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To Market, To MarketMay 15, 2009Marketing departments at publishing houses have a daunting task, figuring out how to use shrinking budgets to create promotional materials that are actually effective for the publisher and useful to the bookseller. So what works? What do we love seeing in our bookstores? What gets tossed out without a further glance? Whereas a centralized bookselling corporation may have one buyer to please, indies range in size, scope, and individual buyer preferences. Do: Allow us to re-order the kits if we run out.
Do: Send appealing bookmarks. Designers, think like a consumer: would you choose that bookmark out of a jar? Would your kids? Great bookmarks have appealing front-side images without a lot of text; no one ever picks up a cluttered bookmark that is obviously only a marketing tool. There's nothing in it for the customer. Less is more with bookmarks, truly. Do put on-sale dates, backlist information, website, and/or author info, on the back; the back is fair game for any text you'd like. Again, think like a consumer, not a marketer. What would you or your children actually pay attention to? It's often not quite the same thing that a marketer wants to get across, but it can still sell a book or series. An author's signature can be a draw, and does double-duty as a giveaway at school events where not every child can buy a book. Don't: Design very dark or black bookmarks; for some reason, no one takes them. A pirate or vampire book could get away with a black bookmark, if it were handsomely designed and had white and bright accent colors. Otherwise, a no-go. Other bookstore mileage may vary. Consider: Trifold bookmarks for series books. Scholastic had a great promotion for its Weekday Fairies series: it was composed of several connected perforated bookmarks, one for each book in the series. Kids loved these and we sold a lot of Fairy books. Children also love quizzes and mazes; tie in a back-of-bookmark game to the book and kids might hang on to the bookmark for quite a while.
Do: Send autographed copies we can use for prizes or raffles. We love that, and usually build a promotion around it. Sells books! Do encourage reps to put post-it notes on galleys they particularly love or want to draw our attention to: "Boys will LOVE this!" or "Great summer read" are helpful, as well as more specific praise: "Rep top pick. I couldn't put this one down." Holly Ruck was our first rep to do this, and we always paid attention. OH! And these two are crucial: Do put release month and year on the spines of ARCs. Many publishers have started doing this and we love you for it. Also, please please please put series numbers on the spines of your books, in easy-to-find, easy-to-read type. You would not believe how much time is spent by customers and frontline booksellers trying to track down which is the next book in a series.
Do: Put as much thought into the shipping as the design and printing of these items. So often, they arrive with whole sections bent or creased, which undercuts the sharp appealing new feeling you're trying to create with the piece. Also, make sure they (a) assemble correctly, (b) have clear directions, and (c) are sturdy enough, something a toddler would have a hard time pulling over. Don't: Send anything made of materials you wouldn't let a baby chew on.
Consider: Displays for six titles. These work so well on counters at smaller stores.
Do: Send sticker sheets. These are always, always popular, especially when the book cover is one sticker and the rest of the stickers are cute images from the books. Creative pairings are wonderful; Harcourt's promotion of Little Miss Matched socks with Linda Urban's MG novel, A Crooked Kind of Perfect, was imaginative and attention-getting, and did our work for us; the display practically created itself. Pins and magnets can be great, if they're terrific-looking; otherwise, they tend to get tossed. Don't: Send bottles of glitter, body powder or other dust-type things. Inflatables and other items made of that vile-smelling plastic seem hazardous to your health and I wouldn't let a child near them. (I might blow one up and suspend it from the ceiling if I love the character enough, but even that's iffy.) Consider: Less packaging for all promo items, and doing away altogether with those trinkets that make a person feel like factory workers overseas are being exploited for an item that won't even get used.
Do: Send pencils, pens, or crayons, in enough quantity to actually give away. A great T-shirt always makes a terrific raffle item, too. Don't: Send three pens on a light-up lanyard. The staff probably won't think to wear them, and there aren't enough to share with a teacher. Consider: Writing implements or erasers with your book title or cover image on them.
Do: Send good candy. We love it! We still remember the delightful "Fudge Bucks" from a Judy Blume promotion. And Workman had a golden ticket promotion that came with a gigantic Hershey bar perfect for sharing with your staff at 4:30 when everyone needs a little boost. Or send something that lasts beyond the promotion terms. Candlewick gave out a pretty painted wooden Maisy coin bank 10 or 12 years ago, and we still use it. Don't: Use way more packaging than you need. Large boxes with few galleys and lots of pretty packing material come off as wasteful and needlessly expensive. In addition, a lot of fancy packaging gets banged up in the mail, so it often doesn't reach your booksellers in great condition. Consider: Attaching something value-added to your promotion. We'd all rather get a plain old ARC and 2% than a cute imprinted carton. Honest.
