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Ten Ways To Use Video To Sell More Books
When it comes to convincing a reader to buy, sometimes there's nothing more compelling than a good sales pitch. Yes, you can have excellent back copy, a stunning cover, but nothing makes a reader morph into a buyer quicker than a hefty pitch that pushes every single hot button (and even a few they didn't know they had). Video as a means to promote a book is a great sales pitch, but only if it's done right. What do I mean by "done right"?
With all the talk today about using video to promote your book, it's easy to get caught up in a YouTube-driven world. It's a great idea certainly but there's one catch: you've got to make your viewer feel something. An example of this is a recent video posted to Yahoo videos (it also landed on YouTube) about a contestant (Paul Potts) on Britain's Got Talent. While not an author (yet) the video shows us clearly what we mean by emotion. Don't believe me? Take a look for yourself.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=exyJ2CSfrHo
The video became so popular (almost overnight) that within a few days it made it to the U.S. and into the hands of millions of viewers. Why? Well, let's think about this. If you've ever watched an episode of American Idol or a version of the program you know that the most favored contestants are the underdogs, the ones who just show up and blow the judges away. That's the biggest emotional hot button on any of these types of shows and that's why the Paul Potts video made such an impact online. Of course he had talent, but talent in the absence of a true underdog factor wouldn't have made this video as successful as it was.
In fact, not only that but every major media outlet is clamoring for an interview with Paul. He's become a sensation. The video gave him exposure to people globally and it tapped into an emotion - but more than that, it tapped into the right emotion. That is key. If the Paul Potts video had been scary, or disturbing, or flat out boring, who would have cared? So if you're considering doing a book video for your own tome, don't sell yourself short by just "telling the story," do it in such a way that grabs your reader, engages them and hits them right in their emotional hot buttons. Know the triggers your audience responds to and incorporate that into your video.
Check out this video that MonkeyCMedia did for a book we worked on: http://www.redhotinternetpublicity.com/trailers/engaged.html
Here are some ways to make the most of your video:
1) Have you been YouTube'd? If you haven't this is the #1 place to load your book video.
2) Put your video on your own website, don't let a single visitor land on your site without getting the "touch and feel" of your book.
3) Send a sample of your book video to every media contact you pitch. Never let a press kit leave your office without a disc.
4) Got a social networking page? If you do (and you should) add the clip or a link to it on the page.
5) When you pitch the media, don't forget to insert a link to the trailer in your email. Don't send it as an attachment; chances are an overaggressive spam filter will have it for lunch.
6) Blog about it every chance you get. No, I'm not talking about repeating a blog over and over but blog on what success you've had thanks to your video. And oh, yes, add a link to the book video too.
7) Trying to get a signing but have been unsuccessful? Let your book speak for itself, literally. Drop off a copy of your book trailer to an as-yet-unconvinced bookstore person and I can almost bet you'll get a signing in the store.
8) Ready for your close-up? There's no quicker way to a potential producer's heart than through his eyes and ears. Seeing a book come to life can sometimes be a great way to sell someone on the concept of turning your book into a movie.
9) If you're doing a signing bring the book video to show while you're signing books. I've known authors who've done this and they sold almost twice as many books. The video really pulls in readers!
10) Just like you can tell a book by its cover, you can often tell a book video by its packaging. Get your CD cover professionally printed, don't skim on the first impression! In fact, why not have your video burned to a business card size cd that you can pop into the card slot of a presentation folder?
BONUS : Text Translation: Difficulties Technological Transfer
No secret that the current scientific and technological transfer to Russia the deepest crisis. Despite the fact that the sale is expensive translated literature, the buyer is very earth, which means buying foreign word pronunciation. Technical transfer of illiterates in the field of translation rasplodivshihsya everywhere. And none of this is not to draw attention, as the customer wishes to receive the translation of the cheap and in the short term, a random Executive working for pennies, forced transfer of a number. So the translation from English and appear boreal type "provider", "zuminga", "Just"... And if the translation into English left Russian word? Funny, right? Technical translation should record fields, which employ highly skilled technicians who understand the specific terminology and able to translate the text without deviating from the original. This is almost not found. But today a technical translator must obtain and deliver work in electronic form, work in ultra-high-speed pace to recognise abbreviations, foreign names, incomprehensible units, as well as edit the translation for the customer, from the original care. It is not respected its copyright. Most difficult is the new terminology in the areas where we have fallen behind for decades (for example, in physics bounce and maintenance of complex production equipment). Challenges technical specialists lexicographers working on the creation of specialized dictionaries, is a Russian equivalent, of the original. Another problem is that special dictionaries in paper form does not correspond to technical progress, and their electronic counterparts have only a limited number of users. Technical translation must reach a new level of quality, it depends on the future of science and, therefore, the prosperity of our country