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Encouraging people to publish and share reviews of your book is a key book-marketing task, and one on which other aspects of marketing rest.
Reviews provide the social proof that is the bedrock of attention from booksellers, bloggers, media, libraries and other influencers.
There are many ways to get your book reviewed and it can be challenging to know what’s ethical and advisable, and what’s worth your time and money.
This Quick and Easy Guide from the AskALLi team at the Alliance of Independent Authors offers guidance to current best practices and ethics and a myriad of ways for you to get more book reviews, fast.
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Seitenzahl: 96
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2019
ALLi, the Alliance of Independent Authors is the global association for self-publishing indie authors.
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Font Publications is the publishing imprint for Orna Ross’s fiction and poetry and the Go Creative! books and planners and Alliance of Independent Authors publishing guides by Orna a. Ross.
All Enquiries: [email protected]
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YOUR FIRST 50 BOOK REVIEWS
ALLi’s Guide to Getting More Reader Reviews
E-book: 978-1-913349-70-7
Paperback: 978-1-913349-71-4
Large Print: 978-1-913349-81-3
Hardback: 978-1-913349-62-2
Audiobook: 978-1-913349-50-9
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All good books are a team effort. An author’s name goes on the cover but behind that is the creative team of editors and designers and formatters who made the book, the distributors and marketers who take it to readers, and the long list of supporters—from family members to work colleagues—without whom it would never have been created.
Then there are the other writers, from journalists and academics to storytellers and poets, who have published relevant ideas, information and inspirations that, quite literally, underwrite the book.
All this is true for this book you hold in your hand and our thanks to all those who had a hand in its making.
Thanks are due to all at the Alliance of Independent Authors (ALLi). ALLi guides rely heavily on the work and wisdom of our team, members, ambassadors and advisors. All of this is generously and freely shared with our non-profit CIC (Community Interest Company), with the intention of paying it forward, and benefitting other indie authors. Thank you for your generosity and for lighting the way.
For this guide to Your First 50 Book Reviews, particular thanks are due to ALLi team members and blog contributors: Dorah Blume, John Doppler, Barb Drozdowich, Dan Holloway, Mark Horrell, Dan Parsons, Russell Phillips, Orna Ross, Boni Wagner Stafford, and Debbie Young.
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SHORT PUBLISHING GUIDES FOR INDIE AUTHORS
BOOK 1
Introduction
1. Start with Mindset
2. Types of Book Reviews
3. Using Advance Review Copies (ARCs)
4. Amazon Customer Reviews
5. Getting Customer Reviews
6. Free Versus Paid Editorial Reviews
7. Book Bloggers
8. Mainstream Media
9. Using Goodreads
10. Responding to Reviews
11. Next Steps
Appendix: Ethical Author Code
Your Next Step
Other Guides
Encouraging people to publish and share reviews of your book should be a key activity in your author marketing toolbox. Reviews indicate a sense of credibility. They offer social proof—an assurance that other readers have enjoyed the book—and instill confidence about your book in new readers, making them more likely to convert from browsers to buyers.
Social proof is widely considered the bedrock of the purchasing-decision process for today’s consumer. Think about your own behavior when you want to book a trip, buy a new car, or reserve a table at a restaurant. If you’re like most people, you’ll check online reviews of the location, hotel, dealership, food, and venue. Most of us now turn to reviews for help when deciding whether it’s worth our time and money to try something new. We even get suspicious if we can’t find reviews when looking to make a purchase.
It’s the same way with books.
Ten years ago, if you asked authors or publishers about getting book reviews, they probably would’ve answered in terms of traditional print media and review periodicals. Trade magazines like Publishers’ Weekly or The Bookseller. Literary magazines like The New Yorker or The Times Literary Supplement. The review sections slotted into the daily and weekend newspapers, radio programs, and TV shows. All these avenues comprised the bulk of their review-generating strategy.
These days, far more book reviews happen online and from regular readers. Instead of professional critics doing the posting, it’s largely the audience of readers. And instead of only listening to one authority figure’s opinion, many potential readers now prefer to gain a consensus of the opinions of hundreds or thousands of amateurs and “unknowns.” Reader reviews on book retailer sites, especially Amazon and Goodreads (which is owned by Amazon), now have a large impact on reader behavior in addition to the critic and book reviews on blogs and podcasts.
This short book is a guide to getting reviews in all these arenas, based on ALLi’s best advice and on the experience of our members. Beginners and experienced authors alike can use the strategies that follow to complement whatever you’re currently doing to get reviews. No matter your skill and knowledge level, you’ll find useful takeaways in this guide.
