Paid Book Promotion – Yes It’s Necessay, But Beware

Value for MoneyAs many Vandal readers may know, I also run a book promotion website. Whizbuzz has been operating successfully for over three years, and has taken a ‘soft marketing’ approach to both promoting books and authors, as well as itself. During this time, Whizbuzz has attracted a large following and has just recently been launched on Facebook. With these admissions and disclosures out of the way up front, let me now move on the purpose of this post.


This post is not about my own site, but having mentioned it, I suppose you can call that part ‘soft marketing. However, having access to my own site’s data means I can use it as an example further on in this post.


What I’d like to look at is the rapidly increasing number of new sites offering paid book promotion, and what to look out for when reaching into your wallet to invest in promotion. While some are genuinely good value, there are others that may look good, but are often new entrants with little behind them.


Most of the new entrants use a similar method in setting up shop. They buy Twitter followers to give their accounts an instant sense of grandeur. Of course it looks good when a site can boast 150,000 followers, but if they are mostly bots and dead accounts, which are what purchased Twitter followers are, there is not much value in spending good money on publicising to 150,000 electronically generated nobodies. They just don’t buy books. Because of this, beware of sites offering paid promotional Tweets. $20 or more is a lot to pay to send a Tweet or two to absolutely no one who is actually breathing. So beware of ‘Pay to Tweet’ services, especially if the Twitter account is quite new and it has seen a sudden and dramatic rise in followers.


There are also many websites springing up, and normally connected to a new Twitter account as above, offering often very expensive promotion and marketing packages for books, and while some established sites are well worth the investment, there are many new sites that may not be such good value for money.


To give a graphic example of how to quickly check whether a website that is offering paid promotion is worth considering, a site called Hrefs is one of the best to use. What you are paying for is an audience to see your book. If a site is reasonably long standing, has good traffic and page views with a high number of backlinks, the site is well worth considering. But if not, who will see your book? Look at the following screenshots of firstly my own website, and secondly, a very recent and quite expensive entrant into the paid book promotion business.


 


Whizbuzz Hrefs data

Whizbuzz Hrefs data June 2012


 


New Entrant

New Entrant Hrefs data June 2013


So even though this new entrant may look good on Twitter with approximately 70,000 followers, the truth is that the website was only created just over a month ago, and has only 98 backlinks, a very low URL score, therefore next to no website traffic whatsoever. Comparing 98 to 18,500 backinks for Whizbuzz, it is clear which site generates the most traffic.


Ok, I’m in the book promotion business, so you can call me biased towards my own business, but I believe I give my paying clients not only value for money, but also transparent information and disclosure about what exposure they will really get for their money. If a site is reputable and offering genuinely good value, they will give you their traffic information if you ask. So ask. When planning your book promotion, it makes sense to use a selection of sites to spread the word about your book. So I do not view reputable promotion sites as competition.


A little research before reaching into your wallet for your book promotion is what I would advise though. Whether you are considering spending $50 or $500 on book promotion, use Hrefs and check out exactly what book promotion sites are really offering you, and beware of grand promises.


Promoting a book is always an investment, and in some ways a gamble. Great promotion and advertising won’t fix a bad book, but you do need readers to be able to discover you, so promotion is absolutely necessary. Just make sure a lot of people are going to actually see your book when you pay for promotion so it has a good chance. There are quite a few very reputable book promotion sites on the Net and these sites are well worth using for promoting books. But it’s always wise to check before you hand over your money.



Related posts:


Making The Most From Your Amazon KDP Free Promotion
Virtual Book Tours And Book Bloggers – Just More Paid Reviews?
I Wrote A Book – But It Won’t Sell
The Hard Grind – Marketing Your Self Published Book





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Published on June 12, 2013 06:25
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Just Publishing Advice

Derek Haines
Just Publishing Advice is a resource for all writers.

Publishing is not only about writing and publishing a book or posting your articles online. There is a lot of work and multiple facets involved in
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