Thursday, March 19, 2020
10 Things Successful People Do on Sunday Nights
10 Things Successful People Do on Sunday Nights Most people find that they dread Sunday evenings. The almost-time-to-go-back-to-work blues set in and the whole world seems to get a little bit more bleak. Even if you love your job, youââ¬â¢re probably not too jazzed about your weekend being over. But the secret to truly successful people, of course, is that they never stop working. And the hours between the weekend and the new workweek are almost always wasted. What if you could put them to better use?Here are a few strategies to get a leg up on the week ahead and set yourself up to be a huge success- or just make sure you use the leisure time available to you to maximize your enjoyment of your free time- which will refresh you best for whatever Monday brings.1. Have FunSuccessful people understand their weekday time constraints, and so they make sure to pack their weekend full of things that will relax and rejuvenate them. See family and friends. Do your favorite activities. And save something really fun for last. That way youà ¢â¬â¢ll be extra focused on the fun part of Sunday night, rather than the less fun part of Monday morning. End on a high note!2. Work OutNever underestimate the power of endorphins. Do a bit of yoga, or a gym class, or a tennis game. Youââ¬â¢ll find it centers you for the week ahead.3. Get OrganizedSit down with your calendar and start to plan things for the coming week. Set yourself goals and task lists. Just make sure not to stress yourself out.4. Eat HealthyAvoid the temptation to pig out on nacho pizzas. Try making a healthy evening meal instead. Youââ¬â¢ll feel lighter and brighter when your alarm goes off on Monday morning.5. Catch UpSunday night can be a great time to catch up on all the emails, phone calls, and texts youââ¬â¢ve had to dodge during your busy workweek.6. UnplugPut down your phone. Shut your laptop. Donââ¬â¢t check your emails or your texts. Read a book instead, or watch a movie. Reflect on the week behind you and the week ahead. Disconnect for a minute before you have to plunge back into the world.7. VolunteerSundays are a great time to give back. Do something meaningful with your last free day. Put a little time and energy into helping others and your good vibes will carry you through.8. Tidy UpIf your week is super busy, chances are that is reflected in the state of your bag and wallet- crammed with bits of detritus and crumpled receipts. Clean out and reorganize. Make it look good for Monday morning and youââ¬â¢ll feel an extra boost. While youââ¬â¢re at it, try the same trick on your fridge. Toss out expired food and wipe your shelves.9. PlanPlan your outfits for the week. Your grocery list. Your breakfast! That leaves your morning free for clear thinking and concentrating on your day.10. SleepQuality sleep (and a good quantity of sleep) is crucial. You probably arenââ¬â¢t always able to get as much as youââ¬â¢d like. Make sure to make up for that on Sunday evenings.
Tuesday, March 3, 2020
Getting Traction for Your Books â⬠by Justin Mares
Getting Traction for Your Books - by Justin Mares Getting "Traction" for Your Books - Interviewing Justin Mares ââ¬Å"Most startups don't fail at building a product. Most startups fail at getting traction.â⬠- Traction BookThe same can be said of books. Most authors donââ¬â¢t fail at writing a book, they fail at finding their readers and selling the book to them. This is why weââ¬â¢ve always stressed how authors and startups are similar, and how, when it comes to marketing, authors can learn al lot from startups.So today, we decided to bring some of the best startup marketing advice to the Reedsy blog: Justin Mares is the co-author of the Traction book, a bestseller and true reference work for early-stage startups planning their marketing strategy. As usual, the transcript of the most important points of the interview is provided below Hi Justin, itââ¬â¢s really amazing to have you on our Reedsy podcast. Youââ¬â¢re the co-author of the Traction Book, which I think is one of the very best marketing books for startups. For our listeners who donââ¬â¢t know about it yet, could you quickly give us the pitch?Sure! So Traction is a book that is there to help startups with the hard part of ââ¬Å"what do you do once you have a product?â⬠The book approaches how to go about setting up a growth process, how to figure out what channels are good for your business, and then has a chapter on each one of the 19 ââ¬Å"channelsâ⬠that we have identified as ways for a business to acquire customers.And youââ¬â¢re now releasing the second edition. Whatââ¬â¢s interesting is that you self-published the first one, and then got picked up by Penguin, howââ¬â¢s the experience been?Interestingâ⬠¦ Yes, itââ¬â¢s been interesting. Like anything, there are positives and negatives. On the positive side, the sec ond edition is in bookstores, it has been professionally edited, it is a lot crisper, we did a bunch more iterations and stuff like that, so itââ¬â¢s a really good book.On the negative side, things move a lot more slowly, and you lose some of the creative control that you have when youââ¬â¢re self-publishing a book.So on balance, I think it was the right decision, weââ¬â¢re really happy with Portfolio (Penguin), itââ¬â¢s been a great experience working with them, but there certainly are some positives and negatives.Thatââ¬â¢s really interesting, and I can definitely understand why, coming from a startup and tech background, you would find traditional publishing slow. Now, on another note, I like to think that authors are a little bit like startups, and that they should approach marketing in the same way we do. Would you agree with that?Definitely. And thatââ¬â¢s something we mention in our book: if you approach things in