Do: Make it pretty (i.e., well-designed) and keep it brief. Follow the bookmark rule: put a great image on the front and save the text for the back. Most effective text? ISBN, on-sale date, one-line teaser, and two or three great review quotes. That's enough. A small, handwritten personal note instantly makes the "okay, I'll take a look" stack. These often come from authors; it's amazing what a difference a personal touch makes. Don't: Put too much text on the back; that makes a bookseller's (and a reader's) eyes glaze over. Consider: Choosing the larger-sized postcards; they do stand out in a crowd and allow for a cleaner, more readable, back side. Consider collaborating with authors more often, helping them with design, printing, and postage; let them add a note and signature before sending. It's a relatively inexpensive way to get the word out about a release.
Do: Ship them with adequate protection. Crumple-edged or crunched posters are a waste of your design, printing, and postage money. (This is why I never take posters from booths at trade shows; the chances of them making it home are practically nil without a tube, and I never think of bringing a poster tube with me. Hmm, maybe this year....) Don't: Fold them. Teachers will take folded posters because any poster is welcome, but for a key spot on a bookstore or school wall, rolled is best. Don't waste your money on posters created more as marketing tools than art, i.e., posters with a few different books and a lot of text promoting them, and the publisher's name in huge type. (Award books are an exception to the several-book-covers rule; those are good. But, a simple label like "Newbery Books," accompanying the covers is best, with the publisher info tastefully at the bottom in a slugline. The poster is more likely to be placed in a prominent location and looked at, and the books will sell on the basis of their covers, titles, authors, and reputation. Kids and their parents don't tend to ask for books by publisher. Consider: Is this a poster you would put up in your child's room? Classroom? Library?
Do: Make them as eco-friendly as possible. And pretty / handsome. The ones with great children's book art get used again and again and again. They are expensive, but probably pay off in the long run for books you're hoping will sell solidly well into the future. Don't: Bother with the junky stuff. Better to spend your money elsewhere than have crummy totes, the weird ones that feel like environmental hazards, have handles too short to sling over your shoulder, and/or feel creepy to the touch. We also dislike plastic bags with book cover art sent in quantities for the checkout counter, but some booksellers love them. (Poll a few of your accounts?) Consider: Imprinting recycled paper bags (with soy ink; it's everywhere now) instead of plastic. Not for trade shows, but for in-store promotions.
We got a terrific promotion from a publisher that had all the right elements, and all in a very small bubble envelope (no waste and inexpensive to mail): good bookmarks, a one-page sheet with an author interview on one side and an ordering promotion on the other, and — this was brilliant — a sheet of small square stickers listing release dates for that season's titles. Booksellers could pop them onto our calendars and plan ahead so easily. Posted by Elizabeth Bluemle on May 15, 2009 | Comments (27)
May 15, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Mary Quattlebaum commented: Thanks much for this info.! It will be helpful for publishers but also us authors and illustrators as we think through the materials we may wish to create for kids, booksellers and teachers.
May 15, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Kenny Brechner commented: Amazing job here Elizabeth! One other thing I know we are always hungry for are solidly made demos of pop ups or other books which are made unsaleable easily.
May 15, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market shelftalker elizabeth commented: Great, Mary! Kenny, excellent point about the pop-up samples. We'd order more if we knew we didn't have to sacrifice one $25 book in every batch....
May 15, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Elizabeth Partridge commented: Elizabeth --
May 15, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Inderjit Deogun commented: Elizabeth, great post! There's a lot of great information and insight.
May 15, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Jessica commented:
May 15, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Elizabeth O. Dulemba commented:
May 15, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market shelftalker elizabeth commented: Jessica, thanks! I totally forgot about that kind of postcard -- the stacks we're supposed to give away but no one ever takes. Especially when they can't be used as postcards because the back is filled with text.
May 15, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Augustina Rolle commented: Thanks for the insight! Among other thins, you highlighted the professionalism that is needed in the promotional aspect of marketing a book (s). What timely info!
