Why Building an Email List is Essential for Authors

POSTED ON Mar 24, 2014

Joel Friedlander

Written by Joel Friedlander

Home > Blog > Marketing, Self-Publishing > Why Building an Email List is Essential for Authors

As authors have flocked to the internet and social media to meet readers, get market insight, create communities of interest and, perhaps, build a robust web asset of their own, many have run into a problem.

How will all this activity translate into the income necessary to keep writing and marketing your books?

After all, most of us aren’t involved in social media, blogging, or other online activities just to change the world, to tell as many people as possible our stories, or to improve people’s lives.

These are all noble aims, and many of us hope to accomplish some of them, but there’s that one inconvenient truth: we all need to make a living somehow.

And it’s true that there’s a “missing link” in the fan-finding, Facebook-liking, blog posting process that so many authors are filling up their time with.

Your email list.

“If there’s one thing all professional platform-builders agree on, it’s the importance of building your list.”—Michael Hyatt

A Sad Truth About Author Websites

Sadly, if you surf the web looking at author websites, you’ll find that many of them lack this essential function:

They have no sign up for people to add their names to an email list.

Many of these blogs offer an opportunity to sign up for the blog articles, but all that will do in most cases is add you to a subscriber list that will be sent each blog post as it’s published.

That’s not the same thing as your own email list (although some email providers combine the two functions).

On other sites you’ll see an “opt in” box where you can enter your email address and perhaps your first and/or last name, too. In exchange, you’ll be offered a free download, or a free newsletter, or perhaps a free short course in a subject that’s related to what the author is writing about on the blog.

This opt-in box is the sign that the blogger is actively building an email list.

You might be wondering about why this is so important. And it is important. In fact, I consider it the most important element of any author’s site, if the author intends to make their writing and publishing into a sustainable business.

What Social Media is For


You might think you don’t need an email list, and I’m not suggesting it’s a good idea for every single author. For instance, if you want to become a novelist but haven’t published anything yet, it might be challenging to build a list particularly if you’re not sure yet what kind of books you want to write.

But for the vast majority of authors—published, self-published, or soon-to-be-published—an email list is the perfect complement to your other marketing activities.

Since most of those activities are likely taking place in social media, perhaps we should look at what all those connections are really good for.

Social media is for:

  • finding communities of readers
  • engaging with readers and other writers
  • determining how much interest exists for your topic
  • building a community of fans who will support your work
  • keeping up with current developments in your field
  • building “buzz” when you’re launching your book

And lots of other things, too. But notice that selling books or other related products and services isn’t really one of the best uses of social media.

No, it’s really more about being “social,” whatever that means to you.

To me that means meeting people who share my interests, finding out about new products and services, hearing about mass media events, and keeping track of breaking news.

“Building a targeted and invested email list of subscribers is hands down one of THE most important things you can do to ensure the long term growth of your writing career.”—Kimberley Grabas

The Importance of the Network

We already know that the means by which we attract people to our site is the quality, appeal, and utility of our content. Without great content, nothing else matters very much.

With a linking strategy and some idea of how to market our site, we reach out to other people who share our interests.

Once people find out about your content, you have the opportunity to take your relationship to a higher level of engagement.

When a reader signs up for your email list to download a free report, ebook, or some other piece of content, they are telling you two things.

  1. That they are part of your market, otherwise they wouldn’t be interested in your free offer.
  2. They have given you permission to talk to them about that subject in their email inbox.

Unlike social media, you can have a longer conversation by communicating through email. In social media, most interactions happen in public, and that’s part of their appeal.

But in email, you are really talking to one person at a time, since each person opens their email in the privacy of their inbox.

(This is also the secret to writing effective email that people will act on—even though you may have hundreds of people on your email list, try to write your email as if you are sitting across the table with an interested friend at a coffee shop, telling them about something exciting to both of you.)

This leads to the ability to create a longer narrative about the kinds of books you write, or about products and services related to your subject area.

These kinds of messages are much more suitable to making an offer to your list. People on your email list know you better than casual readers, they have already established a relationship where they want to hear more from you, so they are open to your communications.

Through regular communication with your email list, you can build your credibility, establish your authority in your field, and make offers to your readers that reflect your shared interests.

It’s this last option—making offers to your readers—that creates the opportunity for you to finally find a way to turn all the hard work you’ve done into financial support.

And as long as you maintain the respect and integrity that caused people to want to know and interact with you in the first place, readers will continue to value these offers.

Your offers don’t need to be books, either. Perhaps you’ve created a training program based on your expertise, or decided to take a group of writers to an exotic location to work on your books together.

Your email list is where you will make these offers to your readers, and where you’ll be able to fully explain them.

For more complicated products or services, your email may be a vehicle that convinces people to take a look at a sales page, where the item is described more richly than it can be in an email message.

“Imagine how powerful it is to have a list of 10,000 people and to send an email saying “My book is available now. Click here to buy”. This is the basis of all the Amazon bestseller campaigns”—Joanna Penn

Sustainable Business is Built on Repeated Engagement

With your email list full of people anxious to hear your stories or learn from your expertise, you have the beginning of a sustainable business.

Over time these people will get to know you better and better, and a percentage of them will become some of your best and most devoted fans.

They will help spread the word about your new books, let you know about opportunities you might have missed, and be open to offers you make them in the future.

This network of engaged and interested readers is the base upon which you can build a truly effective, long-term business as an author, a speaker, a subject-matter expert.

So start building that email list today, it’s never too soon to start.

9 Great Email List Resources

Ready to dive into email marketing? Here are some great resources and in-depth articles to help get you going.

Why I Use and Recommend AWeber for Your Email Marketing

Yes, E-mail Still Works for Book Marketing by Jane Friedman

How to Get a Ton of New Subscribers to Your Blog by Michael Hyatt

How I Use Email Newsletters to Drive Traffic and Make Money by Darren Rowse

Email List Building Series (Part 1): The Power of an Email List (And Why It’s a Must) by Kimberley Grabas

Email Marketing for the Time and Cash-strapped Self-published Author by Caimin Jones

Email Marketing: How to Push Send and Grow Your Business by Copyblogger Media (opt in required, well worth it)

How Authors And Writers Can Build An Email List For Marketing by Joanna Penn

Best Email Platforms for Small Business by Digital.com

Photo: bigstockphoto.com. Originally published is a slightly different form by CreateSpace as The Money’s In the List. Links to AWeber in this post are affiliate links.

Joel Friedlander

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Joel Friedlander

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