities,
best- selling authors and well-known experts
in your field.
Show that you're respected in the world.
Endorsements show that high-level people
believe in you, that you're a good bet.
They also go on your book cover jacket and
help sell your book--and in today's competitive
marketplace it's essential. Don't say you're
*actively seeking endorsements.* Leading
with the endorsements makes sure an agent
or editor gets that you're a big shot--or
soon will be.
One secret that many authors don't know
is the best blurbs are written by the writers
themselves. Don't expect famous people to
read your tome. They don't have the time
or the desire. And please don't send it
to them unsolicited. Ask permission. Then
do the work for them and ask them to sign
off on that perfect gem--the one you've
written--touting the marvels of your work.
10. Your sample chapter.
Once you've established that the author
has some sort of a platform, that they have
some voice in the world beyond their circle
of friends, I go straight to the sample
chapter.
Prove you can write. *I want to know if
they are a good writer, because an agent
can tinker away with the rest of the proposal
and make it sound really good,* says Kelly
Notaras, a Senior Editor at Hyperion.
What if you're not a great writer? Hire
a ghost writer. Remember platform is non-replaceable.
You, the personality, the presence, is what
they're investing in. Good writing can be
bought. Star quality can't
About the author:
Do you dream of making big money for your
book idea... even before you write it...
(even if it's your first book.) Want to
be paid $100-$975,000 or more for your book?
Let me show you how. You'll discover how
to land a top literary agent and sign that
coveted 6 figure deal. Get more fr.e.e tips
here: http://tinyurl.com/dwb63
Circulated by Bandoni
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