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Social Currency

October 27, 2020– You can also find this blog post topic on our Podcast today click here to listen: https://jidwkx.podbean.com/e/social-currency/

What is Social Currency? In the most simplistic terms, it’s information shared by people as they go about their lives talking about brands, products, services, and events. We use social currency to make ourselves seem more educated or knowledgeable, more interesting, more attractive, more fun, and more influential to others that we come in contact with.

Social currency is what people say about our books, brand, and business when we aren’t around; it’s what they talk to their friends, neighbours, acquaintances, and colleagues about. For example, when is the last time you talked to someone about toothpaste, coffee, or an oil change? Those things probably don’t sound that interesting and probably don’t make you seem any more educated, attractive, or fun, but each day 100,000 conversations consist of people talking about such items and brands. Why does this matter for authors? Because social currency is what can make or break your books and business. If people aren’t talking about your books, they certainly aren’t buying them. Tip of tongue=top of mind. You want people to talk about your books, to get excited about your new releases, to say good things about you to their friends and family, and to spread the word about your business. So, how do we get people to do this?

  1. Give them something to talk about. Let’s say that you are looking for readers to review your newest thriller; you send them out one copy of your book, but also send an extra one for them to pass on to a friend who might be interested in the same genre. Why? Becasue the story of getting 2 of the same book in the mail (when you were expecting 1) and giving it to a friend is a repeatable, talk-worthy story.  It also gives the book reviewer social currency by making them feel important and telling people that they are trusted to provide an honest review of your work. It makes them seem like an expert or that they’re privy to inside information.
  2. Guerrilla marketing. Do something big. Something totally unexpected. Like the time McDonalds painted a gigantic box of french fries on the street at pedestrian crossing; imagine you’re walking across that intersection with your kids and they see a massive box of fries…guess where you’re going? To the nearest McDonald’s to get a Happy Meal. For an example of what I did for my own Guerilla marketing campaign, listen to the latest episode of my podcast here: https://jidwkx.podbean.com/e/social-currency/
  3. Out of the box thinking. Remember Snapple? The juice drink that came in a glass bottle with a metal lid? Under the lid hid fun facts such as Kangaroos can’t walk backward and a glass ball will bounce higher than a rubber ball. These facts (all true) are fun, repeatable, sharable, and interesting. The same kind of thing needs to be done for your books; could you include a few fun facts at the end of your story? Could you create a contest online that gets people talking and sharing? What if you had an online treasure hunt with a massive prize where the clues could only be found within your books?

People love to talk, but only 7% of word of mouth marketing happens online. The real publicity of your brand/books/business happens in person. Remember that advertising is what you pay for, publicity is what you pray for and social currency is what customers “Hurray” for.

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The Business of Books…

September 28, 2018– A lot of the time what happens in the book business is that new authors don’t treat it as such. I’m not only talking to our self-published friends, I’m talking to our traditionally published peeps as well. The easiest part of being an author is writing the book, and the hardest part is marketing it, hands down, that’s the absolute truth, and that’s coming from someone who has a marketing and advertising background.

I know what you’re thinking, doesn’t the publisher do all the work while I get to sit behind a table at (insert name of bookstore here) and sign copies of my books for all of my adoring fans while they bask in my genius? The short answer? No. The long answer? F#*& No. Newsflash: You are NOT Stephen King, and no one is here to see you.

Harsh but true. Here’s the thing, traditionally published authors are expected to market themselves alongside the publisher. If you’re not willing to put yourself out there and help with the marketing, promotion, publicity, and you’re not willing to put the work in you’re going down in flames, I would bet my business on that. It’s even more of a challenge for our self-published friends! My advice? Get a strong business background first and go from there, learn as much as you can and then implement the good stuff. And if something doesn’t work, you can always pivot and change directions with your marketing plan. In order to become any kind of successful author, or to be successful at anything for that matter, you’re going to have to do whatever it takes, and it’s going to take everything you’ve got.

One of the best pieces of advice I was ever given when I started all of this was, “When you’re writing a book it’s an art. When the book is finished, it’s business. Never confuse the two.” That piece of advice has been instrumental in me making decisions as a writer and business owner.

Keep your chin up, keep writing, remember that this is a business, and take all of the good advice you can get. Remember, you get what you work for, not what you wish for.

Write that on my tombstone.

X LLB

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