Publicity and Publishing Today – The Battle Between Old School Versus New School

The internet was the “game changer” and the traditional book publishing and promotion process have become ineffective.

Up until this point, the world wide web was for those techy-geeky folks and had no real impact on book sales. But now Amazon.com, print-on-demand, viral marketing messages, social media and powerful online communities have leveled the playing field.

Bookstores, agents, fat clunky press kits and publicists scoring traditional media are not the keys to an author’s success anymore.

There are tons of self-published or independent books that have made history – and surprised the publishing world. Like The Shack, a Christian novel by William P. Young was originally self-published in 2005. And as of February 2010, over seven million copies in print worldwide, spent seventy weeks holding the number one spot on the New York Times bestseller list, and it continues to remain in the top ten to date.

The success of The Shack demonstrates what word-of-mouth and community networking can do for a self-published book, but more interestingly, the market strength of religious books in the United States, within and without the book publishing industry.

So let’s compare old school and new school way of doing things:

Old School: Traditional hard and soft-cover books

New School: Digital books, ebooks, Kindles, iPad and other wireless reading devices are on the way!

Old School: Book tours

New School: Blog tours & webinars

Old School: Getting reviews in magazines and newspapers

New School: Getting reviews on Amazon and in book communities where readers hang out like Shelfari, goodreads, librarything.com, rawsistaz and more

Old School: Web 1.0 (webmasters needed for HTML and complicated stuff)

New School: Web 2.0 (freedom – just a blogger blog or WordPress.com blog) Two-way communication!

Old School: Mailing out ARCs, books and big press kits

New School: EPK(electronic press kits) and ebooks

Old School: Media Escort

New School: Virtual Assistant

Old School: Press releases emailed and mailed to media

New School: SEO press releases sent or using online media matching service like Pitch Rate or Reporter Connection

Old School: Printing, stamping and mailing newsletters to mailing list accumulated over the years

New School: Sending out eNewsletters & continual email marketing campaigns using autoresponders and broadcast emails

Old School: Creating & updating media lists

New School: Capturing emails of interested readers using an “opt-in” database program like AWeber

Old School: TV interviews

New School: Creating book trailers, viral videos and streaming LIVE online

Old School: Authors visiting reading groups and libraries

New School: Teleconferencing or streaming live to many groups at the same time from the comfort of your home via Skype or a bridge line

Old School: Postcard mailings to readers, bookstores and organizations

New School: Eblast postcard to thousands using email marketing services like Goodgirlbookclub, BlackGospelPromo, ChristianPRGroup or DetroitGospel

Old School: Radio Interviews

New School: Podcasts and internet radio shows (heard online or downloaded via itunes)

Old School: Magazine features

New School: Ezine Features

Old School: Writing a column in newspapers

New School: Syndicated articles submitted on article directories like Ezine using keywords and generating web traffic or writing a regular blog

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