Search Engine Optimization (SEO): While not directly advertising, investing in SEO can be highly cost-effective in the long run. Optimizing your website and content for search engines helps improve organic rankings, leading to increased visibility and traffic without paying for clicks or impressions.
Pay-Per-Click (PPC) Advertising: PPC advertising, such as Google Ads and Bing Ads, allows you to pay only when a user clicks on your ad. This model ensures that you pay for actual engagement and can be cost-effective if campaigns are well-optimized. Proper keyword research, targeting, ad relevance, and bid management are essential for maximizing ROI.
Social Media Advertising: Platforms like Instagram, Twitter, and LinkedIn offer cost-effective advertising options. You can target specific demographics, interests, and behaviors to reach your desired audience. Social media ads often provide good value for money, allowing you to set budget caps and pay based on clicks, impressions, or other engagement metrics. (We do not recommend Facebook however, as that has proven to be ineffective.)
Display Advertising: Display ads appear on websites, typically as banners or graphics. Platforms like Google Display Network offer affordable ad placement on a wide range of websites. Careful targeting and optimization can help you reach your target audience effectively, resulting in cost-effective brand exposure and conversions.
Retargeting/Remarketing Ads: Retargeting allows you to show ads specifically to users who have previously visited your website or shown interest in your products/services. These ads can be highly effective since they target users who are already familiar with your brand, resulting in better conversion rates. Retargeting platforms like Google Ads and Facebook Ads offer cost-effective solutions.
Content Marketing: Content marketing involves creating and distributing valuable, relevant, and informative content to attract and engage your target audience. By producing high-quality blog posts, videos, infographics, or eBooks, you can increase brand visibility, build trust, and drive organic traffic at a relatively low cost.
Influencer Marketing: Collaborating with influencers who have a significant following in your niche can be cost-effective compared to traditional advertising. Influencers can promote your products/services through their channels, reaching their engaged audience. Finding relevant micro-influencers can be particularly cost-effective while maintaining targeted reach.
Schedule a consultation with SEO Expert Charles Moffat
by emailing contactus@designseo.ca.
Consultations are $40 per hour.
What are the Most Cost Effective types of Online Advertising?
How to get 1000+ Wattpad Followers = Follow + Followback
Wattpad is a social media website for writers to share their short stories, poetry and even novels. You can even sell your writing on there by becoming a "Wattpad Star", but to fulfill the criteria needed you need to do several things: You need to post two finished stories that each have over 50,000 words, and you should probably have at least 1000 followers.
So how do you get 1000+ followers on Wattpad?
It is tricky if you are just starting out as a writer and you don't have any existing fan base.
During the past 3 months I have determined that Wattpad follows a similar Follow/Followback culture to Instagram and Twitter, which implies that if you want lots of followers you really want to be following other writers (especially writers with less than 1k followers) as they are the most likely to give a Followback.
On Twitter it is very easy to reach 5k followers. You just follow 5000 writers (often during #writerslift) and then unfollow anyone who didn't followback with 7 days. Then repeat.
Same thing on Instagram. Follow 7500 people. You can easily follow 100 people per day, over 75 days, until you reach the 7500 limit. Then unfollow anyone who didn't followback. Repeat the process.
On Wattpad it is basically the same thing, but there is a 1k cap, and there is also a bigger delay because some people don't login to Wattpad regularly. So you really want to be following writers who are regulars/have multiple works/posted recently, because it is those people who are the most active who are the most likely to give the precious Followback.
Repeating this process I estimate a person should be able to gain 100-200 followers per week, and they should only need to login 3 times per week (Mon-Wed-Fri) for roughly an hour for a period of 5-10 weeks until they reach 1k followers.
After they reach 1000+ followers the social benefits of having 1000+ followers should kick in and the writer can focus more on writing.
The writer can get those two 50,000 stories done (basically two pulp fiction length novels) and should be able to apply to get the Wattpad Star status. For reference it should only take 1 month to write a pulp fiction novel if a person is a full time professional writer.
