Writers Tricks of the Trade Issue 2 Volume 8 | Page 33

Publish An Updated New Edition of Your Book … Not Once, But Every Year! N ED B ARNETT , B ARNETT M ARKETING C OMMUNICATIONS F ROM H IS F ORTHCOMING B OOK : W RITE N OW ! … This is a One Volume Book Writing and Promoting Course: Writing, Self-Publishing and Selling YOUR BOOK to Attract New Clients and Well-Paying Speaking Gigs While Becoming a News Media Expert W hen you finally publish your book, it will be shiny and new. That’s important because readers, and especially book-reviewer readers, like books that are shiny and new. However, as soon as January 1 st rolls around and the calendar changes, sud- denly your book – along with every other book published with last-year’s copyright date – is no longer shiny and new: in- stead, it’s suddenly old news. This can squelch sales and cut way back on re- views. Now if you publish your book on January 2 nd , you’ll have a full year before your book seems dated. However, if you publish it any time after Labor Day, you’ve just artificially truncated your “current year” status to just four months, and that can hurt sales a lot. So, what can I do? Fortunately, this is an easy problem to solve: Publish updated editions of your book periodically – ideally, every year, but no less than every other year. This update must be noted in the copyright date, of course, but it can and should also be noted by a “flag” in the upper-right or upper-left corner of the cover, something S UMMER 2018 like: “New and Updated for 2018.” For ex- ample, successful novelist and how-to- write authorKatie Salidas, took a minimal- ist approach when she did this with her “Go Publish Yourself! Quick & Dirty Tips for Successful Self-Publishing”. Note that the deep red promo-flag appears in the upper-right corner of her book’s yellow cover (an eye-catching color combo). It reads: “2018 UPDATE. What if my book is fiction? Because – to be honest with readers and book-buyers – you will actually want to update your book, it is often easier for non-fiction authors than for novelists to add a new introduction, a new conclusion or a new chapter. However, novelists can update their books as well. They can, for instance, ask someone who liked the book to write a new introduction or foreword, or the novelist could even write a new prologue to set the stage for the action. An example of such a prologue can be found in all of the classic James Bond films – the movie always opens with some violent, spectacular and deadly action featuring Bond, some spy-like shenanigans, lots of explosions and gunfire, as well as generally P AGE 28 W RITERS ’ T RICKS OF THE T RADE