Multi-author anthologies are a great marketing tool
by Anne R. Allen
A couple of weeks ago, a European blogger asked if she could reblog a post I wrote 10 years ago. She said it was the best piece on marketing she’d ever read. (Aw shucks. Here’s me blushing.)
The truth is I’d forgotten all about the post, and I pointed out a lot of the info was out of date, but she wanted to post it anyway.
So I thought I’d re-post it here, deleting some of the most dated stuff.
Guaranteed Marketing Success is a Myth
Ruth and I hear this kind of stuff a lot: “I’ve got great reviews, I’m on social media, and I send out a newsletter — just like [my publisher/agent/a blog guru/this book I read] told me to: why isn’t my book selling? It’s been out for six months!!!”
In other words, everybody wants us to tell them how to achieve sure-fire publishing success.
But we won’t.
That’s not because we’re meanies. It’s because we are fresh out of magic spells. And our wands have been recalled to Hogwarts.
Yes, Ruth has had a number of books on the NYT bestseller list and I’ve been an Amazon bestseller.
But we couldn’t tell you exactly how a brand-new author can climb up the charts right now. What we did worked for our books at the time. But times change. What worked even three months ago may not work now. Each new book, each new Amazon program change, and each new search engine algorithm change requires a different strategy.
Here’s the thing: there IS no sure-fire formula. There never was. Traditional publishers don’t have one and neither do indies.
Anybody who tells you otherwise is lying. Marketers only know what worked for certain books at a certain time.
I know you’ve seen dozens of books that claim, “I became an instant Kindle Millionaire and So Can YOU!!”
But most of those books offer “formulas” based on old information. Some writers who jumped on the self-publishing bandwagon at exactly the right moment did zoom to the top and made a ton of money. Maybe they knew some handy-dandy tricks for gaming Amazon at that moment or maybe they just had the right book at the right time.
But if they’re still selling big, they’re probably using a whole new set of tricks or they got themselves a loyal fan base and kept it through a lot of hard work, prolific output, and books with mass appeal.
There’s still money to be made as a self-publisher or if you publish with a small press. Success may be harder for indies to achieve now than 10 years ago, and you probably have to think outside the Amazon box, but it’s still possible — and plenty of successful authors are doing it.
You do have to think smarter, have more patience, and get creative in your marketing. You shouldn’t expect some glowing reviews from the ladies in your Mom’s book club and a fancy website to rocket every new writer to stardom. (And don’t jump on the bandwagon of putting a blurb in your title, like “True Lovers: a staggeringly brilliant rags-to-riches, enemies to lovers, billionaire romantasy thriller with horror elements.”) I know they’re selling right now, but Amazon frowns on them and they’re soooo tacky.
So what do we tell people who write to us with the age-old question, “how can I sell my book?”
First, authors should be aware of an important distinction I don’t see mentioned often enough:
Nonfiction and Narrative (fiction and memoir) have different audiences so don’t try marketing them the same way.
A lot of the people who are telling you “there’s gold in them thar ebooks” are talking about short, informational ebooks, not novels.
Marketing for nonfiction needs different emphasis. The most important thing to do as a nonfiction author is to establish yourself as an expert. A blog or Substack is essential. You can also get a lot of attention through instructional YouTube videos and podcasts as well as personal appearances.
The Following Marketing Tips are Mostly for Novelists and Memoirists, but I Have Tips for NF Writers, Too.
But some can be applied to instructional nonfiction as well.
These are a whole lot more likely to get your career going than X-Tweeting 24/7, paying to boost Facebook posts, buying followers and reviews, spamming online author groups, or any of the other gimmicky things way too many authors are doing.
1) Write Another Book.
I know, I know. You’re tired of hearing that.
You’ve been stalled on that WIP ever since you launched your first book.
