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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /srv/users/sandra/apps/sandra/public/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114<\/em><\/p>\n Our guest blogger today is Chris Syme,\u00a0principal of the award-winning agency, CKSyme Media Group<\/a>. She is a former university media relations professional, a frequent speaker, and the author of the popular <\/span>SMART Marketing For Authors<\/span> book series.<\/span><\/em>\u00a0She is also the co-host of Smart Pants Book Marketing podcast<\/a>.\u00a0Her new book, The Newbie\u2019s Guide to Sell More Books With Less Marketing<\/a>, is available for at a special pre-order price of\u00a0$.99 until June 5.\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\n By Chris Syme<\/strong><\/p>\n There are hundreds of social media networking sites on the Internet. Of those, there are 10 or so that most people can identify. Five years ago it was pretty easy to be found and followed on social media. Now the Internet is bulging with information. <\/span><\/p>\n This proliferation of bits and bytes has caused some authors to throw up their arms and declare that selling books on social media is not possible. But the keys to selling more books with social media are not about doing more, but doing less.<\/span><\/p>\n Social media content gives us an unprecedented opportunity to build loyalty, trust, and endearment like no other platform out there. And that loyalty translates into more sales. How do you do that? In the book <\/span>Content Code<\/span><\/i>, author Mark Schaefer concluded that, \u201c<\/span>Heroic brands, or businesses that people love, exceed customer expectations and stand for something other than selling stuff.\u201d <\/span><\/p>\n Social media\u2019s strength is connecting people. In my new book <\/span>The Newbie\u2019s Guide To Sell More Books With Less Marketing<\/span><\/a><\/em>, I teach one golden rule of selling on social media: You must engage where you want to sell. These two are inextricably linked. You will not sell successfully without engaging first. <\/span><\/p>\n Here lies the conundrum. How can you do both? <\/span><\/p>\n The answer is to follow The 80-20 content rule. <\/span><\/p>\n The 80-20 content rule simply states: To sell books with online media, 80 percent of your posts must give something valuable to your fans and 20 percent should ask for a sale. The rule is based on a long-established marketing principle called the <\/span>law of reciprocity<\/span>. Show yourself to be a source of value and people will want to buy your books. Not only that, they will recommend them to their friends as well. <\/span><\/p>\n Jay Baer said it this way: \u201cSmart marketing is based on help, not hype.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n Let\u2019s start with a look at data. <\/span><\/p>\n <\/a>According to <\/span>Pew Internet Research<\/span><\/a>, the majority of people on social media interact on more than one channel. The most common overlaps are Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. <\/span><\/p>\n Facebook users make up a whopping 72 percent of the adult online population. The other two have less than 30 percent. Facebook\u2019s demographics are the best across the categories of age, gender, education, ethnicity, and location. Facebook is indeed king of the social media universe. <\/span><\/p>\n And the good news is, Facebook has the second highest ability to help new readers discover you and to sell products\u2014surpassed only by YouTube (AOL Platforms). <\/span><\/p>\n Three of the major social media channels now have engagement-restricting algorithms: Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. That means they have a formula that chooses how many of your fans get to see your posts. As a percentage of your fans start to engage with your posts, they send the post out to more of your fans. <\/span><\/p>\n So instead of reaching a small portion of your fans on many channels, I encourage authors to spend time and money sticking to one channel that has the best overall ability to reach the majority of their fans. For 90 percent of authors, that venue is a Facebook business page. Some call it a Facebook author page. <\/span><\/p>\n Choosing one primary channel for fan engagement\u00a0will boost your engagement rate. I\u2019ve seen it happen time and again to students in my online classes. Instead of spreading themselves paper thin across several social media channels, they narrow their focus to one primary channel and build a strong engaging presence that creates the best sales environment. <\/span><\/p>\n