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Bonnie and Shanda countdown 4 of their favorite ways to sell books at in-person or virtual author visits for "traditionally published" books. Below, you will find our discussion along with each book sale method mentioned listed with pros, cons, and sample sale fliers to model your own after if you like.
#4 - Bookshop.org
#3 - School's local bookstore
#2 - Author's local bookstore
#1 - AuthorVisitCentral.com
Resources and books mentioned in this episode (with some affiliate links that help support this podcast):
If you’ve ever performed a school visit or hosted one at your school, you know that selling books can be a complicated ordeal when the author is traditionally published and we are going to try to explain why…
First off, let’s compare traditional publishing, self publishing and everything in between...
Now, let’s talk about book sales at school visits for traditionally published authors. These authors are not book sellers (or are not supposed to be), and from what I understand, publishers don’t even want their authors selling books regularly (it’s in a lot of our publisher contracts) for a few reasons…
Seems kinda silly though for authors not to be encouraged to sell their own books, after all, a sale is a sale and there’s not an indie bookstore in every town. And then it gets really hairy when you talk with the comics world! As the comics’ world (which is driven hugely by authors selling their own work at conventions) collides more and more with the literary world in the form of graphic novels, things get more complicated. Each of these worlds use to operate separately for along time, but as they overlap more and more - things get messy. Anyway, I digress...
So here's the countdown! Our 4 favorite ways to sell books at school visits, so here we go...
#4 - Bookshop.org:
Use Bookshop.org to place one bulk book order for in-person or virtual visits...
This method would require the school to send out the order form and have families turn it back in to the coordinator with cash or check, then the author would place the order on Bookshop.org with their own account and money, shipping to the school. The author would collect the money from the school after the visit.
Pros:
Cons:
Sample flier:
#3 - School's local bookstore:
Use the school’s local bookstore to place one bulk book order for an in-person or virtual visit for students learning at school...
This method requires the school to coordinate with their nearest bookstore, send home an order form to be returned with cash or check (unless the bookstore could set up a special ordering link), and then pick up the books from the store or pay for shipping to the school.
Pros:
Cons:
Sample flier:
#2 - Author's local bookstore:
Use the author’s local bookstore for virtual visits when students are learning remotely from their homes:
This method is perfect for getting signed books sent to individual students’ homes because some or all the students attend school remotely. It basically gives families a link to the author’s bookstore that the author can easily drive to to sign purchased books before they ship out.
Pros:
Cons:
Sample flier:
#1 - AuthorVisitCentral.com:
Use AuthorVisitCentral.com for a virtual or in-person visit when students are learning at school...
This method is one we invented! (So we may be a bit biased.) It’s designed to be easy on everyone involved - it takes the accounting out of the school, has a built-in buying incentive that gives back to school, and supports a local indie in the school’s area. It also represents the author in a professional way!
Pros:
Cons:
You can find us individually at:
Find us both at AuthorVisitPodcast.com where we love to hear directly from our listeners! Feel free to leave comments or even ideas for future topics you’d like us to cover.
This podcast is sponsored by AuthorVisitCentral.com and produced by Ben McCloskey of EngineIndustries.com. And if you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review us on Apple Podcasts and share it with others who might dig it!
Thanks for listening to this episode of the Author Visit Podcast!
By Shanda McCloskey and Bonnie Clark4.9
1111 ratings
Bonnie and Shanda countdown 4 of their favorite ways to sell books at in-person or virtual author visits for "traditionally published" books. Below, you will find our discussion along with each book sale method mentioned listed with pros, cons, and sample sale fliers to model your own after if you like.
#4 - Bookshop.org
#3 - School's local bookstore
#2 - Author's local bookstore
#1 - AuthorVisitCentral.com
Resources and books mentioned in this episode (with some affiliate links that help support this podcast):
If you’ve ever performed a school visit or hosted one at your school, you know that selling books can be a complicated ordeal when the author is traditionally published and we are going to try to explain why…
First off, let’s compare traditional publishing, self publishing and everything in between...
Now, let’s talk about book sales at school visits for traditionally published authors. These authors are not book sellers (or are not supposed to be), and from what I understand, publishers don’t even want their authors selling books regularly (it’s in a lot of our publisher contracts) for a few reasons…
Seems kinda silly though for authors not to be encouraged to sell their own books, after all, a sale is a sale and there’s not an indie bookstore in every town. And then it gets really hairy when you talk with the comics world! As the comics’ world (which is driven hugely by authors selling their own work at conventions) collides more and more with the literary world in the form of graphic novels, things get more complicated. Each of these worlds use to operate separately for along time, but as they overlap more and more - things get messy. Anyway, I digress...
So here's the countdown! Our 4 favorite ways to sell books at school visits, so here we go...
#4 - Bookshop.org:
Use Bookshop.org to place one bulk book order for in-person or virtual visits...
This method would require the school to send out the order form and have families turn it back in to the coordinator with cash or check, then the author would place the order on Bookshop.org with their own account and money, shipping to the school. The author would collect the money from the school after the visit.
Pros:
Cons:
Sample flier:
#3 - School's local bookstore:
Use the school’s local bookstore to place one bulk book order for an in-person or virtual visit for students learning at school...
This method requires the school to coordinate with their nearest bookstore, send home an order form to be returned with cash or check (unless the bookstore could set up a special ordering link), and then pick up the books from the store or pay for shipping to the school.
Pros:
Cons:
Sample flier:
#2 - Author's local bookstore:
Use the author’s local bookstore for virtual visits when students are learning remotely from their homes:
This method is perfect for getting signed books sent to individual students’ homes because some or all the students attend school remotely. It basically gives families a link to the author’s bookstore that the author can easily drive to to sign purchased books before they ship out.
Pros:
Cons:
Sample flier:
#1 - AuthorVisitCentral.com:
Use AuthorVisitCentral.com for a virtual or in-person visit when students are learning at school...
This method is one we invented! (So we may be a bit biased.) It’s designed to be easy on everyone involved - it takes the accounting out of the school, has a built-in buying incentive that gives back to school, and supports a local indie in the school’s area. It also represents the author in a professional way!
Pros:
Cons:
You can find us individually at:
Find us both at AuthorVisitPodcast.com where we love to hear directly from our listeners! Feel free to leave comments or even ideas for future topics you’d like us to cover.
This podcast is sponsored by AuthorVisitCentral.com and produced by Ben McCloskey of EngineIndustries.com. And if you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review us on Apple Podcasts and share it with others who might dig it!
Thanks for listening to this episode of the Author Visit Podcast!