Publishers Weekly Mobile
Log In  |  Register          Free Newsletter Subscription
Subscribe to Publishers Weekly Magazine

BookExpo America 2009: Facebook to Facebook Meeting

By Claire Kirch -- Publishers Weekly, 5/29/2009 8:06:00 AM

Tim O’Shaughnessy, CEO of LivingSocial, the online social discovery and cataloging utility he founded two years ago, stressed to an audience of 100 BEA attendees Thursday morning the power of social media to efficiently and effectively promote books and authors.

Social networking Web sites like Facebook, LivingSocial and Twitter are “massive online word-of-mouth-on-steroids tools,” he insisted, and “readers are more accessible than ever before” in this “new communication paradigm,” where people with similar interests cluster in structured online communities, thus making it easy to “harness” them in large numbers. There are 100 million Facebook users in the U.S alone, and 200 million users worldwide. Approximately 50% of Facebook users visit the site daily and the average user has 120 friends. Thirty million LivingSocial users share information on books, movies, games, restaurants, TV shows, even ski slopes, with the site logging 250,000 new users in the past two months. Twitter has 20 million users.

Publishers can build buzz for books by doing “all those things they’ve done before,” O’Shaughnessy said, including buying advertising in print media and paying for prime shelf placement in chain bookstores. Or, for very little time and money, they can reach and track target audiences by setting up Facebook pages or buying Facebook ads, opening Twitter accounts, and embarking on campaigns (such as sponsoring contests) that target specific users on LivingSocial. Using the author John Grisham as an example, O’Shaughnessy explained that “the right 50,000 people who’ve read at least three Grisham books before and have given them good reviews” can be identified and tracked, while the other 1.5 million people who use [LiveSocial’s] Visual Bookshelf app don’t have to be bothered with.”

It’s all about engaging the booklover by creating fan pages, tweeting, and “leveraging lost-cost, targeted advertising,” O’Shaughnessy explained, and getting booklovers to “inadvertently act as your publicist” by commenting on an author or book, following authors or publishers on Twitter, or even writing book reviews. “We get more reviews a day than Amazon does,” he said, explaining that, while 1% of Amazon users write reviews, 10% of LivingSocial users write reviews, as “they know their friends will read them.”  

 “Social media is the new Yellow Pages,” O’Shaughnessy declared, “And Facebook pages are in flight to become a broader Yellow Pages,” as more and more people use Facebook to obtain information on individuals, companies, and organizations.

After his 30-minute presentation, O’Shaughnessy answered questions from the audience for 30 minutes. Not surprisingly, since this was a social media discussion, while some audience members raised their hands during the q&a, others tweeted their queries. 

Click here for more BookExpo America 2009 coverage from PW.

Talkback

We would love your feedback!

Post a comment

» VIEW ALL TALKBACK THREADS

Related Content

Related Content

 

By This Author

PW PARTNERS




 
Advertisement

More Content

  • Blogs
  • Podcasts
  • Photos

Blogs

  • Josie Leavitt
    ShelfTalker: A Children's Bookseller's Blog

    October 5, 2009
    A Little More NEIBA News
    Now that I'm home from NEIBA's annual trade show, I have a few thoughts and some photos. First off,...
    More
  • Josie Leavitt
    ShelfTalker: A Children's Bookseller's Blog

    October 2, 2009
    NEIBA, Thus Far
    Okay, I must confess: I'm late for the breakfast with Mary Karr, Anita Shreve and Sarah Vowell. And ...
    More
  • » VIEW ALL BLOGS RSS

Photos

Advertisements





SUBSCRIBE to PW


Virtual Edition
NEWSLETTERS

PWDaily
Children's Bookshelf
PW Comics Week
Cooking the Books
Religion BookLine
Booksmack
LJXpress
LJ Academic Newswire
LJReview Alert
LJ Criticas Review Alert
SLJ Extra Helping
Curriculum Connections
SLJTeen
Please read our Privacy Policy

©2009 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites