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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: target audience, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Publishing Terms


As an aspiring author I don't claim to know everything but I do know that there's so much more to being a writer then just writing a book. Like many new authors, I started out sending a manuscript after a few drafts to every publisher I could find listed in the yellow pages and on the Internet. Little did I know what I was up against with my competitors (other aspiring authors) and their weapons of mass destruction (aka-knowledge).

I've constructed this list of publishing/writing terms (weapons) that will hopefully help you put your best foot (or book) forward, sorry I couldn't help myself. All the best with your writing goals and never ever give up! 

Query Letter: Is a one page email or letter to an editor/publisher asking if you may send your book proposal. The query letter has to showcase your writing skills so keep it professional. You don't need a query letter if the publishers website states that they are currently accepting unsolicited manuscripts.


PitchA successful pitch sets up your book and the need for it in the marketplace. Try the elevator test and see if you can sum up your book in the time it takes for an elevator to go from your floor to the lobby. You could also set up a timer and give yourself 5 minutes to explain your book.
3 Comments on Publishing Terms, last added: 9/23/2011
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2. Marvelous Marketing: Identifying Your Target Audiences

The winner of The Liar Society giveaway is Lori Lee (email me your address at [email protected])

The real lie was that "I wear colored contacts". I do not - that is my real eye color. Though, I get asked that a lot.

I do dye my hair a little darker/richer than it really is (can you say mousy brown? not that I have any gray or anything.....) and the weight on my DL is actually correct! (believe it or not! Just don't ask me what it is!:)

We are finally back to Marketing Mondays which will include interviews, tips, and other resources on marketing yourself and your books.

Today is on the topic of identifying the segments or target audiences for your book so you can hone your marketing better.

When people come to me for marketing consultation or to do web sites or to create swag - most authors or writers cannot list for me the target audiences for their book. I find most of us think are targets are: teens, librarians, schools, and bookstores.

They are... but there is so much more to it than that.

As you begin your marketing plan/strategy, it is important to segment out all your audiences into smaller chunks. You cannot target a billion teens, a katrillion schools, and a million librarians.

Here is something you can do now before you are agented and published - identify the target audiences for your books.

1) Write down all the topics your book covers.

(For example - a teen knitting mystery set in an Alabama summer camp would probably have: knitting, mystery, and Alabama to start with)

2) Identify the audiences interested in the topics.

(For example - just off the top of my head, I would divide the teen market into the following segments: those who like knitting, those who are crafty/like doing crafts, those who love mystery, Alabama teens, teens in the south, teen camp counselors etc)

3) For each audience, identify the top 3-5 ways to reach them.

(For example - lets take knitting - Google knitting magazines, craft magazines, knitting/sewing clubs, etc)

4) Keep a record of everything (I prefer excel myself) and start documenting all the information for future: contact name, address, phone, web site address, type of channel (magazine, club, ezine etc)

That is how you start thinking through the main targets of your book so you can be prepared when it comes time for your book to come out.

What questions do you have? Do you find it hard to drill down and identify your target audience for you book? Can you identify 3 groups?


13 Comments on Marvelous Marketing: Identifying Your Target Audiences, last added: 3/9/2011
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3. Book Marketing Mondays: Your Book Marketing Plan – Who Should You Be Promoting Your Book To?

Guest Expert: Dana Lynn Smith

As you write your book and develop your book marketing plan, one of the first priorities is to define your target audiences.

The primary target audience for your book is the “ideal reader” that the book was written specifically for. In your book marketing plan, define the characteristics of your ideal reader, asking questions such as these:

• What is their age range, gender, and education level?
• Where do they live?
• What is their family status – single, married with kids, retired couple?
• What is their income level and occupation?
• What are their interests and hobbies?
• What makes this person the ideal reader for your book?
• What are their book buying habits?