All your energy is going into writing those blogposts and X-Tweeting your book every half hour and sharing cat videos on Facebook, dancing on Tik-Tok, and cooking food to photograph for Pinterest and Instagram or sending out newsletters to those book club ladies, and of course, endlessly begging for reviews…so there’s no time to be creative any more.
Here’s the thing: most of the stuff people tell you about online marketing just wastes time if you only have one book. What you want to do is build a brand. The way you do that is produce more product.
Remember the classic Saturday Night Live sketch about the mall store that sold nothing but scotch tape? Don’t be that store.
Writing your second and third books should take priority over platform building. In fact, I suggest you don’t try to publish your first book until you have another in the hopper — that goes whether you’re querying agents and publishers or self-publishing.
Nonfiction authors: Your books may take a long time to research, so it can be tough to come out with more than one a year. But you still should be working on #2 as you market #1. You might consider putting some of the material you’re working on for #2 on your blog if you’re planning to self-publish. For great info on how to blog your nonfiction book, check out Nina Amir’s long-running blog How to Blog Your Book.
NF authors can also put some of your new material into speaking engagements, podcasts and videos.
2) Guest Blogging is Good Marketing
Visiting a blog that addresses your core readership is something that can help sales even if you only have a single title. This is especially true for a memoir or personal journey story.
High profile writing blogs like this one are all well and good, but you’ll do much better targeting smaller blogs that address your core audience.
If you’ve written a cancer survival story or a war memoir or a “wo/man vs. nature” story, Google your subject matter and visit as many blogs as you can find that deal with cancer support or veterans issues or wilderness travel or whatever. Comment on those blogs. Get to know the bloggers. Then ask if you can be a guest.
Blog tours still work for some authors, so you might consider paying for a professional blog tour for your first book launch. But be aware that reviews that come from paid blog tours can’t be posted on Amazon, and the bloggers don’t get paid even though the tour organizer does. This means you might not get as much enthusiasm as you think you’ve paid for. (I’ve also heard of host bloggers asking for reviews or other quid pro quo reciprocation: stay away from any blogger who makes that kind of demand.)
If you’re already here in the blogosphere, you may be able to organize your own blog tour simply by networking with your friends. Want to meet other writer-bloggers who might want to host you? Join the Insecure Writers Support Group, a fantastic blog group started by bestselling SciFi author Alex J. Cavanaugh.
Nonfiction writers: Guest blogging can be one of your most effective marketing tools, so you can get a lot of milage from networking and visiting other blogs.
3) Get some Short Work Published (and Enter Contests.)
Getting your work in a vetted journal or winning a contest gives you a stamp of approval. It shows publishers, agents, and/or readers that somebody besides you and your mom think you can write. It can also make money, as I wrote in my article for Writer’s Digest, 9 Ways Writing Short Fiction Can Pay off For Authors.
Some literary magazines take novel excerpts. If you’ve self-published your book, you can place bits of your book that work as stand-alones and mention they’re part of a larger work. (Don’t try to do this if you’re querying, though, because it may violate a potential contract.)
Winning contests and getting short pieces published can also boost your self-esteem (and sometimes fill your wallet.) They can be stepping stones to a successful career.
If you skip the short story step, you may find it a lot harder to get your work discovered.
Nonfiction writers: Nothing establishes you as an expert better than getting your work published in a major journal in your field. Don’t worry about how much it pays or the circulation numbers as much as the prestige involved and how closely it targets your audience.
4) Run a Sale or Countdown (if you’re in KDP Select) and Advertise it in Bargain Ebook Newsletters.
Bookbub is the Rolls Royce of bargain-ebook newsletters, but it’s very expensive and so selective they reject most applicants. But there are many others to choose from. David Gaughran has a great run down of the best bargain book newsletters.
But remember every genre is different. Fussy Librarian does very well for cozies and women sleuths, and another may be better for thrillers or nonfiction.
NOTE: if you have only one book, do not offer it free. Free samples only work if you have other products to sell. Otherwise you’re just giving away the store. A 99c countdown works best if you’re in KDP Select.
