What Is An Author Platform?
What’s an author platform? It might help to define it first, so that we’re on the same page.
An author platform is the set of assets and activities that contribute to your brand. It’s how people see you, their opinion of you, and their support of you – both online and offline. It’s something that grows and evolves over time. It can gain strength with positive “inputs,” but it can wane and atrophy as well if you’re not putting work into it.
- The assets are things like your website, your blog, and your books themselves – but also your Goodreads profile, Your Facebook Author Page, your brand imagery, and your book covers.
- The activities are your social media interactions, your email newsletters, and your correspondence with beta readers – but also your podcast appearances, library readings, and in-store events.
Why Is An Author Platform So Important?
Whether you are an established author or building an author platform from scratch, your platform is a representation of your sales potential. Agents and publishers certainly see it that way. They won’t even look at an author these days without a strong platform.
But even if you intend to self-publish, it’s just as important. It’s your base of operations, and a place to manage the interactions required to lead readers from the Awareness Phase through the Trust Phase to actually purchasing one of your books. And then beyond – purchasing another book, and becoming a fan that spreads the word about you and your work!
In either case, an author platform is critical:
- Traditionally-published authors. Beyond the fact that you won’t even be considered by a mid-sized to large publisher without a platform, you have to take responsibility for marketing your book. Publishers often mean well, but their marketing lasts for 12 weeks around the publication date – and that’s only if your book is considered one of their “tentpole products” for that sales season. Most authors will tell you that they are unsatisfied with their publisher’s promotional efforts – even the successful authors.
- Self-published authors. Whether you think of it this way or not, you are running your own small business. In fact, I say this very same thing to traditionally-published authors as well. No one will care about your books as much as you do, so you have to own it. But it you’re going the self-published route, it’s all you. You can hire some support as needed, but if you don’t establish a storefront and invite people to come in an browse, who’s going to do it for you?
Don’t get intimidated, though. Anyone can do it. It just takes time and effort – and anyone can learn it. But it sure helps accelerate the process if you have a strategy, though. So let’s get started on building your author platform.
Setting Up Your Author Platform
An author platform is your online portfolio and a pathway to a potential purchase. So let’s go back to basics for a second. In order for someone to purchase from you, they first have to know about you. That’s the Awareness Phase, and it’s always the first step. Ask yourself: “How do people find out about you now?” And more importantly: “What do you do after they find out about you?”
Awareness is an important component of how to promote your book, but it will only get you so far. Consumers are different now, and they make decisions about you and your product/service well before they want to hear from you directly. They are going to do their research first. Before they hear from you, they need to hear from someone else that you are legitimate.
In other words, what you say doesn’t matter nearly as much as what others say about you. But that doesn’t mean that you can’t have influence over it. Let’s talk about developing your brand as a way to help others say the right things about you.
Establishing Your Author Brand
Your foundation starts with your online presence, which includes four key elements. All of it has to be simple, informational, and professional. Consider this table stakes. If you don’t have a Web presence, it’s a liability. So get these four things in order:
1. Author Website – Your Base of Operations
On the front page: A clear statement of purpose, and a way to get in touch. If you’re just starting, this can be a one-page site. You want to have your own domain as a destination. A lot of writers rely on Facebook as a home page, and a way to connect with readers. This is useful, but what happens when Facebook changes its terms of service or its algorithms? Own your own site. No exceptions. Maintaining control of your brand means being in full control of your content.
A lot of writers ask, “should I have a book site or an author site?” My answer is simple: You are your brand. That means that you are the business and the books are your products. Set up an author site, and you will always have a hub for your readers – from your first book to your tenth book.
2. Author Blog – Getting to Know You
This is the very core of your content strategy. I get a lot of resistance to blogging from writers, which is puzzling. First of all you’re a writer – you can write! Second, it’s going to help give your readers a taste of who you are and what your writing’s like. Why would you resist this incredible opportunity?
If this sounds like you, start with a simple mind shift: Don’t think of your blog as an ephemeral stream. A blog is a terrible publishing platform in a lot of ways. It can feel like when you produce something, it just disappears into the ether. Instead, think of your blog as permanent pieces that can offer lasting value in helping your new readers get to know you.