Thus it is in theory possible for a full time professional writer to get that Wattpad Star status in about 2.5 months, and it should only take them about 30 hours of following/unfollowing other writers spread over a period of 10 weeks, and the actual time requirements for writing their pulp fiction length books.
After reaching the 1000+ followers mark the writer really needs to focus on producing quality writing in order to build a following of readers. This means posting regularly and often.
But on the plus side, if they have already gained Wattpad Star status they can now sell their stories.
Or use their Wattpad account to promote their Amazon author page. Or their Twitter page, their Facebook page, their YouTube page, etc.
Writers really need to be on top of their social media accounts these days. Even authors who go the traditional route of getting a publisher need to build their social media presence. Publishers expect it of authors to be doing it.
Don't believe me?
Just look at Margaret Atwood's Wattpad page:
wattpad.com/user/MargaretAtwood
It isn't like Margaret Atwood isn't already a world famous successful writer. It is just that in order to get more sales even successful authors like Atwood are expected to be spending a few hours per week promoting their social media presence. Don't believe me? Just look at how busy her Twitter page is:
How much should a webite be charging for guest post advertising?
Click Thru Rates for Amazon Advertising + Book Publishing
This is a win-win for Amazon as they then get paid more money regardless, from people buying the books (depending on the book Amazon is typically taking 30 to 70% of the profit from book sales), and they get paid for the advertising itself.
The Click Thru Rate varies on the product and the advertising campaign.
Click Thru Rates
- Poor, 0.3% or lower.
- Average, 0.4%.
- Good, 0.5% or higher.
It is even possible for targeted advertising campaigns to get a CTR of 2 to 3% (or higher), but this is comparatively rare and requires some experimentation on the part of the user.
The Conversion Rate for sales is typically between 9 and 9.5%. Thus 100 clicks typically leads to roughly 9.25 sales. Again, this can vary on the item being sold.
If you were paying perhaps $50 per 1000 views (also known as CPM Advertising), and attaining a good click thru rate of 0.5% that equates to only 50 people clicking on your advertising. Ergo, you are paying $1 per click.
Now $1 per click may not sound too great or too bad, depending on what you are selling. What is bad is the conversion rate of 9%.
Thus you are spending $11 to just to get 1 sale. If you are making at least $12 of profit off each sale then it is fine to be doing that, but for book sales you are probably not making that much.
Eg. The maximum sale price of an ebook is normally $9.99 and you get 70% of that. If you set the price to $10 or higher then Amazon takes 70% and you only get 30%.
Thus in that scenario you could be spending $11 just to make $7.
Fortunately there is a hitch to this whole idea.
Amazon doesn't actually do CPM advertising...
No, they only use PPC (Pay Per Click) Advertising.
And the "Suggested Bid" according to Amazon is between $0.61 and $1.80 USD.
So that does create a bit more flexibility, but the upper number of $1.80 suggests that there is a lot of bidding going on.
You could potentially bid 65 cents per click, paying $650 to get 1000 clicks. In theory, assuming someone else doesn't outbid you for the keywords you are advertising to.
If 9% are converted into sales, you are looking at 90 sales. So you are paying $7.22 per sale.
For $9.99 ebooks making a $7 per sale, good luck with that conversion rate. You would be literally losing 22 cents per sale on the amount of advertising required to get 1 sale.
If you bid lower, say $0.61 per click the math works a bit easier. You are now spending $6.77 to get 1 sale worth $7. Finally you are making money, but again you are still taking a financial risk and gamble that you will even get sales.
Which begs the Question: Why do Click Thru Rates Matter?
If a click thru rate and a conversion rate of a particular product is too low Amazon will reject it for being too low quality and will run different advertising instead which converts more sales, which leads to Amazon making more money.
A good click thru rate and a good conversion rate means more money for both you and Amazon. A bad one means Amazon's algorithms may decide to ignore your bids because you are either:
A) Not bidding enough to make it worth their while.
B) Not selling enough to make it worth their while.
The Rigged System
Amazon's PPC system is for suckers. It is for people who don't know how to advertise their books any other way and are willing to throw money at the problem.