It’s helpful to start with an understanding of some key principles. First, trends and reader habits are constantly shifting. As such, the tools are updated often and sometimes replaced as modern operators create products and services to help indie authors get more reviews. While we have made every effort to provide up-to-date information at the time of writing, some of the tools and processes might have already changed by the time you read this book. But you can still get lots of reviews and advance your author career by following core strategies. We have included those that have stood the test of time and cover most commercial and critical bases to make this text as evergreen as possible.
It’s worth mentioning that, when referring to costs, we have translated everything into United States Dollars (USD) unless quoting a source. U.S. currency is widely considered the most universal one for indie authors since the dominant service providers working in the self-publishing arena originate in the US.
In terms of navigation, this book is intended to be read in chronological order. However, those who prefer to jump straight to sections that interest them, without reading the chapters in between, can easily read and comprehend individual chapters without having to flip back to find definitions or understand context. We’ve also added “Key Takeaways” at the end of every chapter for summation and simplicity. We know authors lead busy lives, so these takeaways were created with that in mind.
Some of the steps for getting reviews require technical knowledge. But if you’re not tech savvy, don’t worry. We’ve made every attempt to minimize jargon and complex processes. Though today’s book reviews are primarily organized and collected over the internet, most authors who are rocking the reviews scene never considered themselves to be technically minded. Some of the following activities may require skills that you need to develop, but most of the work will be straightforward and only require a basic grasp of how the internet works.
Everyone starts at the beginning. As an organization that has your back, we offer guidance to master current best practices. Examine the advice we offer, then make choices the creative way: trying and testing, experimenting and exploring. When you keep what works for you and drop what doesn’t, your process and results will improve.
Most of the strategies in this guidebook will not cost you a lot of time or money, but some will take courage. Fear holds many authors back from taking the first step to get more reviews. This guide will encourage you to simply take one step at a time. Opening your work up to public criticism can be scary but can also be a fruitful endeavor.
Having said that, we urge you not to jump right in to gathering reviews without understanding the rules of the game. Rules and ethical boundaries do exist in this space, and the penalties for breaking them can be dire. If your quest for reviews begins before you understand the code of ethics that many retailers and governments require you to follow, you may inadvertently damage your reputation and career potential as an authorpreneur. As such, it’s important that you learn the reviewing rules of each bookselling platform before you invest time and effort into asking readers to post reviews there. You must also know the government laws surrounding how to collect and store reviewer data.
You won’t go wrong if your activities related to soliciting book reviews align with ALLi’s Ethical Author Code. The Ethical Author Code began as a campaign in late-2014 to promote ethical author behavior and to counter the damage done to our collective reputations by unethical individuals. You’ll find more in the pages ahead on the ethics that are paramount to effectively conducting a review-generating activity.
You’ve accomplished the massive undertaking of putting your book out into the world. Going that extra step to ask for people’s opinions and reviews can be daunting. As authors, many of us would rather shy away from the challenge. That’s understandable. But we are not just authors; we are publishers. A good author may avoid reviews, but a good publisher seeks them. This guide will help you find the way.
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When learning any new skill or practice, adopting the most effective mindset is key. As an indie author, you are an author-publisher, which means you are juggling more than one mindset. You need to be an inner-directed writer, in touch with your innermost thoughts, feelings and ideas and able to hone them into words. And you also need to be an outer-directed publisher, in touch with what readers need and want and how to best encourage them to buy and read your books.
As a writer, you want to produce the best books you can produce. As a publisher, you want to ensure that prospective readers know how good the books are so they will want to buy and read them. You also need to ensure that all strategies to get more reviews for your books are ethical and not misleading—fair to readers, other writers and other players in the bookselling ecosystem, who must not be misled by our natural desire to receive good reviews.
Internalizing this double-mindset will make the strategies in this book easier to accomplish.
Make it your mission to motivate your readers to review your books. Once you do, reviews will start to appear. What’s more, you will become less “attached” to the content of reviews, where getting positive reviews causes a dopamine spike of delight, but getting negative ones throws you into a tailspin. Exposing yourself to more reviews lessens this emotional rollercoaster ride.
The mature author-publisher approaches reviews in a spirit of curiosity. What can I take from this feedback? How does it alert me to what I’ve done well, or what I need to improve. Once you’ve been through the process a few times, you’ll learn to react to both criticism and praise in the same way. Instead of throwing off your day, you will acknowledge them purely as a learning opportunity—a way to become a better author and publisher.
Rather than fixating on reviews, positive or negative, you know they won’t derail you, even when readers say cruel or crazy things. You stay connected to that most important item on your to-do list: writing the next book.