Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Why Every Author Needs a Mailing List By Warren Whitlock

I am excited to introduce you to today's expert guest, Warren Whitlock, coauthor of Twitter Revolution, and the Bestseller Book Expert. In today's post, Warren will be talking about why it's important for every author to have a mailing list.

Before we get to his post, I have a couple of quick in-house announcements. The Samson Effect (A Thomas Hamilton Adventure)has continued to do great this month on the Kindle lists. I am actively working on it's sequel which will be released late summer/early fall as part of the Thomas Hamilton Adventure series.

My new mystery/thriller release, The Lottery Ticket: A Novel, is outpacing the first month for The Samson Effect on Kindle, so I'm thrilled with its success as well. Thanks to everyone for your help in spreading the word for these books.

Now, on to Warren's post...


Why Every Author Needs a Mailing List
By Warren Whitlock

With all the talk of social media and the dominance of Facebook in the out thoughts when we market your book online, authors have been asking me "Do I still need a mailing list?"

The answer is any unwavering YES!

In the 1990's, just having an email address from a reader meant you had a connection. Then marketers got busy sending out offers and mailings, with some large companies reaching millions of subscribers. Spammers really added to the clutter to the point where many people shut down one email address and started over.

However, in the past decade, we've all come to depend on email for important communications. Most good email services do a pretty good job of catching the spam, and we've all learned to filter and ignore the mundane or irrelevant mail.

You Have to Be Relevant

When I talk to major marketers about their mailing lists, they tell tales of lower response rates to sales offer emails. One might think that email is on its way out.

Not quite, what on its way out is irrelevant emails.

It's true that some young people forgo an email address to get their messages from other sources, but most everyone is getting email type messages in one or more places. Facebook has just announced integration with email systems. Emails between real people have a real conversation is alive and well.

What does this mean for an author today?

You have a major advantage when you engage readers using email. As an author you understand the power of the written word. In an age where much of the communications amounts to the written equivalent of grunts and murmurs, a little bit of attention to good writing really stands out.

Here are some tips for getting your email read

  1. Make sure you are writing as a human being. Put your own name and a return address on every email and expect that some of your readers will reply and want a response. If you have a large following, you may need some assistance, but there's no excuse for ignoring your readers.
  2. The SUBJECT LINE is the most important part of an email message. If your reader thinks it's just another ad or notice, you’ve lost them before the message is opened.
  3. An email is not a book. Keep it brief, get to the point and let your readers know what do next to continue the conversation.
  4. Don't send email just for your own goals. Pay attention to what the readers will be feeling and thinking when they get your email. What is their desire? Speak to those desires and they will respond.

How To Build Your Mailing List

When you know what your readers want, it's easier to find other places they are reading relevant information. You can buy advertising, or reach these groups in forums, chat rooms and user groups... or you can get creative...

My favorite way to find people who are anxious to read about a subject is a cross promotion with other authors in similar niches. We often put dozens to hundreds of authors together to announce a new book launch or business. We know that readers will like seeing what authors they know recommend.

Connect With the Best Authors for FREE

I set up ZeroCostPromotions.com to help authors build their mailing list when we launch a new best seller.

It FREE to join, just sign up at the link to become a PARTNER.

You'll get the first notice of any upcoming book launch, specialized training, and an inside look at our best seller book launch campaigns.

The site is a bit dated. We are putting up the new page with paid options next month.

Become a PARTNER at ZeroCostPromotions.com to build your list with readers.



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Best Seller Book Expert Warren Whitlock is a marketing strategist, blogger, speaker and author. His new book Profitable Social Media will help authors and business owners who are looking for ways to do business online without playing games

Warren offers free help for authors at BestSellerAuthors.com














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Tony Eldridge is the author of The Samson Effect, an action/adventure novel that Clive Cussler calls a "first rate thriller brimming with intrigue and adventure." He is also the author of the Twitter marketing book, Conducting Effective Twitter Contests. His new novel, The Lottery Ticket, was just recently released on Kindle.

6 comments:

Karen Lange on June 28, 2011 7:52 AM said...

Thank you for sharing this. I need to give this serious consideration for several things I've got going. These points, to me, parallel good blogging principles as well. Thanks again!

L. Diane Wolfe on June 28, 2011 11:47 AM said...

I've had a newsletter for years and a huge mailing list, and I keep it short, featuring other authors and news of the industry. I've also developed a Facebook list, because some people really don't check their emails anymore, but they're on Facebook 24/7.

Carolyn Howard-Johnson on June 28, 2011 12:25 PM said...

Oh, my gosh. This is so true. What good are query letter, media list, and media kit skills without a contact list? There is a section in The Frugal Book Promoter (www.budurl.com/FrugalBkPromo) on how to build lists, too. And having a targeted list (or many more than one!)! Soooo RIGHT!

Sonia Marsh/Gutsy Living on July 1, 2011 6:12 PM said...

I just started a new WordPress blog after using blogger for 3 years and am collecting e-mails from people who wish to be notified about my upcoming book, after my web-designer recommended it to me. I would never have thought of doing this myself, as I'm not published yet.

Burn Fat on May 1, 2012 12:02 PM said...

Will it be good to add a small image of the person to build trust?

Warren Whitlock on May 1, 2012 5:51 PM said...

Yes, and image does build trust. Even in comments where I immediately doubted that the last comment was from a real person :)

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