Today's guest post is part of the virtual book tour for Nina Amir's new book, How to Blog a Book. Read on for some great tips from Nina about how blogs can be used to both create and promote books.
Most writers realize their blog offers a phenomenal tool for building author’s platform and for promoting a book once it’s been published. However, you may not realize the variety of ways in which you can actually put your blog to use to create a loyal fan base, sell more books and produce more useable content—even book manuscripts—in the process.
Here are seven ways to accomplish these tasks.
1. Blog a book.
If you map out the content for a book, and then write and publish it from scratch in post-sized bits (250-500 word pieces) on your blog, you will begin to drive your blog up in the search engine results pages and attract more readers as you write the first draft of your book. By posting often and consistently—2-7 days per week, you organically provide search engine optimization for your blog. This increases your blogged book’s discoverability in the search engines, like Google. This means when a potential reader, journalist, agent, or publisher searches for a topic related to you or your book, your blog may come up on that coveted first Google search engine results page.
2. Book your blog.
If you have been blogging for a while, your blog contains content that could fill a book. Create a content plan, but this time go back through your blog and find existing posts to fill out each chapter. You may need to write some additional content and edit the whole manuscript to make it flow and read like a book and not a blog.
When you are done, you can begin to promote the book on your blog. You could sell the book to readers or try to land a publishing deal. Or you could give your “booked blog” away as a marketing tool to gain more mailing list subscribers so you can market to them directly when your next book is released.
3. Blog about your book.
This is a more traditional use of an “author’s blog.” Simply find many topics related to your book to blog about. For nonfiction writers, this can seem simple; blog about your topic and everything related to that topic. Also tie into the news as it pertains to your topic. For fiction writers, consider every subject, theme, character, place, etc., in your story, and blog about that. Also tie into the news. This is a great way to drive your blog up in the search engine results pages and to help readers interested in your topics find you and your book.
4. Turn blog posts into ezine articles.
Take your best and most informative blog posts and rewrite them (at least 20-40 percent) into 500-word articles. Then post them on Ezinearticle.com or any other ezine article site. When you do this, you make them available to anyone who needs content on their own blog, website or newsletter. Here’s the reason to give others permission to use your content: Each article contains a small “resource box” with information about you and your blog (or website, book or services) and a link to your blog. Each time the articles is published somewhere, that box also is published. Readers find out about your, and your blog gains a link, which boosts it again in the search engines, and you gain some free publicity. You can use an ezine article distribution service, like SubmitYourArticle.com, which will submit one article to many ezine article directories, but it is not free.
5. Turn your social networking status updates into blog posts.
If you are active in social networks, in particular in groups on Facebook or LinkedIn, and often answer questions in these groups, start turning your answers into blog posts. Elaborate on those answers. Offer more tips or tools or a more in-depth response. Publish this as a blog post. Of course, if you have a book, provide a link to the book in your blog post. Go back to the group and share the link to your blog post. In this way you will drive more traffic to your blog, showcase your expertise and make the group members aware of your book. Gather enough of these short posts and you could compile a tip book.
6. Add audio and video to your blog.
If you add podcasts or videos to your blog, these provide just one more way to get the word out about you and your book. Audio and video don’t provide as much search engine optimization as blog content, but they are useful, especially since YouTube, in particular, has so many viewers. Your audio can gain many listeners, of course, on Itunes.
7. Pin your blog photos on Pinterest.
Last, but not least, Pinterest is the third largest, as well as the fastest-growing, social network at the moment. The easiest way to use this network in conjunction with your blog posts is to make sure each post has a photo and to then “pin” the photo to a relevant “board” in your Pinterest account. Make sure you write a little something about the photo and include a link back to your blog post. You might publish a weekly inspirational photo and later compile these into a book.
Choose a few of these seven ideas and put them to use—or choose them all! Before long you’ll see your blog turn into a superb content marketing machine.
About the Author
Nina Amir, Inspiration-to-Creation Coach, inspires people to combine their purpose and passion so they Achieve More Inspired Results. She motivates both writers and non-writers to create publishable and published products, careers as authors and to achieve their goals and fulfill their purpose. The author of How to Blog a Book, Write, Publish and Promote Your Work One Post at a Time (Writer’s Digest Books), you can read her blogs at Write Nonfiction NOW! or How to Blog a Book and learn more about her at www.copywrightcommunications.com
Nina, thanks for sharing these great tips with my readers. I enjoyed reading your new book and I highly recommend it to anyone who's interested in blogging a book!
Posted by: Dana Lynn Smith | June 14, 2012 at 11:26 AM
Thanks for sharing this post. This is basically what I did to create my books, but there are additional ideas in this post that I can use. Blessings, Deborah H. Bateman-Author
Posted by: Deborah H. Bateman | June 14, 2012 at 04:37 PM
Deborah, that's so cool - thanks for sharing!
Posted by: Dana Lynn Smith | June 14, 2012 at 05:07 PM
There's only 7 ways posted. ;)
Posted by: Imherb2 | June 14, 2012 at 07:17 PM
Dang, you're right Herb. It was my fault - I'll fix the headline!
Thanks,
Dana
Posted by: Dana Lynn Smith | June 14, 2012 at 09:15 PM
Thanks for hosting me, Dana, and for your words of praise.
Deborah, I'd love to hear more about how you blogged your books! I have a place on my blog for submitting guest posts, and I'm looking for stories and tips from people who have blogged books. I'd love for you to consider submitting a post.
Posted by: Nina Amir | June 14, 2012 at 11:50 PM
Great Post. I'm using a couple of these. My first book is out on Amazon and I am writing my second a chapter at a time on my website. My hook is that I'm trying to include reader suggestions in revised posts. andrewtarantino.com
Posted by: Andrew Tarantino | July 28, 2012 at 08:24 AM
Andrew, that's great! Good luck with the books.
Posted by: Dana Lynn Smith | July 28, 2012 at 08:36 AM
Thanks for sharing these ideas. Your first three tips are excellent! I will soon try to do it.
Posted by: Judith Briles | August 10, 2012 at 06:08 AM