Author Promotion Versus Book Promotion: Why You Need Both

Image: The words Photo by Jon Tyson on Unsplash

Today’s post is by author, attorney, and managing editor for Amble Press, Orlando Ortega-Medina.

When I speak to authors about promotion, I often find a common point of confusion: they conflate book promotion with author promotion, treating both as one and the same. In reality, they serve different purposes. And if you want your work to reach the readers who will value it most, you need to be thinking about both.

Book promotion is a sprint

Book promotion is what most writers think of when their manuscript is ready to launch. It’s a time-bound campaign that focuses on getting your book into the hands of readers, reviewers, booksellers, and media outlets. A strong book publicity push typically includes:

Targeted review outreachMedia appearances timed to releaseVirtual or in-person eventsSocial media teasers and campaignsPaid promotions or giveawaysARC (advance review copy) distribution

This kind of promotion often ramps up three to six months before publication and extends a few weeks or months after launch. It’s focused, strategic, and fleeting.

Author promotion is the long game

Author promotion, on the other hand, is an ongoing investment in your identity as a writer and public figure. It’s about building an audience that’s interested in your perspective, not just your latest release. It involves:

Publishing essays, op-eds, or thought pieces on topics aligned with your workParticipating in panels, podcast interviews, or community discussionsMaintaining a professional presence online (website, bio, author photos, etc.)Sharing useful or personal content on social mediaEngaging with readers, influencers, and fellow authors year-round

Author promotion doesn’t stop when the launch buzz dies down. In fact, it’s most powerful when you’re not promoting a new book, because that’s when readers get to know who you are without a sales pitch. Think of it as planting seeds for future harvests.

Why the difference matters

Here’s the reality: If readers, journalists, or podcasters don’t know who you are or why your voice matters, they’re far less likely to care that you have a book coming out. Book promotion without author promotion is like shouting into a void. But when you’ve been steadily building a presence, such as sharing your voice and connecting with your audience, your next book doesn’t just appear, it arrives with anticipation.

Where publishers fit in

Book promotion is typically a collaborative effort between the publisher and the author. We’ll work together to position the book, coordinate outreach, and provide resources where possible. But author promotion—your public identity, your ongoing visibility, your relationship with readers—is entirely yours. No publisher, big or small, is going to build your brand for you.

From my experience as a managing editor at a small press, we receive a steady stream of submissions—some of them genuinely well-written—from authors whose platform consists solely of writing classes, contest wins, or a stated love of writing. But with no website, no social media presence, no previously published work, and no indication of an effort to be known as an author, it becomes incredibly difficult for us to justify taking the financial risk. As a traditional for-profit publisher, our continued existence depends on book sales, and that means working with authors who are already taking steps to engage with their future readership.

That said, once in a blue moon, we come across a manuscript so exceptional that it simply must be published—regardless of the author’s platform. But these cases are the exception, not the rule.

Do-it-yourself author promotion tips

You don’t need a massive budget or platform to get started. Here are a few practical steps:

Build a simple website with your bio, photo, links to your writing, and contact informationPitch short pieces to outlets aligned with your book’s themes or your backgroundEngage with niche communities where your work resonatesStart a newsletter or Substack to connect with readers directlyBe generous online: share your journey, spotlight others, and add value to the conversation.

The key here is consistency. A little effort every month compounds into meaningful presence over time.

When a professional PR firm might be worth it

Once you’ve started laying the groundwork on your own—building a website, engaging with your community, and finding your voice—there may come a point where you want to expand your reach. For some authors, this is where a professional publicist can help.

That said, hiring a PR firm is not essential, and it’s certainly not within reach for everyone. But if you have the resources and a clear goal in mind, the right publicist can help shape your story, pitch to appropriate outlets, and open doors you might not access on your own.

At Amble Press, we’ve seen both sides: authors with little to no platform who’ve struggled to connect with readers despite glowing reviews, and others with modest but focused efforts—think a niche blog, a targeted newsletter, or consistent social media presence—who gained early traction and media interest.

The takeaway? Do-it-yourself promotion is not only possible—it’s powerful. A PR firm is just one tool among many, not a requirement for success.

Final thoughts

The best time to start building your author brand was yesterday. The next best time is now. Don’t wait until you’re a month from launch to start thinking about how to reach readers. Whether you DIY it or bring in professional help, remember that readers don’t just buy books—they buy into people.

And if you’re not showing up, someone else will.

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Published on July 29, 2025 02:00
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Jane Friedman

Jane Friedman
The future of writing, publishing, and all media—as well as being human at electric speed.
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