In addition to the ideal reader, most books have several secondary audiences. Your book marketing plan should include strategies for reaching audiences such as these:

Readers – people who buy the book to read. This is the most obvious category and it includes your primary audience as well as secondary audiences who have an interest in your topic or genre.

Purchasers – people who buy the book for someone else. For example, people buy books as gifts, parents and grandparents purchase books for children, women buy men’s health books, companies and organizations purchase books to give away as gifts and premiums. Who would be likely to purchase your book for someone else, and how can you reach those folks?

Retailers – companies who buy your book to sell it to others. If you’re selling through physical bookstores or other retailers, you have the task of convincing these resellers that your book will sell in their stores and demonstrating how you can help generate demand.

Influencers – people who communicate with your target customers and can let them know about your book. The influencers may be the most important category of all, especially in online marketing and social media. Think about how much you can multiply your marketing efforts when other people spread the word to their own readers, customers, and networks.

Your book marketing plan should outline specific tactics for reaching influencers, including print, broadcast and online media. You can reach the media through traditional publicity efforts as well as online press releases and article distribution.

Other important influencers include authors, consultants, and bloggers who cater to your target customers. These folks can mention you, your website, and/or your book in several ways, including blog posts, links, Twittering, ezine articles, and media sharing tools like Digg.

Here are some tips on working with influencers:

• Search the Internet to compile a list of the top websites, blogs, ezines, magazines, newsletters, online forums, books, ebooks, clubs, and association that cater to your target market or cover your topic.

• Study each site to get a good understanding of what they do and how it relates to your book, and look for possible promotional opportunities.

• Write a thoughtful, customized email or letter sincerely complimenting the prospect about their site, publication, or organization, and suggesting some specific ways that you might work together to your mutual benefit.

It’s also important to read the top blogs and online forums on yo

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4. PUBLICIZE YOUR BOOK!: Target Audience

Who will your readers be? What is their age group? Profession? Interests?

"What kind of reader did you imagine while writing?"

"Which individuals will benefit from reading your book?"

"Who do you think will buy your novel?"

"Can your book attract readers of books from other genres?"


While writing, it is easy to have a specific audience in mind. Since I write middle-grade, I think of upper elementary / lower middle school kids as I create a story. But now that my work is on submission, I need to think beyond this initial audience.

What other people might be interested in your book?

Think about your story. What things about it make it unique? My novel-in-verse, MAY B., takes place in Kansas in the 1870s. May struggles with an unnamed learning disability, most likely dyslexia.

How can these unique aspects interest those beyond your initial audience? Brainstorm a list, however ridiculous, of others who might find your story interesting.

Here's what I've come up with for MAY:
  • Readers of Louisiana Literature magazine (a portion of MAY B. was featured in LA Lit's 2009 spring/summer edition)
  • Learning disability organizations
  • Learning disability educators
  • Blogs/sites for parents with learning disabilities
  • Dyslexic organizations
  • Dyslexic education
  • Dyslexic blogs/sites for parents with dyslexic children
  • Kansas Historical Society
  • Kansas Historical museums
  • Kansas libraries
  • Kansas schools, teaching programs, and teachers
  • National Council for Teachers of Social Studies
  • Adolescent literature professors
  • Museum gift shops in the Mid-West
  • Kansas newspapers
  • Mid-West Magazine? Sunset?
  • Kansas public radio
Though some of these groups listed might be a stretch (NCTSS probably won't take much interest, for example, and I have no idea if Sunset Magazine does book reviews, let alone reviews for children's books), I've expanded my thinking about my audience.

I'm slowly starting to collect addresses, phone numbers, and email for Kansas Museums. Maybe sometime soon I'll seek out some sites on learning disabilities, not to toot my own horn, but to add to the conversation. Promotion is as much about respecting your audience as it is sharing your book.

What groups beyond your initial audience could be part of your target audience?

11 Comments on PUBLICIZE YOUR BOOK!: Target Audience, last added: 3/5/2010
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