With more and more books being published every year, and more authors “going indie” every day, it’s never been more important to find ways to get your book the attention it needs to succeed.
Authors who understand how to deal with the media are clearly ahead of the game.
And the central tool for getting the power of the media on your side is the press release.
But how many authors even know how effective press releases can be in spurring attention and sales? And how many of those know how to write a press release that really gets results?
Join me on Wednesday when Joan Stewart (The Publicity Hound) and I will present a free webinar on:
- How fiction and nonfiction authors have benefited from fabulous publicity via press releases
- 9 key elements journalists and book buyers expect to see in a press release but that many authors ignore.
- Special tips for fiction authors.
- What to do with your press releases after you’ve written them so they do triple-duty.
This will be a fast-paced, information-rich live event. At the end we’ll also talk about a great way we’ve come up with to really exploit the power of press releases.
Seating is limited. If you want to learn press releases from a pro, grab your seat now. Here are the details:
Date: Wednesday, September 9, 2015
Time: 1:00 p.m. Pacific, 4:00 p.m. Eastern time
Register: Webinar Registration Page
See you on the webinar!
Tôi muốn để cảm ơn bạn này tuyệt vời đọc !!
Tôi chắc chắn thích mỗi chút chút nó.
Tôi đã có cuốn sách đánh dấu kiểm tra điều bạn gửi …
Hi Joel! Tried to register but never got the confirmation email… could you post a link to the room or resend it, please? Karen (at) pioneerdrama (dot) com
Thank you!
Karen,
Sorry for the bother. Here’s the registration link again:
https://bookdesigntemplates.leadpages.co/press-release-webinar/
One tip: don’t base your PR dream on free press release distribution services. They seem to get much worse results (even zero results) than the paid-for services from PR Web and PR Newswire.
And: remember that the mere publication of your book is not usually sufficiently newsworthy to impress anyone. Only the most desperate small-town weekly would publish an article with the headline: “Local Woman Writes Book.”