How to Set Up a Blog Book Tour and Why You Should

Alan Baxter is an optimistic cynic and dark speculative fiction author, based on the South Coast of New South Wales, Australia. His writing is primarily based in the magical, the spiritual, the religious and the arcane with tendencies towards horror, depravity and battles between light and dark. Baxter says:

A blog book tour is a great way to generate buzz about you and your book. It’s essentially free, it generates a lot of hits on your site and others, and it creates an ongoing interest in your work. As a result of a blog tour, your books and name will gain exposure to potentially thousands of new readers. And all it really costs is time and effort on your part.

Any author, however they’re published, needs media attention. The new media of blogging and social networking is a great tool to use to your advantage. Working with other people, cross posting on a variety of media, gives you a saturation coverage for a period of time that can have excellent ongoing results.

So what is it? A blog book tour is essentially taking your books out on the virtual road, in much the same way that authors would traditionally tour the country, visiting various bookstores promoting their work. In this case, an author visits a different blog every day where they engage in various activities (interviews, guest posts, reviews and so on) and make themselves and their books known to the audience of that particular blog. There’s great cross-promotion as the writer’s audience gets exposed to a variety of blogs they might not have discovered otherwise (which is good for the blog owner) and that blog’s existing audience learns about the author and his or her work.

I currently have two novels out, RealmShift and MageSign, and it was these two books that I recently took on a blog book tour. My books are available in print and ebook format and I also have a novella available as a free ebook, Ghost Of The Black: A ‘Verse Full Of Scum. By taking my two novels on the virtual road, I opened up my both those novels, my free novella and my other work featured on my website to a wide audience that may never have heard of me or my writing before. It also helped to increase exposure to my indie press, Blade Red Press. Building an author platform online is essential for indie authors and a blog book tour like this is a great way to expand that platform.

It helps to offer something special. I really wanted to make an aspect of this tour something attractive — a special offer for people following along. It’s difficult with the print editions of my books through Amazon or places like that to make any changes in the short term. However, all my books are available as ebooks in a variety of places including Smashwords.com. With Smashwords there’s an excellent degree of control for the author/publisher. With any title you have there it’s possible to generate vouchers to vary the cost of your books however you please. So that means that I was able to set up a voucher code that was made available to anyone following the tour, valid only for the duration of the tour. If those people then came to Smashwords to buy RealmShift or MageSign they could enter that code and the books only cost them $1 each, instead of the usual $3.50. Giving very cheap or free content has proven itself many times over as an excellent way of generating interest in new work and it also gives people an added reason to check out the blog tour.

As for how successful a blog book tour can be, it depends on how much work an author puts in? With anything in this game it’s all about how much work you do. It’s also about working smart. If you get involved with a variety of blogs, with a widely varying audience, and you ask those people to promote the tour for you, then a lot of publicity can be generated. You can also make sure that you and those others involved cross-media promote with things like Twitter, Facebook and so on, to attract as many potential readers as possible.

To set up a blog book tour you firstly need, of course, a quality product to promote. Then it’s a case of contacting the owners of blogs that you think are relevant to you and your book. For me it was based on blogs that I read a lot or that are owned by other indies I’ve met or that had a fan base interested in the kind of writing I do, which is speculative fiction. There were also some blogs of friends and one blog that I’m an active contributor to. I contacted them all, asked if they’d get involved and asked what sort of thing they could host for me. I explained how the extra traffic could be a boon for them and then, if they agreed, we worked together to decide what I would do there.

It’s important to have variety. If you just go to a different blog every day and say, “Check out my book!” you’re going to bore people pretty quickly. It was essential in my mind to create something that people would want to follow every day, to see something new each time. The best explanation is to show the itinerary of the tour I did in July. I ended up with a ten-day tour that looked like this:

Day one: Guest post: Dark Fantasy – What is it exactly? – Monday 20th July at The Creative Penn. This is a blog all about indie authorship, but Jo is hosting a blog from me about the genre of my writing. It’s something new for her readers and hopefully interesting for everyone.

Day Two: Interviewed by Leticia Supple – Tues 21st July at Brascoe Books Blog. Brascoe Books is an small press in South Australia, so Leticia interviewed me about the nature of going it alone, the process of editing and so on.

Day Three: Guest post: Writing a good fight scene – Wed 22nd July at David Wood Online. David is another indie author – he writes action adventure novels with a speculative edge. As I’m often complimented on writing convincing fight scenes (my “day job” is as a kung fu instructor) he asked me to write about writing fight scenes.

Day Four: Interviewed by April Hamiltion – Thurs 23rd July at Publetariat. Publetariat is a hub site for indie authors, telling them all they need to know about self-publishing and indie publishing, from print to ebooks to just about everything. This is the site I’m a contributor to already, so April interviewed me about my experiences.

Day Five: Guest post: Demons and where to find them – Friday 24th July at Joan De La Haye’s blog. Joan writes in a similar genre to me and has a fascination with demons. She always has a Demon Friday post where she writes about a different demon every week. In this case, she gave the Friday over to me and I wrote about demons in general. Again, this is something different for her readers as well as being something interesting for those following the tour.

