Navigating a Virtual Book Tour

By Guest  |  June 5, 2011  | 

Kath here.  Please welcome guest author Shelly Frome to WU today.  Shelly Frome is a professor emeritus of dramatic arts and an author of fiction and nonfiction. His latest is the trans-Atlantic mystery The Twinning Murders.

Like any venture, there are certain factors at play before considering a virtual book tour. Assuming, of course, the goal is to improve your “platform” beyond your friends and acquaintances on Facebook, etc and your fans at the local bookstore. The first step then is to determine your niche. Otherwise the success rate via this particular promotional tool becomes more problematic.

In other words, given the feedback you’ve received from editors, reviewers, others who’ve encouraged you, book groups or what-have-you, what are the chances your latest work will instantly appeal to a wide range of readers and increase sales? Moreover, how does this effort of yours potentially measure up? If we’re talking about fiction, among the standard categories are mysteries and thrillers, horror, romance (contemporary, historical, time travel), science fiction, fantasy and the like. If your work is literary and/or falls outside any typical genre, the marketing prospects dwindle. The manager of any given tour may have some difficulty setting up a number of stops because each and every site is geared for readers of a certain kind of book and even a certain kind of author.

By the same token, this yardstick applies to nonfiction as well. Even if your work fills a significant gap, it still has to center on topics like social, political and religious issues, parenting, struggles with addiction and relationships, how to reinvent yourself during the downturn in the economy, pitfalls and strategies in starting your own business and so on and so forth. Because, no matter how you look at it, the realities are that online marketing is set up for special interests. 

And that, as they say, is just for openers. A tour runner may tell you that readers from all over the globe log on to just about anything, you’ll get access to top search engines, coverage in prestigious online publications and exposure to millions of book buyers. However, on the basis of personal experience, all of this promotional hype should be taken with the proverbial grain of salt. It’s true you’ll be asked to write a summary that will draw in readers that’s as provocative as an ad for a best seller plus a short promising bio. Hopefully your photo on a personalized tour page will enhance your chances. But everything rests on how attractive any of this will be to potential hosts. Simply put, the hosts who operate these sites are looking for guest posts that are especially apt and compatible.    

Next, assuming you’ve cleared this initial hurdle, there are other things you should keep in mind. More often than not, once you’ve signed on you’ll be sent a set of interview questions to accompany each scheduled stop. (Again, the number of stops all depends, along with the timeframe of your promotional package.)  These questions, in turn, tell you a great deal about the personality of the host, the exact nature of his or her site and the types of books and authors favored. For example, take this sampling from a number of hosts from various national and international blogs: 

When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer?  Which of your characters would you most like to invite to dinner and why? Is there a particular message you want readers to grasp? What books have influenced your life most? Who are your favorite authors? What books are you reading now? Are you immensely disciplined, writing a set number of words every day, or are there times when you can’t get started? Some authors claim that desk research is enough to get important details right or do you insist on firsthand research? If your novel were to be made into a film, which popular actor would be featured? What are you writing now and what are your plans for a sequel?

As you can see, these are all leading questions. Are you whimsical, expert, spiritual, old school, prolific or trendy enough to meet their criteria?  

By the same token, if you happen to be the right kind of author you may find you’ve gathered a number of good reviews; if not, you may be in store for the exact opposite. As a case in point, a certain novel recently received high praise from a host in the U.K. while, at the next stop, the tour was cancelled because the writing was judged to be sub-par—e.g., “sentence fragments were incorporated and in one descriptive passage the unfortunate phrase ‘in this neck of the woods’ was utilized.”

On balance, there is no telling what any of this will mean in terms of a spike in sales. Or how, say, an assortment of twelve interviews, fifteen interviews coupled with a majority of good reviews, one cancellation and two mixed reviews, plus two or more stops that never materialized because the site wasn’t updated will eventually play out. It’s also possible that a number of people who log onto these sites may be aspiring writers simply looking for tips.

On the other hand, there’s the opportunity to scan the interviews and the critiques   other guests have received who are trying to succeed along more or less the same path. The kinds of work they’ve done to date and the direction they’re heading in. In this ever changing pursuit, getting some clear idea how comparatively well you’re doing might just be worth the candle. If you’re willing to take the risk, that is, and have a keen sense of integrity.

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8 Comments

  1. Judy Croome on June 5, 2011 at 8:57 am

    This was an extremely pertinent post. Thanks for your insights, which I need to carefully consider.

    I’ve just started a virtual book/blog tour and am exhausting myself with all the running around.

    My biggest difficulty is that my book is best classified as interstitial fiction; it doesn’t fall strictly into any one category, but crosses genres. It’s difficult to spread a wide enough net to find readers!

    Judy, South Africa



  2. Cathy Yardley on June 5, 2011 at 12:18 pm

    Thank you for your insight on this. I’m still a little thrown by the term “virtual book tour” — to me it just seems like multiple blog placements, but that’s just getting hung up on a metaphor. :) That said, I think that carefully choosing blog targets, connecting with readership up front, and then getting a good combo of interview & giveaway could be a great boost for a writer, especially in fiction where you’ll have a hard time getting coverage any other way. Interested in seeing how it goes, good luck! :D



  3. Linda Cassidy Lewis on June 5, 2011 at 1:13 pm

    Thank you for this post. I’ve not yet looked into a formal virtual blog tour, so I appreciate you sharing this information.

    My problem is that my book is on the edge of a “typical genre” and has a literary bent. but I’ve had great reviews from some who typically read genres I know it’s not (YA, dystopian, psychological thrillers, fantasy), so I’m having a difficult time discerning my ideal reader. It appeals to women. That’s about as specific as I can get at this point.



  4. Krissy Brady, Writer on June 5, 2011 at 3:22 pm

    Thank you for such an insightful post! This is an area that I have yet to delve into, but I know that it will be coming in the future. I really appreciate your views, and the heads up about the potential hurdles are most helpful. xo



  5. Kristan Hoffman on June 5, 2011 at 3:54 pm

    Thanks for sharing some of the ups and downs of a blog tour. It’s such a “hot” thing nowadays, but there’s very little guidance about how to do it or what it’s like.



  6. Mari Passananti on June 6, 2011 at 6:34 am

    @ Cathy, thanks for clearing that up… I was afraid I might be the only person here who had never heard of a virtual book tour.

    Thanks, Shelley, for a thought provoking post.



  7. Tammy Snyder Author on June 6, 2011 at 11:58 am

    Thank you for this post. It gives me something else to consider by way of marketing.



  8. P-A-McGoldrick on June 7, 2011 at 11:06 pm

    Food for thought!

    Thanks for sharing all this great info!