SFFMP 148: 12 Ways to Keep Your Backlist Selling and Maintain a Steady Income
The guys discussed the various tactics they’ve tried and promotions they’ve participated in that have helped keep their older titles selling, especially in finished series that haven’t seen new releases in a while.
Here’s the short list, though they also answered listener questions and expounded on these quite a bit. As usual, it wasn’t a short show!
1. Run a sale on Book 1 (free/99 cents) while booking promos
2. Put together a boxed set of the first 3-4 books and run promos on it.
3. Publish new stories (short stories or novellas, if not novels) that tie into your old, completed series.
4. Publish short stories for your old series in multi-author anthologies that will lead people into your books.
5. Join or put together a multi-author boxed set, using one of your old Book 1s. It’s a chance to basically promo something new for all the authors involved.
6. If you have a number of series, consider putting together a “sampler” boxed set with your own Book 1s (maybe publishing something new to entice regular readers who already have the other stuff to buy).
7. Relaunch with new blurbs, categories, and new covers, especially if your original ones were done on the cheap and/or don’t seem a perfect fit.
8. Facebook/AMS ads for a steady trickle of sales.
9. Sales/freebies combined with joint authors promos or newsletter swaps.
10. Keep your community active and engaged in social media with polls/discussions/artwork. Word of mouth is easier to get when you’ve got people talking.
11. Create print copy giveaways on Goodreads, or on your own blog. Engage the readers. Make them do something different, or fun, to “enroll” in contest.
12. Network with other authors. Offer to write a “guest” blog post. Offer newsletter swaps.
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Awesome as always.
Idea: could you guys put a list of promo sites and lists that you have found to be effective on the “Links” section?
There are only a handful that I bother with, Jim, and I haven’t kept up with all the new ones. I know there are some lists out there, and Carolynn had links to a couple she maintains in one of our older shows: http://www.marketingsff.com/premafree-advertising-and-tumblr/
I mostly try Bookbub, BargainBooksy or Freebooksy, Ereader News Today, Book Barbarian, and Fussy Librarian.
Love these shows with so much to learn and to do.
Blessings,
E
Glad to hear they’re helpful, Ethan!