a systematic way - that we talk about in our book- you are far more likely to have things work out. And we found that applying that process we describe in the book to our own marketing of the book had the same impact and allowed us to do really well.And thatââ¬â¢s why I usually recommend authors to read the Traction book and use the approach you describe. Now, just quickly for our readers, could you sum up that approach?Sure! So what we talk about is basically: look at the potential channels (ways) you could market the book, and then figure out, if you want to sell, say, 5000 copies, which of these channels is going to allow you to sell that number of copies. [Read more about the ââ¬Å"bullseyeâ⬠approach here] Look at the potential ways you could market your book and test the ones that make most sense. So in our case we looked and we said: ââ¬Å"ok, we think email marketing is going to work well, we think doing blog guest posts is going to work well, and we think podcasts will work wellâ⬠. Once we figure that out, we ran small tests on each of these three channels. We measured them and saw that podcasts and email marketing far outperformed guest posting.So then we thought: great, letââ¬â¢s get on every potential podcast we can, get on every potential newsletter that has a relevant email list, and letââ¬â¢s just focus on those instead of doing all three of them in the hope that one will work (which is what a lot of people sadly do when it comes to marketing).This makes sense. And itââ¬â¢s interesting because, as you say, a lot of authors try to do everything at one time (social media, newsletter, advertising, blog tours, etc.) and when you do that, you lose focus and waste time and resources.Exactly. I mean, there are so many things you can do as an author, as a marke ter or as a business person to market your stuff. The possibilities are effectively limitless, so what you have to do is figure out what the best use of your time is, and spend as much time doing that as possible. Thatââ¬â¢s what our approach effectively tries to help people with: if youââ¬â¢re trying to sell your book, or grow your company, focus only on the things that really matter, and ignore everything else. That makes sense. The one thing that makes it a bit trickier for authors, is that often they sell their books through platforms like Amazon, iBooks or Kobo, which they donââ¬â¢t control. So how do you do the tracking in a case like this, how can you know which ââ¬Å"channelsâ⬠are bringing you which sales?Great question. This is something that is certainly a challenge, itââ¬â¢s not easy. But we found a couple of things you can do. For one, we could look at our rough sales rank and see, if we launch a certain campaign today, see what our sales rank does.The other thing you can do is set up Amazon affiliate links so that if someone promotes your book, you can give them a unique affiliate link that allows you then to see how many people clicked on the link and how many made a purchase as a result of it.That way we were able to track the number of people who bought through email promotions, through guest posts, through podcasts, etc.Yes, weââ¬â¢d heard the affiliate link t actic before (from Mark Dawson), so Iââ¬â¢m glad you mentioned it. Now, you had this non-fiction book that you marketed very well. If you had to put yourself in the shoes of a fiction author, which channels would you test first?Hmm, itââ¬â¢s a hard one. I think basic marketing principles can apply here, and youââ¬â¢ve got to ask yourself the right questions.First, who are the people who are most likely to enjoy or resonate with your book, and where are they hanging out? Then, how are these people finding out about new fiction books today? What are the bestselling indie authors in your genre and how did they do their early-stage marketing?I would look at all these things and see what you can replicate and what you canââ¬â¢t.I think that one thing that is really powerful in driving book discoverability today is still word-of-mouth. Would you agree with that?Oh definitely, Iââ¬â¢ve got 150 books on my reading list that have been recommended to meâ⬠¦So as an author, w hat can you do to help encourage or kickstart word-of-mouth?The biggest one is to write literally the best book that you could ever think of writing. One reason why I think Traction has done really well is that if you are someone who is working on a startup, I can legitimately recommend that book to you - even if I wasnââ¬â¢t one of the authors.I had coffee with someone four hours ago and he told me ââ¬Å"oh yeah, my friend is running growth at this one company and he said that Traction was a really good book, so he gave it to me and now Iââ¬â¢m meeting with youâ⬠. And that only happens when you write a really good book that becomes one of the reference works in its category.I think thatââ¬â¢s the #1 thing you can do for word-of-mouth. Otherwise, things that weââ¬â¢ve done is weââ¬â¢ve inserted little bonuses where after reading the book, you can go get bonus material on the website and once youââ¬â¢re signed up to our mailing list we have referral systems li ke ââ¬Å"forward this to a friend and weââ¬â¢ll give you another bonusâ⬠. 'To drive word of mouth, just write the best book you could ever think of writing.' @jwmares Thanks for the insights, Justin! And again, I really recommend the Traction book to both startup people and authors because it offers a good approach and a good breakdown of all the channels you can use to sell your books.Follow Justin Mares and Reedsy on Twitter: @jwmares and @ReedsyHQWhat channels have worked for you in your book marketing activities? How do you track your efforts and measure your results? Leave us your thoughts, or any questions for Justin, in the comments below!
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