5) Network for Joint Promotion Marketing.
One of the best sales tools used to be the multi-author boxed set, but they seem to have mostly disappeared — I think because some unscrupulous packagers scammed authors by overcharging and promising “USA Today Bestseller” fame and fortune. But they were joint promos that worked at the time and might again. One mystery boxed set put my author rank in the top 100 mystery authors on Amazon.
And joint author anthologies still work. My career got a huge boost in 2011 when I was invited to be part of the Indie Chicks Anthology, which showcased 25 indie authors. And just last year, I got a bunch of new readers from A Sampling of Sleuths anthology from Thalia Press.
Then there are joint promotions, where writers in one niche genre get together a 99c promo of a bunch of their books and pool money for advertising. A joint promo by a mystery Facebook group gave me the boost I needed to get onto some major bestseller lists. Joining with authors in your genre for a well-organized promo like this will put you on “also bought” lists of other authors in your genre on Amazon, so it can give you a huge ratings surge.
So how do you get to be part of these promotions?
You have to be invited.
How does that happen?
You make friends with other authors in your genre instead of competing with them. I can’t emphasize enough how important this can be to your career.
This is also why you don’t want to make a lot of enemies, as I mentioned in my post on How Not to Sell Books.
Follow Wil Wheaton’s Law. Treat your fellow authors as colleagues, not rivals. Acting like a kind, helpful grown-up person doesn’t just keep you out of trouble. It helps your sales. If people are choosing between a book by somebody they like and one by an arrogant, infantile jerk, which one do you think they’ll choose?
Visit other author blogs, especially high-profile ones where lots of people will see your name so they’ll feel they “know” you.
It’s also a good idea to join some Facebook writer groups. Not for drive-by promotion, but to make friends.
Some people have success with Goodreads groups, but I have not. I find the anti-author sentiment on Goodreads to be overwhelming. If you go, don’t tell anybody you write. Keep your “reader” hat on.
So how can you do all this if you’re madly writing your next book?
Use your social media time wisely: only get involved with a handful of social media platforms where you can make some friendships, but avoid arguments and long discussions. Tweet and share useful information for your fellow authors and retweet their sales and launches,
When it’s your turn, they just might reciprocate.
6) Blog and Forget the Newsletter until you Have More Books Out.
Yes. You read that right. I know every book marketing guru out there tells you to bombard potential readers with weekly updates about getting your carpet shampooed and how tragified you are that your pet gerbil has toenail fungus.
I could not disagree with them more. In fact, if you only have one book, I strongly recommend you do NOT send out a newsletter. You will annoy more readers than you’ll get.
Newsletters only work when you have an established fan base that is desperate to know what happens next with your series or characters. You can be compiling a mailing list, but don’t use it until you have something to announce. And only use it to announce books and sales. Nobody cares about your carpet shampoo dramas. Trust me on this.
And I recommend only blogging once a week or less for fiction and memoir authors. You won’t wear out your welcome and you’ll have more time to write. Blogging once a week or less is sometimes called “Slow Blogging” and it sure has worked for me. Here’s one of my posts on Slow Blogging.
Nonfiction authors: The rules are different for you. Your blog is where you establish yourself as an expert, so I’d suggest blogging at least twice a week and incorporating your work on your next book into the blog.
***
You’ll notice I haven’t said anything about:
- press releases
- having a big book launch party
- going on a book-signing tour
- attending book fairs and festivals
- public readings or speeches
- getting on talk radio and TV shows.
There’s nothing wrong with these old-school methods. In fact, the less expensive ones, like getting an interview on a local talk radio or TV show, can be cost effective and raise your local profile a good deal. Here’s a post by Sue McGinty on Hometown Marketing.
But in this era, you should be marketing globally, not just in your area. (Unless your book is a nonfiction piece about your town. Then you do want to go old-school.)
