Most authors think they need more book marketing ideas.
But in reality, they don’t.
What they actually need is a better understanding of how successful authors approach book marketing in the first place. Because the difference isn’t just what they do—it’s how they think about it.
This alone, can really change how you view the work. Successful authors don’t chase random tactics, which I get is of very appealing. But instead they focus on building systems that create visibility, reader growth, and long-term sales momentum. Below are 14 strategies successful authors consistently use to market their books more effectively and why they work.
If you’re making every decision based on short-term ROI (return-on-investment), you’re going to stall your progress. Also, while it may make sense (in theory) to focus on a return on your investment, it actually creates more road blocks to your success. And believe me when I say, I’ve seen this a lot.
Successful authors understand that book sales are cumulative. One campaign may not “pay off” immediately, in fact, it may not pay off at all, but it builds visibility that drives future sales. Successful authors are willing to invest in their success, even in absence of an obvious pay off. They make smart choices (which we’ll cover in a minute) and they track what works (we’ll discuss this as well), but they don’t obsess over “if I do this one thing will it pay off in book sales?” that’s not even part of their venacular.
What to do instead: Track audience growth. Email subscribers. Repeat readers. Engagement. These are the metrics that actually move your career forward.
I get it. As an author myself we’re very passionate about our work. But remember this is a business and having a great book isn’t enough. It has to be positioned correctly in the market.
Successful authors look at their book the way a business would look at a product:
Marketing can’t fix a product that doesn’t meet market expectations or, in some cases, for which there is no market at all.
Readers follow consistency not experimentation. And keep in mind that every time you decide to write in a new genre, you’re actually starting a new business. When authors jump genres, they reset their audience every time. The majority of readers don’t jump genres. Meaning that if you started out writing non-fiction, or romance and then want to diverge into thrillers or sci-fi, you’re unlikely to have any readers follow you into these various genres. Successful authors build within a lane (and stay focused on that lane) so their readership compounds over time.
What this looks like: Clear genre positioning, consistent themes, and covers that signal exactly what readers can expect.
To many authors Amazon feels like “set it and forget it” but that’s actually the worst thing you can do. Because driving traffic to a weak retail page – or an incomplete one – is one of the fastest ways to waste your marketing efforts.
Before successful authors spend money on ads or publicity, they optimize:
If your page doesn’t convert, more traffic just means more missed opportunities. And also this: if you’re sending traffic to your retail page via ads or your own marketing efforts and the retail page isn’t converting, this could impact your overall visibility on Amazon. After all, Amazon doesn’t want to show something that consumers won’t buy. Selling is their #1 priority. Yours should be making sure your retail page is the best it can be.
Hope is not a marketing plan. And I get it, planning feels like a book launch buzz kill. You just finished and published your book and now you have to build a marketing plan, too? It feels very unfun and because of this, a lot of authors skip this step entirely and just “do whatever.” Successful authors don’t “wing it” after launch. They map out a plan that extends beyond release week often 6 to 12 months.
Your plan should include:
Pro Tip: Your book marketing plan doesn’t have to wildly complex, in fact if you stick with just a handful of strategies that work for your genre and are repeatable, you’ll be doing more than most authors. Don’t overthink this. Creating something that you’ll actually stick with is much better than outlining a marketing plan that’s complex and exhausting.
If you want to be successful, you’ll need to invest in your success. Book marketing requires an investment. Not unlimited spending, but smart, intentional spending.
Successful authors know where to invest:
Trying to do everything for free often results in slower growth and missed opportunities.
Here’s the thing, it’s hard to build a career on one book. Actually, it never works. There’s a saying in book marketing that the best way to sell your first book is with your second, and the best way to sell your first and second book is with your third and so on. One book rarely builds a sustainable career and each book you publish increases discoverability, strengthens your brand, and gives readers a reason to stay engaged.
Over the years I’ve talked with a lot of authors who want to publish one book and wait to “see what happens.” This is something successful authors never do, They plan their next release early.
Your cover isn’t about personal preference or art work you’ve just “got to use” it’s about reader expectation. And covers are tricky because readers “know” if a cover fits the genre or doesn’t and often make these decisions in a fraction of a second.
Successful authors study their genre and design covers that align with what’s already working in the market.
If your cover doesn’t immediately signal the right genre, you’re losing sales before a reader even clicks over to your retail page.
I used to always say that at some point if my editor doesn’t push me in a way that makes me ridiculously annoyed, she isn’t doing her job. A good editor should push you, a lot.
Successful authors don’t look for validation, they look for improvement. If you want validation, pretty sure ChatGPT can help with that. But that’s not what a good editor should do. You want someone who challenges the manuscript, tightens the message, and strengthens the reader experience. Also: successful authors don’t use Word as their editor, either.
And remember this: you’d never send a potential employer a resume that is full of typos, would you? You shouldn’t publish a book that way, either. I always like to say: everything is your resume.
This is something that will help you tremendously as you grow your brand. Because your readers are your most valuable marketing asset.
Successful authors don’t rely solely on algorithms. They build relationships through:
And while having an email list may seem like “work” (and it is) it’s the right work. Your readers will carry you from book to book, they may even help you promote your book.
Not every strategy works the first time so tracking, testing and adjusting is not only important, it’s crucial. The other thing to remember is that sometimes strategies that look great on paper may not work well the first time. Successful authors don’t abandon marketing after one attempt. They test, measure results, and refine their approach.
Key shift: Stop asking “Did this work?” and start asking “How can I make this work better?”
Reviews are one of the most underutilized marketing tools. And I get it, sometimes it’s hard to read reviews but that’s what successful authors do. They read them all – both good and bad – because they want to understand what they did right, and what they did wrong.
Successful authors review reviews for things like:
This insight informs future books and marketing messaging. And one tip I’ll offer you is this: if you see something mentioned a few times it’s worth noting but a one-off issue is maybe something to keep an eye on, but not worth a change unless you see it repeated in another review.
Years ago there were indie publishers who offered “fax blasts” – this was a press release faxed all over the US and, in theory, this sounds great, right? Sadly it wasn’t. While the numbers of recipients was staggering, these blasts never paid off. Why? Because they weren’t targeted. More exposure isn’t always better, but better exposure is.
Successful authors prioritize visibility that aligns with their audience:
Reaching the right audience converts far better than reaching a large, unfocused one.
There is no single moment that makes a book successful. Sure, we’ve heard of big success stories that made books massive bestsellers, but more often than not this “big break” was preceded by a lot of work.
Successful authors build momentum over time through consistent effort, multiple visibility points, and ongoing releases.
This is what creates long-term sales—not one, single viral moment.
The best book marketing isn’t about finding one perfect strategy, it’s about building a system that works over time.
The authors who succeed aren’t doing radically different things. They’re doing the right things, consistently, and with a clear understanding of how the market works – and, they’re always focused on their readers. In fact, reader obsession is a “thing” with successful authors.If you focus on readership growth, strong positioning, and sustained visibility, your marketing becomes significantly more effective.
Knowing what to do is one thing. Executing it effectively is where most authors get stuck. If you’re ready to build a smarter, more strategic approach to marketing your book, we can help.