Day Six: Wily Writers published my short story “Stand Off” (featuring Isiah, the protagonist from RealmShift and MageSign) as both text and podcast – Sat 25th July. This was a great result for me, to get a story published and podcasted alone is a great result. To have it key in with the tour so nicely was fantastic.

Day Seven: Ruthie reviews MageSign – Sun 26th at Ruthie’s Book Reviews. This one was a bit of a risk. Ruthie agreed to review the second book, MageSign, and post the review to coincide with her day of the tour. It worked out as she loved the book and gave it 4/5 stars!

Day Eight: Pat Bertram interviews Isiah, the protagonist from RealmShift and MageSign – Mon 27th July at Pat Bertram Introduces. Pat often hosts interviews with the characters from books, which is a great idea. This was a fun one to do.

Day Nine: Guest post: Indie authors and the future – Tues 28th July at Musings Of An Aussie Writer. Brenton is another Aussie author and he asked me to talk about the nature of indie publishing and how I see things progressing as time passes.

Day Ten: Guest post: The inspiration for RealmShift and MageSign, what they’re about and what’s next – Wed 29th July at The Furnace. The last day here is me talking directly about the books, which is the first time on the tour that I’ve done that, and also talking about my future projects.

As you can see, I tried to build an interesting and varied experience for everyone involved to enjoy. Hopefully, with ongoing and interesting content like this, plenty of people will follow your tour, comment on those blog posts and generate lots of discussion and interaction. It will hopefully interest people enough that it also generates a few sales. Mine certainly did.

It was hard work and took a lot of co-ordination with other people to pull it off. It meant keeping in touch with those blog owners, putting together a lot of content for them to host and sending out a lot of reminders to make sure everything went smoothly. But it was worth it. I saw a definite spike in sales of both print and electronic editions of my books during the tour and I’ve hopefully piqued enough peoples’ interest that they’ll remember me and maybe buy my books in the future.

(Incidentally, if you’re interested in any of the articles listed above, they’re still available to read. Another advantage of a blog tour. You can find direct links to all those blog book tour posts, along with a wrap up of some sales and web-hit stats from the tour, here: http://www.alanbaxteronline.com/2009/08/02/blog-book-tour-wrap-stats.html )

11 Responses to “How to Set Up a Blog Book Tour and Why You Should”

  1. Joel Says:

    G’ concept, please add me in. If everyone do a bit together, all of us will benefit enormously. We will be a chain of writers.
    Joel
    http://wulfstein.wordpress.com/

  2. Alan Says:

    Joel, I’ll certainly give you a shout next time I do a blog tour!

  3. Nigerian writer Says:

    I love it. you really explained so much how man can do a book tour.
    I will try that soon here in Nigeria. Hope it works.

  4. Jackie Paulson Author Says:

    I love the idea of “chain of writers” or chain of bloggers, comments or even blogging buddies.

  5. the Ghostwriter Says:

    This is amazing. Thank you for all the great info! 🙂 Your personal success if very inspiring, and I congratulate you!
    Question, since I am a beginning author — what is the best way to approach people on creating a virtual book blog tour? Are there certain communities of writers who are more receptive to working with you? Or do you randomly google and email other published authors who share your interests/genre/etc.?

  6. Alan Says:

    Hi there

    It’s always a problem when you’re starting out that you don’t know so many people. But there are a few approaches. Firstly, if there are any blogs you read regularly, especially if you’re a regular commenter, start there. Send them an email and ask if they’d be interested in getting involved somehow. After that, have a search around and approach any places that seem suitable, but be careful to word your email in a very polite and open manner and draw attention to the fact that you’re trying to build up a tour and will gladly return the favour at any time if possible. A lot of this stuff works on a reciprocal basis and people are more likely to help you if you make it clear that you’re happy to help them in return. None of us can do this stuff alone!

    And if they say no, be polite and accept that. People are very busy and have their own agenda and no one owes you a favour. But if you are active enough, you’ll find some people to help. If you have a crit group or friends in the field, ask them and ask them for recommendations too.

    It’s a good idea to be active already, before you plan a tour. After all, if you interact on comments on certain blogs and are a member of the community in general, not just because you want something, then those people will be a lot more inclined to help you out.

    And always remember to mention how you plan to drive traffic to the blog tour – people hosting you should benefit from more hits and new people finding their site, so be sure to indicate how you’ll help to make that happen.

    Hope that helps a bit!

  7. donnagalanti Says:

    Excellent in depth tips here…as I embark on my first blog tour. Thanks for sharing this valuable info!

  8. Gabriella Hewitt » Blog Archive » Write on Wednesday – Blog Tour or Bust Says:

    […] Hmmm… that’s a tough one. My fear is that I will run out of things to say. According to my friends and family that is almost impossible. They’ve been trying to get me to shut-up for years (and yet they still love me). Alan Baxter gives some great tips in this article on how to prepare yourself and talk about your book without boring the pans off the readers https://marketingfloozy.wordpress.com/2009/08/24/how-to-set-up-a-blog-book-tour-and-why-you-should/ […]

  9. Ginger Says:

    This post was very helpful, and gets the creative juices flowing for ways to cross publicize among blogs you follow, or would like to support and be associated with. Thanks so much for sharing!

  10. Vina Kent Says:

    Great information. As a writer myself and published author I’m always looking for more ways to get my work noticed. So thank you for sharing this.


Leave a comment