[stylist] Sub: Finding Your Audience (Digital Pubbing, Sabrina Ricci)

David Russell david.sonofhashem at gmail.com
Tue Sep 5 21:08:36 UTC 2017


Hi Writers,

My anthology, Waiting For Messiah, is just a few days away from going
up on Smashwords!
Cleaning out my inbox, I found this helpful post, featured from
Sabrina Ricci in her online column recently. Pasting below and welcome
your thoughts.
----------
Pretty much everyone can agree that having a marketing plan is
essential when it comes to publishing your own books. And the first
step in creating that plan is finding your niche and your audience.

This isn’t always easy to pin down. One thing you can do is create
user personas. Xtensio (https://xtensio.com/user-persona/) has a user
persona creator tool which can help. There is a free version, which
you can use to figure out your target audience, and their motivations,
goals, and preferred channels for communicating.

Once you’ve figured out who to target, another tool you can use as an
indie author is Pew Research Center, according to BookWorks
(https://www.bookworks.com/2017/01/using-pew-research-stats-to-find-your-readers-online/)
. Pew posts information on who uses what social media. This can be
helpful so you can decide which social media platforms to focus on,
depending on who you’re trying to reach. As an example, young adult
readers tend to be on Instagram, Snapchat, and Tumblr. And romance
readers tend to use Pinterest.

After you decide you your readers are and where they like to visit,
you can then ask yourself what they’re thinking. According to Content
Marketing Institute
(http://contentmarketinginstitute.com/2017/06/customers-thinking-search-secrets/)
, you can figure out what types of content people search for on
Google, based on the top results that pop up, and the autocomplete
questions that appear. The idea is to uncover what people really want,
and then deliver content that addresses that.

Last, once you’ve found your audience, you want to retain them. If you
have a website, you can dig into your Google Analytics to learn more
about your audience and what kind of content keeps them engaged. To
get the best view of your audience, check out Ohow’s Ultimate Guide to
Blocking and Cleaning Google Analytics Spam and Traffic
(https://www.ohow.co/removing-google-analytics-spam/#setting-up-reliable-and-accurate-analytics)
. It’s an intense tutorial, but it teaches you about spam in Google
Analytics and how to remove it from your dashboard, so that your data
is as accurate as possible. Then you can see which pages get the most
visits, the flow of your website (which order of pages people visit),
how long people stay on your site, and whether or not people go deeper
than your home or landing page.

For indie authors who also create videos, Wisita has a great post that
breaks down how to understand your audience. According to Wistia
(https://wistia.com/library/understanding-audience-retention) , you
can make better videos if you know how your audience consumes your
work. For example, if engagement in your video drops off in the
middle, you may want to consider breaking your video up into multiple
videos. You also want to make sure the beginning of your video has a
hook and that the end of the video is more than a mere summary.
-------
Back again. Has anyone created a website on  weebly.com?
Is it a freebie?

-- 
David Russell
david.sonofhashem at gmail.com
"chilah phanim" Make G-d smile!




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