Being the Same Doesn’t Help You Make a NameWith the onset of the Internet and digital printing, authors are finding it easier than ever to self-publish their books quickly, build their websites, and market their books. Just as with food, however, what is fast and convenient does not necessarily mean it is the healthiest choice for an author. Today, getting a book published, building a website, and producing marketing pieces can happen within a matter of days or even hours. There are online companies that allow you to upload your manuscript and have an e-book for sale within minutes. Even printed books can be accomplished within a matter of a few days. However, fast and easy does not equate with successful when it comes to producing a marketable product, and especially not when trying to sell books. Producing a book and building a website can be overwhelming at first. Plenty of companies are out there that will try to convince you they can make the process easy for you, and in some cases, those companies will also help you to produce a quality product. However, companies that use templates and cookie-cutter approaches are companies that are best to avoid. Here are a few examples of how a cookie-cutter approach can be detrimental to an author and his or her book’s image right from the beginning. Book Covers If as an author, you choose to go the template route rather than hiring a professional cover designer, you will have to settle for a cover that may not best represent your book. Chances are bookstores will realize your book is self-published and be less likely to carry it. Readers might think even they are buying one book and end up buying another if they do not look closely at a book cover. Similarly, people who read another author’s book with the same cover as yours will dismiss yours when they see it, thinking it is another book rather than buying it. In short, not having a distinguishable cover that lets readers know what your book is about will not help your book sales, and most likely will hurt them. Even if people buy your book, if the cover is misleading about the book’s subject, they are unlikely to say anything good about your book to their friends, if they say anything at all, meaning you lose out on the most powerful marketing tool—word-of-mouth. Websites The template choices offered by online companies that sell websites might at first seem abundant. You might even have 100 template choices according to the website company’s advertising, but once you purchase the website, you find that those 100 choices are broken into categories such as education, entertainment, healthcare, transportation, etc. The result is that only entertainment really works as a category for your book and you only have three template choices in that field that perhaps are more representative of dance or theatre than books. Not a single template shows a book or anything relevant to what your book is about. Here is a case in point: I know one author who ended up with a train image on his website. He was writing historical fiction set in the nineteenth century, and trains were mentioned in the book, but his book was not about trains. However, of all the template options, the train picture on the template was the only one that looked remotely historical. After a year of settling for this poor image for his website, he hired a website designer to make his website reflect his product—books. Marketing Following the Crowd In short, while well-intentioned people might tell you, “If you want to sell books, you need to…[do this activity, advertise in this publication, etc.]," remember that no two books are the same, and no two authors are the same. What works for another book will not necessarily work for yours. Don’t Make Cookies. Make Cake. Do not blindly follow what every other author has done. Do not create a cookie-cutter book and image. When the other bakers show up with their plates of cookies, bring a cake to the party, and if you can add some special icing to it, all the better. Give them a product they’ll remember. Irene Watson
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