May 15, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Carol Chittenden commented: LOVE post-it notes, and they often stay up for weeks, months, years. Extravagant social events such as dinners are wonderful for three hours, but for months afterward I wish I had the $125 in coop or discount instead. It would buy more good will than shrimp and strawberry mousse ever could.
May 16, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Angela/57th Street Books commented:
May 17, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Katherine Tillotson commented: Elizabeth,
May 18, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Ellen Mager commented: Elizabeth, This was great and took in so much! About the cardboard displays.. Very few floor displays come through to us updamaged. It's a killer when it's a standee! I use the postcards as my gift certificates and customers LOVE them and usually ask to keep them. You mentioned the signed bookmarks. I have had authors and illustrated do them for school visits because not all children can afford a book. I ask the school to make them 5 on a page, laminate them if possible give it to each child the next day as a present from the guest. Some of the A/I have put them right on their web sites. Thanks again! I hope that the publishers have seen this!
May 18, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Tod Davies commented:
May 19, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Stephanie Hindley commented: What an incredibly helpful post. When it comes to offering co-op, what is the preferred way to go about this? We have tried offering it through our reps for years, but never have takers. We're going to try reaching out directly to booksellers, and would love any pointers that you can offer.
May 19, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market PATRICIA FOWLER commented:
May 19, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market shelftalker elizabeth commented: Stephanie, what a great idea for a blog post. Co-op! We'll get back to you on that. The main problem with a lot of us booksellers is that we're wearing a hundred hats, and pursuing co-op should be a prominent one, but often gets buried under the immediate concerns of the day. It's one of those important, but non-urgent, tasks we all want to get better at accomplishing. An easy online co-op application would make my ever-livin' day. More on this soon.
May 19, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Todd Snow commented:
May 19, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Anne Rockwell commented: Terrific post! Thanks for all the great ideas that authors and illustrators can use on their own, because publishers aren't doing much these days. I love the idea of the downloadable bookmark on one's web page.
May 20, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market shelftalker elizabeth commented: Anne Rockwell! My former-school-librarian heart just skipped a happy beat. I'm always so happy to see a new book from you. I miss Pots and Pans! And Three Sillies, and The Toolbox, and others that have gone OP. Those were staples at our library and our early store years, and are perennial kid favorites. (Hint, hint, publishers.)
May 21, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Kristy Dempsey commented: Loved this post, Elizabeth. And I, too, hope the publishers are listening!
May 21, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Joyce commented: Thanks, Elizabeth. This is a mini-course on promotion! I'm saving it to mine for ideas in the future. I appreciate your tips and the time you took to post them.
May 26, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Josie Leavitt commented: Okay, here's a marketing promo we don't need. Twenty cents postage due for a red envelope with a black feather, that scared the bejeepers out of me with a note to watch my email for more info. WOW. Costly to me and frightening.
May 26, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Cynthia in SC commented: As an elementary school librarian I read your blog with great interest to see your thoughts on marketing. After thinking about it on and off all weekend I wanted to add another perspecitve if I may. As a librarian I may not be the one to 'sell' a book for money per se, but I do 'sell' books to students in order to create lifelong readers. Many of my students find themselves hooked on a series and are too impatient to wait for me to get the latest installment in the library. As a result, they rush to the bookstores to purchase them, so I feel like I help traditional booksellers in a way too. I would like to second the idea for coloring sheets and bookmarks that we can download from the internet. I keep a basket of bookmarks on my desk and students are always digging through to see what I have new. If I happen to get a set of promotional bookmarks at a conference or in the mail you would think I've put out a pot of gold. I also would like to see more activity guides readily available.
June 17, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Archiepw1 commented: These are such great ideas! I have just started a little children's book publishing company with my first title being released in August.....I am definitely going to post coloring book style book marks under my librarians/bookseller headings on my website. I know librarians in my life have been a greater "marketing tool" than any add. Their influence lasts for generations as you read and re-read your childhood favorites to your kids and grandkids......now THAT'S perpetual marketing!
June 25, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market Peg Finley peg366 commented: I am not at the stage in my writing career where I have a book to be promoted but I copied this onto a disk to save. These are really great ideas, some of which could be used for self promotion as well. Thanks for the insight into what a publisher might do to promote an author's book.
June 28, 2009
In response to: To Market, To Market JuliaDeVillers commented: Wow, Elizabeth. I have to thank you for this information. I'm mulling over the information for my next book release and planning to forward this blog post around! (And squee! Anne Rockwell posted!)
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