NAKED REVIEW: HOW TO GET BOOK REVIEWS
What to do now that Amazon closed all loopholes (2017)
FINALLY – THE
BEST STRATEGY TO WRITE A REVIEW REQUEST EMAIL
Sometimes,
it seems that even though authors like to write they experience writer’s block
when writing emails. Many authors don’t seem to be able to “get themselves in
the right mood. ”
Here is one
way how to do it:
- Pull up an empty word document, meaning – start
from scratch!
- Reduce the document’s size so it covers only about
3/4 of the width of your screen and place the document either on the right
or left side of your screen, whichever "feels" more comfortable.
- Search for and save the portrait of a person you
truly respect – a college professor, a journalist, or maybe a colleague
from work (many of these portraits can be found on Linkedin.) Do not
select a picture from a family member or a close friend!
- Place that picture in the upper corner of the other side of your screen and reduce its size so it does not
overlap your word document. This will allow you to type while also keeping
the portrait visible on your screen.
- Then, type your request email and make your case.
- Imagine that you are explaining to this person who
you don’t know too well but who you respect why they should read and
review your book.
- Every time you get stuck with your writing look at
the portrait. If indeed you were talking to this person you would know
exactly what to say.
- Keep your email concise! Aim for about 150 words
or a screen-ful. If the recipient needs to scroll to see the whole email
they’ll “feel” that it is not concise.
- Save the document. Do NOT send the email right
away!
- The next day, pull up the document and the
portrait again and re-read the email “to the respected person (the
portrait on the screen).”
- Does it sound good? Edit the email if needed.
- Finally, personalize the email by adding the
reviewer’s, the blogger’s, or the editor’s name and voila – you probably
just wrote a perfect email.
THANK YOU
for
buying my book NAKED REVIEW: How to Get Book Reviews.
If
you liked it please help your fellow readers and leave a review. To succeed
indie authors need to know where they can find best practices. There are too
many smart-aleck-non-expert bloggers who
will blog about any topic so they can collect your email address.
Please
also consult the Resources page in the back and see my other books, some of
which may be helpful to you.
Hopefully,
you’ll connect with me
Twitter
https://twitter.com/Naked_Determina
Web:
http://www.giselahausmann.com/contact.html
LEGAL TIDBITS
As
a 29-year industry veteran I notice too many bloggers’ tendencies to simplify
processes or leave out important facts or exceptions, probably because they don’t
know them.
But,
while
- tailoring an email from a
template may lead to recipients deleting emails after reading only the
first paragraph,
- “making calls
to action” may
lead Amazon to “discovering” a street team, and
- following incorrect advice on
how to obtain reviews may lead to reviews getting deleted,
following
flawed advice that ignores laws may result in having to hire a lawyer at a
price between $300 and $500 per hour and maybe having to pay for damages.
To
find best information about copyright questions you should study intellectual property
attorneys’ blogs and Q/A-forums.
Also,
the government maintains websites offering excellent advice for free.
https://www.copyright.gov/help/faq/index.html
https://www.loc.gov/publish/
Most
likely, you are concerned about protecting your own work. Naturally, the same
copyright laws that protect your work also apply to others’ works; for instance
to pictures you yourself did not create. If you enlist a cover designer, you
are the contractor, and they “work for hire.” Do not allow them to use others’
pictures for which they don’t have the usage rights.
Equally,
photographers own the copyright right of every picture
they
took, just like you own the copyright of every book, article, and blog you
wrote.
Altering
a picture is not a way to work around copyright laws. In fact, if somebody
publishes a picture they changed without permission, the copyright owner can
sue the author/publisher for the costs of using the picture and additionally
for “the damage” of “altering” their picture. Lastly, don’t forget to name the
copyright owner of every contribution you did not create yourself.
(Having
to ask for permission when we alter things or change situations is typical in
our Western society. For instance, even though you gave permission that your
child be taught in public school when you enrolled her, the school has to ask
your permission when they change the setting, e.g. remove her from the regular setting to take her on a fieldtrip.
And, your neighbor isn’t allowed to paint your house in a different color
without your permission, even if he pays for it.)
The
same laws apply even to music. Though Mozart’s music is not copyrighted anymore,
because he died more than 100 years ago, you still cannot grab a recording
because recordings are subject to performance and mechanical copyright.
Obviously, not every conductor and every orchestra play every piece of music in
the same way, hence their “interpretation” is protected by law.
In
this century alone, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled
on
eleven cases involving copyright law, which goes to show that
this
topic is extremely important.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_Supreme_Court_copyright_case_law
***
Your
books are your “babies.” You probably spent a lot of time “rearing” them.
Please protect your efforts accordingly.
7 THOUGHTS TO KEEP
YOU GOING
1.
You must write the book
you wish others will read.
2.
It’s never too late to
become an author. The older you get, the more stories you own.
3.
What’s a bestseller? An
author is a success if his book changes one person’s life.
4.
Struggle not to write a
bestseller but rather a book that matters. Success will follow by itself.
5.
There are bestsellers
at the end of the extra mile that still lies ahead!
6.
Don’t count the words,
make the words count.
7.
Books have no
limitations, except the ones you don’t write.
*
Gisela Hausmann dares to write what others' won't say or don't know. Her work has been featured in regional, national, and international publications including Success magazine and Entrepreneur, and on Bloomberg's podcast "Decrypted."
Gisela tweets @Naked_Determina.
Her books are available at Amazon and other fine book stores.
© 2017 by Gisela Hausmann
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Gisela tweets @Naked_Determina.
Her books are available at Amazon and other fine book stores.
- NAKED WORDS 2.0: The Effective 157-Word Email
- 73 Ways to Turn a Me-Mail Into an E-mail
- Naked News for Indie Authors How NOT to Invest Your Marketing $$$
- BOOK MARKETING: The Funnel Factor: Including 100 Media Pitches (paperback only)
- The Little Blue Book for Authors: 53 Dos & Don’ts Nobody Is Telling You
- The Little Blue Book for Authors: 101 Clues to Get More Out of Facebook
- The Little Blue Book for Authors: Essential Manners for the Modern Author
- NAKED TRUTHS About Getting Book Reviews 2018
- BAT SHIT CRAZY Review Requests: Email Humor (paperback only)
© 2017 by Gisela Hausmann

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