I do know that book launch parties and personal appearances can be fun and boost your confidence as a writer. They may be important rituals you need to mark the event of becoming a published author. I’m not telling you to rule them out. But do them for enjoyment, not because you expect them to be cost-effective.
Ditto book fairs and genre conferences. They can be fabulous for networking and feeling like a “real author.” But be aware your costs will far exceed your sales.
Nonfiction authors: One of the best ways to establish yourself as an authority is teaching or presenting at conferences, so again, my advice is different for you. Personal appearances are more important for you and you will probably sell a good number of books at conferences and other venues where you speak on your book’s topic.
But no matter what your genre, you need to keep in mind that most successful indie authors make less than 10% of their income from paper books, which is why I urge new writers to concentrate on selling ebooks.
Now go write that next one!
What about you, Scriveners? Have you hit on the sure-fire key to publishing success? Have you tried any of these tips? Are you a first-time author who has had a singleton title shoot to the top of the bestseller list in the last year and can prove me wrong? Have you followed marketing advice and found it didn’t work for you?
by Anne R. Allen (@annerallen, @annerallen.bsky.social) April 13, 2025
Okay, I have to admit I like a bit of fanfare when I launch a book.
And it’s more fun when you share your launch with a bunch of other authors!
And yes, I do have a new book coming out with Thalia Press. I love their covers! This is Camilla mystery #9.
Launching on April 19. Available NOW for Pre-Order!
NPR fans, there are Easter Eggs in this story just for you!
When Camilla Randall allows a neighboring business to hold a “Moth Hour” storytelling event in the courtyard of her beachy California bookstore, she finds an inconvenient corpse left in the audience after the event. The deceased, a storyteller famous for his appearances on NPR, turns out to have a shady past — and a lot of enemies. Unfortunately, Camilla’s boyfriend Ronzo is one of them.
I love your book marketing honesty. Thank You!!
Bryan–All learned through trial and error. Lots of error. 🙂
I have your book, The Author Blog, which I found refreshing.
Here you re-iterate what you say there about blogging once a week, and how you don’t need a newsletter, at least at the beginning.
I was blogging, as we are often told, as often as I could manage, and putting out a newsletter. I started the newsletter once a week, but then dropped to every quarter as I couldn’t keep it up.
I was not writing any new stuff. No time, and my newsletter wasn’t growing, in spite of me doing everything I was told. Nor did it seem to generate any increase in sales. So I stopped it. No drop in sales. I also now only, as you recommend, blog once a week.
I now have time to build relationships with many other bloggers, and I know many have read my books, as I have theirs, as well as mutual visits to each other’s blogs.
And I have some time to work on my books, too.
Thank you for your great advice both here and in your book.
VM–Thanks for the validation about newsletters. Like you, I got so tired of them, I unsubscribed from most. When I get unsolicited newsletters–especially from authors I don’t read in genres I don’t like–I get really annoyed. But I know these authors are just following “rules” they’ve been taught. But the rules are based on a false premise–that readers care about authors’ personal lives. I don’t think they do. I sure don’t.
I agree that it is harder to make money as a self-publisher nowadays than in previous years. It was difficult when I first self-published in 1989 and it is 10 times as hard today.
As a writer who has written 17 books and has sold well over 1,125,000 copies of my books (mainly self-published), I can say I have 3 books that are true international bestsellers, ones that have each sold at least 100,000 copies in the print edition. My books have been published in 22 languages in 29 countries.
Nathan Bransford, a book expert and bestselling author, recently stated this in an article titled “It’s Harder than Ever to Rise Above the Noise.”
“I haven’t seen a reliable estimate of the number of self-made writers who make a living solely from their books, but… there aren’t many. I’d bet under 1,000 in the entire world. And some of those “livings” are very modest indeed.”
I believe that Nathan’s estimate is conservative. The number of writers making a decent living is likely fewer than 5,000 in the world.