Amazon's advertising system is really geared towards brand name publishers and authors who can go over the $9.99 limit for ebooks. When they are selling an ebook for $16.99 or a similar higher price they can go over the spending limits of their self-published counterparts and still make a decent profit, and their higher price point means they are taking less financial risk during the process.
Plus even if people don't buy the book (the 91% of people who were just browsing) they also create brand name recognition. The next time that 91% of people are in a book store and see a paperback copy of the book they might be more likely to buy it or at least pick it up to look at it.
Isn't There A Better Way To Advertise?
Actually, yes there is. Third Party Advertising on other websites with links to your books on Amazon or other book seller websites.
Consider this.
Imagine putting an advertisement/article about your book on a third party website that does book reviews, and the site in question offers this service for $40 for a permanent article about your book.
If your book gets 100 people clicking on the link per year from the 3rd party website, and only 9% of them buy the book, then you are making a profit. At $7 profit per sale you are looking at $63 per year in profits from 9 sales.
Good, now multiple that by advertising on perhaps 100 blogs/websites/etc that similarly post book reviews/articles/etc. Yes, it will cost you $4000, but if you manage to get 10,000 clicks on the links from those articles then you should make $6300 per year.
Even if you were not getting the 100 clicks per year from the website, you will still make your money back over time because the articles are permanent. It is really more of an issue of being patient.
Some websites might be more popular than others and garner more clicks for your books, but overall you are building yourself as a brand and you could even benefit from word of mouth if other people see your books, buy them, and then write blog posts, articles, Tweet on Twitter and other social media posts.
Now you don't necessarily have to build up these volume of 100 websites/blogs talking about your books in a single year. You could do 20 per year ($800 per year) over a period of 5 years and your results would be slower, but you would save money.
Is There A Cheaper Way?
Yes, of course there is. But it is more time intensive.
It involves you building your own website/blog and building an audience.
Likewise it is recommended you build a Twitter audience, and perhaps a Facebook one too. The Twitter audience is more beneficial because studies have shown that Twitter users have a tendency to be more literate, more educated, and more likely to buy ebooks/paperbacks. Facebook users in comparison don't read as much, but Twitter is ideal for authors as a platform.
The other big thing that is becoming popular for authors is YouTube. Video is increasingly the best way to reach more people and a broad audience. It is estimated that 85% of all internet content being consumed by 2023 will be video. If you are only producing text on your website/etc then you are limiting yourself to a smaller percentage of people.
So in a nutshell you should be:
- Making a website + blog for your writing.
- Making a Twitter account and build an audience of 5000+ people. 10,000 or more would be better, but it is possible to get 5000 Twitter followers in less than 6 months.
- Building a YouTube channel for the future.
Don't worry if you don't get huge numbers on Twitter or YouTube right away. There is a learning curve involved with these platforms, but the trick to succeeding is to keep trying. Social Media is effectively an "If you build it they will come (eventually)" type of platform.
Traditional Publishers like Authors on Social Media
There is a bonus benefit to having an active Twitter/YouTube accounts promoting your books. Traditional publishers notice these things. If you someday go to a publisher and try to sell them a book, if they are interested in you then they will no doubt Google you. If you are already famous on Twitter/YouTube/etc then they are more likely to take you seriously.
Traditional publishers also now expect authors to have Twitter/YouTube accounts promoting their books. If you don't have one already the publisher is going to be pushing you start one and get out there and start promoting yourself. If you are resistant to the idea then you may find they are resistant to publishing more books from you, unless you somehow manage to write a bestseller or if your book sells out its original print run and they decide to print more. In which case you are more likely to sell out the print run if you are active on social media.
Never underestimate the reader's ability to buy books from someone they talked to briefly on social media.
Also don't think that older writers are not on social media. They are. Margaret Atwood. Stephen King. Many of these older authors are very active on Twitter and YouTube.
Hot Tip - Avoid talking about politics or controversial issues on social media. J. K. Rowling for example (of Harry Potter fame) has really ruined her career by talking about her transphobia on Twitter and writing a series of transphobic books under a pseudonym. So yes, definitely avoid certain topics if you want to get more book sales.