The rest of the social media channels become outposts where you redirect fans to the channel where you are engaging with a holding message or graphic. You don\u2019t engage on an outpost, just redirect. <\/span><\/p>\n According to marketing research done by AOL Platforms, there are only a couple of social media channels that are any good at selling anything. One is YouTube and the other is Facebook. Of the six main channels measured, Twitter was at the bottom when it came to aiding discovery and ability to sell. <\/span><\/p>\n Facebook is wired to help you sell. It has\u00a0a number of tools to help:<\/span><\/p>\n According to <\/span>Marketing Week<\/span><\/i>, 26\u00a0percent of Facebook users say they are looking for something to buy there. The next channel in line, Instagram, only boasts 8\u00a0percent and Pinterest is at 6\u00a0percent. <\/span><\/p>\n I would be the first to admit you can sell books on any social media channel if you work at it hard enough. But if you\u2019re looking to get the maximum ROTI (return on time investment) I would put my money on Facebook burying all the rest.<\/span><\/p>\n What’s working for you on social media? Tell us in a comment.\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n <\/a>I always share\u00a0a \u201cTip of the Month,\u201d a free resource or tool for authors, on the last\u00a0Wednesday of the month.<\/p>\n Most of you who blog know by now that it’s important to use high-quality images in your posts.\u00a0There are several reasons for this, but the primary one is that images make your posts more visually appealing.<\/p>\n My favorite source of paid images recently changes its terms, which sent me looking for an alternative source of images. While looking for paid image sources, I stumbled upon an excellent free source: LibreStock<\/a>.<\/p>\n LibreStock is a search engine that scans and indexes stock photos from more than 40\u00a0websites. Type in your search term and get\u00a0free. high-quality. stock photos.<\/p>\n All the photos indexed on LibreStock are licensed under the Creative Commons Zero (CC0) license<\/a>, which\u00a0means you can use these pictures freely for any legal purpose.<\/p>\n Learn more at the LibreStock site<\/a>.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" <\/a><\/em><\/p>\n Our guest blogger today is Chris Syme,\u00a0principal of the award-winning agency, CKSyme Media Group<\/a>. She is a former university media relations professional, a frequent speaker, and the author of the popular <\/span>SMART Marketing For Authors<\/span> book series.<\/span><\/em>\u00a0She is also the co-host of Smart Pants Book Marketing podcast<\/a>.\u00a0Her new book, The Newbie\u2019s Guide to Sell More Books With Less Marketing<\/a>, is available for at a special pre-order price of\u00a0$.99 until June 5.\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\n By Chris Syme<\/strong><\/p>\n There are hundreds of social media networking sites on the Internet. Of those, there are 10 or so that most people can identify. Five years ago it was pretty easy to be found and followed on social media. Now the Internet is bulging with information. <\/span><\/p>\n This proliferation of bits and bytes has caused some authors to throw up their arms and declare that selling books on social media is not possible. But the keys to selling more books with social media are not about doing more, but doing less.<\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":19928,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_kad_blocks_custom_css":"","_kad_blocks_head_custom_js":"","_kad_blocks_body_custom_js":"","_kad_blocks_footer_custom_js":"","_kad_post_transparent":"","_kad_post_title":"","_kad_post_layout":"","_kad_post_sidebar_id":"","_kad_post_content_style":"","_kad_post_vertical_padding":"","_kad_post_feature":"","_kad_post_feature_position":"","_kad_post_header":false,"_kad_post_footer":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[49,11],"tags":[43,624,858,41,405],"class_list":["post-9657","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-guest-columns","category-tactics","tag-book-marketing","tag-chris-syme","tag-selling-more-books","tag-social-media","tag-social-networks"],"yoast_head":"\nThree keys to selling more books with social media<\/h2>\n
<\/a><\/strong><\/h2>\n
Key #1: Win the right to sell: Engage first, sell second<\/h2>\n
Key #2: Go narrow for more engagement<\/h2>\n
Choose a primary channel for engagement<\/span><\/h3>\n
Key #3: All social media channels are not created equal<\/h2>\n
\n
Tip of the Month<\/h3>\n
Three keys to selling more books with social media<\/h2>\n
<\/a><\/strong><\/h2>\n