Writing Workshop – Website Content for Longtail Book Marketing –

you-brandYour website is your brand.


Remember what I’ve said in previous posts about finding a niche for your novels, well how your novel serves this niche is your brand.   Everything about your website should appeal to that niche audience.  In other words, you need to write interesting things on a theme/themes that fit in with the books/novels/series you are promoting. If people are interested in your theme(s) they might be interested in your novels, and visa-versa.


A brand is more than just a novel; it is a whole experience.  Tweet this!


I use WordPress.com for my NickTraversAuthor.com website because it is free and does the job – WordPress.org would be slicker and has lots of useful integrated widgets, but it needs hosting which costs money. WordPress.com, with a few workarounds, is good enough for me. (Other website providers are available, I just happen to use this one because it works for me. If you use another, by all means provide details in the comments section of this blog).


Oh, and did I mention WordPress.com free? Arguments about me being a skinflint aside, free is actually an important consideration, because I am running a business here, which means anything I spend on promoting my novels has to come out of profits from sales. Also, as I said in the first post in this series, any of my book profits I spend on marketing, and a website is definitely a marketing tool, potentially detracts from the quality of my next novel. If I didn’t take this approach, I would be supporting a hobby – which is fine if that is what you want to do, it’s just not my particular aim.


My website, NickTraversAuthor.com  has three thematic elements:



Steampunk – anything about the world of steampunk that I find interesting
The Steampunk world of Nina Swift – ideas, things I am researching, or creating for the steampunk world of my protagonist.
Free writing advice – potted blogs on what I have learned about the craft of writing/story-telling, with plenty of linked examples to my own novels. I tell it like it is, warts and all: no hype, no frills, no romance, no conns, no subscriptions, no charge.

There are also pages where I sell my books, give away freebies, and present ways to earn money (I offer 50% commission through an affiliate scheme to anyone who wants to promote my books). These last two pages are the most visited on my site. One thing I have learned from the awesome Derek Murphy, is to give away lots of things with real value. I wish I had more to give away, but these will grow as I write more books and build the writing business.


The aim for a themed website, is to have lots of interesting articles that your potential readers will want to learn/read about.  This is all about creating buzz for your theme and giving content away for free.  It is also known as Content Marketing.


I’m aiming for a minimum of twenty-five articles on my website, of two-thousand words or more. The articles are then published on stand-alone pages on the website so I can direct traffic straight to that article. At the end of each article suggestions are offered of other similar articles on my website.


I am careful to include examples and illustrations from my own books in each of the articles and blog. The theory being that if a reader gets to know my writing and my books a little, they may want to investigate further and buy the books.


Shorter articles, of less than two thousand words, like this one, are published as regular (or in my case irregular) blog posts. Apparently, the Google search algorithms like articles to be more than two-thousand words in length – I have no idea if this is true, but it sounds to me like a reasonable length for a good in-depth article.


Sometimes, several blog posts on a common theme can, at a later date, be combined to make up a full article.


Most of my blogs fall into two categories: those with Steampunk in the title, or those with ‘Writing Workshop’ at the start of the title, but I also include other stuff in the blogs (Like this article) just because I find them interesting and to show that I am really human.


Once you have a blog set up you can embed it into other services. The only place I do this is on my Goodreads.com account, where I get a lot of ‘friends’ linking to my blog. The only reason I do this for Goodread.com is because I write and sell books and their audience read books – sounds like an ideal fit. Let me know in the comments if you link your blogs to other fruitful services.


Mailing lists, I am told, are absolutely vital to selling new books as they are published and drawing attention to special discounts. These are email addresses of your diehard fans. I offer readers the opportunity to sign up for a VIP emailing list so I can send them interesting stuff in the future, like newsletters, exclusive stories, and details of new publications. I also have individual sign-up lists for many of the free offers, such as ‘free books in return for honest book reviews’. This enables me to set up automated email responders to instantly deliver the relevant discount codes for their free offers, etc.


WordPress.com lacks any widgets for auto-responders, so I use a third-party programme called Mail Chimp.  Mailchimp.com not only allows me to collect readers email addresses, but also allows me to set up an auto-responder ‘thank you’ letter (with discount code included). They also allow me to target my email lists with limited auto-responder campaigns (news letters, etc).


For me Mail Chimp has two distinct advantages for me over its rivals: it is free at the volumes I am using (by now you know how much I love free), and I can download my email lists to store on my own computer – control of my own email lists is an absolute, non-negotiable, must for me. (Other email aggregator services are available. If you use another, by all means provide details in the comments section of this blog).


Now, because WordPress.com will not allow me to embed the MailChimp.com sign-up forms into my website, I need a workaround. Once I have finished the design of my Mail Chimp sign-up forms, in MailChimp.com, I take a screen shot of the finished product, clip it and turn it into a photo, then post it into my webpage text at WordPress.com, then hyper-link the picture of the form to the active Mail Chimp sign-up form.


When a reader clicks on the form to start filling it in, another copy of the form appears in a new window for them to complete. Not quite as slick as an embedded form, but pretty close.


I use the same workaround for videos, because I cannot embed them either – in this case the picture is hyper-linked to my YouTube channel.


I also use this workaround on a new feature I have only recently added. A reader asked if they could make a donation to support my site, so I have added pictures of ‘Donate’ buttons to my site. This is only linked to my Paypal.com account, because linking to merchant cards (Visa/Mastercard etc) is far too expensive. So at the bottom of every article and blog about writing I now add the words, “Please support the work of this author by buying their works or donating below via Paypal.” It never occurred to me that people might like to support the free stuff I provide by giving a donation, but I guess if you don’t ask you don’t get.


Another cool feature I include, is a ‘Tweet this’ options on selected short sentences within the blog or article. Again, there is a widget for this in WordPress.org, but nothing in WordPress.com, so what you need to do is add a piece of additional HTML coding to your blog as a workaround.


It took a while to track this code down, so to save you the trouble here is. http://twitter.com/home/?status= It took a while to track this code down, so to save you the trouble here is. http://bit.ly/1IT9KAx via @njtravers” target=””_blank””>Tweet this!


This is what it looks like in the blog:


It took a while to track this code down, so to save you the trouble here is. Tweet this!


Obviously the ‘via @njtravers’ bit will be your twitter handle not mine.


This has turned into a longer post on websites than I expected. If you have any other useful workarounds for Wordpres.com, or cool features, or experience with other website providers, I would love to hear about them in the comments below.


Next time I will talk about how I use Twitter to drive traffic to my website and Amazon books.


In the meantime …



 


Please support the work of this author by buying their works or donating below via Paypal.


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Published on July 09, 2015 06:49
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