Fact is, it’s 10 to 100 times as difficult to make a decent living as writer as it is to make a decent living as a Doctor, Dentist, Lawyer, or Engineer. There are only a handful of Canadian writers and influencers making a decent living (+$100,000 per year) but there are 100,000 Doctors, 25,000 Dentists, 125,000 Lawyers, and 250,000 Engineers in Canada making a decent living.
Then again, if there are fewer than 500 writers making a decent living in Canada, it’s 1,000 times as hard to make a living as a writer given that there are a total of around 500,000 Doctors, Dentists, Lawyers, and Engineers in Canada.
You are right also about no guarantees with any particular marketing techniques. Charlie Hoehn is a book marketing coach who takes on two major clients a year. He charges each client $250,000 for the year. The client still has to pay for their own websites, cover designs, etc. Charlie has helped authors like Tim Ferris and Ramit Sethi become “New York Times” bestselling authors and have their books sell over 1,000,000 copies — but he does not guarantee anything for that price. In fact, Charlie’s own three books have only sold a total of just over 40,000 copies. (Incidentally, I paid Charlie $1,000 for an hour of consulting. He likely learned just as much from me as I learned from him — but it was still worth it to me.)
Furthermore, check out FORBES BOOKS (a subsidy publisher). Their authors have paid either $125,000 or $250,000 to get their respective books published with promises of great results because of the worldwide marketing reach of Forbes. Yet the typical book published by Forbes Books has sold fewer than 750 copies in its lifetime through normal book channels (bookstores, Amazon, and big box stores). Most of these authors would love to get the results through these channels as I have gotten.
In short, these words of wisdom ring true today as much as they did 35 years ago.
“Even the most careful and expensive marketing plans cannot sell people a book they don’t want to read.”
— Michael Korda, former Editor-in-Chief at Simon & Schuster
Ernie–I share your admiration for Nathan Bransford. It was a guest post for him that first got my blog into the spotlight. He’s so right about “the noise.” Your experiences will be very different from somebody who’s selling a novel or a memoir. As I say in this post, nonfiction and fiction need to be marketed in totally different ways.
Anne,
!. Preordered.
2. This post IS the best marketing advice I’ve ever read all in one place! Bookmarking it to follow by the numbers for my upcoming book release.
3. Perfect timing! This summer, my new nonfic writing craft guide will be published: The Villain’s Journey ~ How to Create Villains Readers Love to Hate. I already have a couple of teaching gigs lined up and am eager to do more.
4. For years, you and Ruth have freely and generously given solid, practical, realistic advice to writers. I am SOOOO grateful for you!!!
Debbie–Thank you so much! I hope you enjoy The Hour of the Moth. It’s pure escapist fun. I figure we need it in these tumultuous times. Best of luck with your book on villains! I can’t wait to read it. You will have to come and guest blog for us when the book comes out. Check out the guidelines under the “Guest Bloggers” tab.
So glad to hear blogging is better than newsletters. I’ve unsubscribed from most newsletters (how many does anyone really read anyway?). I really don’t need to hear about someone’s niece’s dental appointment. Thanks for all the real, honest, down-to-earth pearls of wisdom here!
DD–Isn’t it true? As I said to Alicia, newsletters are based on a false premise. The truth is most readers would rather read your books than find out about your personal life. Most authors have boring lives. We sit in a room and write. 🙂
Huzzah!
Great advice, & I’m looking forward to our Big Event in May.
CS–It will be loads of fun. I look forward to these events every year.
I still don’t have a newsletter even after five books!
Reciprocal is big as far as helping others promote their books. I had so much support for each book launch as I’ve helped other authors over the years with theirs.
And thanks for mentioning the IWSG site.
Alex–With the blogging community you’ve created, it would be such a waste of time to write a newsletter, too. You’ve got one of the most supportive blogging communities on the Web.
Anne, thank you for the gracious invitation! I look forward to submitting. For sure, I’ll send you an ARC.
Debbie–Many thanks! 🙂