What can you write about? How about early drafts of your next book? Short stories that you might never compile into a book? WIPs that could use some reader feedback? An illumination of your writing process? Common questions from your readers? Pick whatever you think is going to be of interest to your readers. You’re there to educate, inspire, enlighten, or entertain. You’re building rapport.
3. Social Media for Authors – The Awareness Phase
If you are still griping about social channels, or deriding them as time-wasters, then it’s time to get with it. If you are not having success with social media in your business, then there are only a few reasons:
- You are using the wrong channels. Just because “everyone” uses Facebook doesn’t mean that it’s right for you and your audience of readers and potential readers. There are a ton of social channels – you have to find the one that’s right for your particular audience.
- You are doing it wrong. The biggest mistake that people make on social channels is that they treat it as a 20th century broadcast medium, churning out “look at me” awareness chum. You’re not fishing, you’re connecting. Get bi-directional and stop selling. Social doesn’t work that way.
- You haven’t really given it a chance. This stuff takes time. Building a community does not happen overnight. Social media just makes those connections more available to you – but you have to do the work. Find common interests. Participate. Offer real value. Just like you would in person.
Guess what? These are not the fault of the medium, the audience, or social media in general. It’s up to you to make it work. There are tons of writers just like you who have found their audience and built a community online via social channels. This stuff works, if you do it right. But you can’t go into it thinking that you are just there to yell about your book and hope that people will care. The rules are different now. You have to approach this by making the first move – and being generous about it. You have to take a risk and provide real value to real people, without expecting anything in return.
4. Author Email Strategy – Nurturing Leads into Customers
If your goal is to get people to buy your books, then email is where the magic happens. People don’t buy your books because of a Facebook post. They buy because you’ve built up a rapport with them, and you’ve established trust. Email is the last stage of the trust-building process. Not everyone on your email list will become a buyer, but it’s your best chance to influence the process.
When someone subscribes to your email list, it’s an indicator of trust. You have now been granted permission to visit their inbox. It’s considered high-level access, and you have to take this responsibility seriously. You can’t be pushy or sales-y, you have to take a much more soft-touch approach. Just like in blogging, you have to be there to serve them in some way.
But since you’re a little closer to your email subscribers, make them feel like the “in” crowd. Give them exclusive access to things you don’t share with your blog readers. Maybe that’s a pre-publication preview chapter. Perhaps you let them help pick from a set of potential cover designs. Maybe you let them name a supporting character in your next book. Whatever you do, make them feel special.
Making Connections with Readers
If writing is your career, then you are a business. Your books are your products, and your readers are your customers. I can’t think of a single business that doesn’t benefit from real connections with real customers. Business is all about relationships. Think of each of these tools – your website, your blog, social media, and email – as a way to build these important relationships.
Set this up so that you are guiding people down a pathway to a purchase. Get a little closer with each contact you make with a reader. Let them in on the process. It’s going to take time, and you have to get comfortable with the fact that you can’t rush it. This is why it’s important to have a strong foundation in your website – you can keep building on it little by little with your blog, driving awareness with social media, and developing deeper relationships through email.
Yes, there’s more to it than having a base of operations and posting to social media channels. Without a strategy behind it, these are empty activities that will lead you nowhere. Having a base of operations is only the starting point – there’s a lot more to content strategy. Here’s a brief overview if you want to learn more:
Content Strategy Basics: An Overview (Free Online Course)
It’s for small business owners of all types, including solo entrepreneurs, freelancers, writers, musicians, and other creatives.
The course content is open to the public – you do not need to register.
If you want comprehensive guidance on how to build an author platform, Unit 3 in my online course is devoted to setting everything up and optimizing it. The course is called:
Content Marketing for Creatives (Online Course)
Here’s what you’ll find in Unit 3:
- Module 10: Establishing the Foundation of Your Brand
- Module 11: Website Basics: Setting Up Your Online Hub
- Module 12: Website Components: An Inventory
- Module 13: Blog Basics: Publishing Regular Content
- Module 14: Blog Components: An Inventory
- Module 15: Social Media Basics: Your Means to Connect
- Module 16: Email Basics: Owning the Relationship
- Module 17: Email Basics: Building Your List
This is only 8 of the 42 video modules, and there’s a lot more to help you design a content marketing plan – and start executing.
See for yourself – have a look at the first module here and see if you think this would help. Then sign up for a free set of email lessons to “try it on.” No obligation, just the hope that you’ll learn something new that you can start applying immediately.