The Old Adage is Still True
If you want something to be quick and quality don't expect it to be cheap.
If you want something to be cheap, don't expect it to be quick and quality.
Amazon's PPC Advertising is good and fast, promising quick results and sales, but it is very expensive.
Third Party Advertising is cheaper and still good, but it is slower and it may take years for you to see your strong returns on your investment.
Building your own website and social media audience is very time consuming, but it is one of the cheaper options and still a good way to build a fan base.
Probably the cheapest (but least quality way) is to do nothing and just publish your books and hope people somehow magical find your books when you do zero advertising. Good luck with that. Have fun having zero sales, because is literally what you should expect to happen.
Conclusions / What You Should Be Doing
If I had to list what authors should be doing it is the following (in order):
1. Build a website.
2. Build a Twitter following.
3. Build a YouTube channel.
4. Third Party Websites.
5. Find a traditional publisher.
It is the dream of every writer to find a traditional publisher and sell lots of their books. It is possible you might skip straight to #5, but doing the first 4 things will certainly boost your chances if you can write a successful self-published book (or a whole bunch of them) and then try to convince a publisher to gamble on your genius.
5 Reasons Why Twitter is Superior to Facebook when it comes to Marketing
Ah, the all important question.
Let me illustrate the reasons why by using a simple list of Pros and Cons:
Pros and Cons of Marketing on Facebook Vs Twitter
#1. Better Reach
Pro - You get your own business page or account on Facebook or Twitter for free.
Con - People have to actively Like your Facebook page to see your posts in their feed. On Twitter people can see your posts if they simply see it while looking for specific hashtags. They don't need to follow you to see it. Yes your Facebook page is free, but how does it reach people?
#2. Facebook Spam
Pro - On Facebook you can join various groups dedicated to specific topics.
Con - If you post advertising or spam in those groups they typically kick you out and block you.
#3. Twitter Advertising
Pro - You can post things promoting your products or services on Twitter and most people won't care.
Con - People can potentially unfollow you if they think your Twitter feed is too spammy, but depending on the topic they probably won't care. Eg. If you are a mystery novelist and post an ad for your newest mystery novel then that is really expected to be there and nobody is going to complain about it. Hot Tip - Avoid making your Twitter feed look spammy by using every 2nd tweet to interact with colleagues in the same field. Eg. If you're a mystery novelist, talk to other mystery novelists and interact with them.
#4. More Interactions
Pro - People can interact on both platforms fairly easily.
Con - If you ask someone to Like your Facebook page it is considered to be an annoyance. On Twitter however if you Follow someone many people will give you a Followback. If they don't give you the Followback you can later change your mind and Unfollow them.
#5. Building an Audience
Pro - On both platforms it is possible to just sit back and hope people find your Facebook Page or Twitter account interesting enough to Like or Follow it.
Con - Building an audience on Facebook however is problematic as the platform feels more invasive for people and they are less likely to Like (and actively Follow) your Facebook Page. On Twitter however the Follow/Followback system makes it very easy for people to build a growing audience as it follows a "Scratch My Back and I will Scratch Yours" approach.
Conclusions
Generally speaking Twitter is the easiest and most efficient solution for most companies and people running a business to promote their brand, products or services.
We may write another post similar to this one in the future. "5 More Reasons..." There are other ways Twitter beats Facebook in terms of marketing with respect to audience engagement, visibility to the news media, the ability to interact with celebrities, the use of memes, and much more.
BONUS TOPIC - WHAT ABOUT YOUTUBE?
YouTube does have potential to be better than Twitter for marketing purposes, but it also requires a lot more work and sophistication to create a really good YouTube channel. You need to have or develop some serious film-making skills to make a super popular YouTube channel, and building an audience on YouTube is extremely time consuming before you start to see any results.
Twitter in comparison is relatively low tech and doesn't require as much effort to make a popular Twitter feed. Thus for certain fields, like mystery novelists, Twitter actually makes more sense because it is geared towards writers as opposed to be film-making buffs.
Get started by emailing contactus@designseo.ca.
Consultations are $40 per hour.
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