Email marketing Archives https://buildbookbuzz.com/category/email-marketing/ Do-it-yourself book marketing tips, tools, and tactics Wed, 15 May 2024 19:19:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 May book promotion opportunities: 29 unusual, unexpected, and quirky holidays https://buildbookbuzz.com/may-book-promotion-opportunities-29-unusual-unexpected-and-quirky-holidays/ https://buildbookbuzz.com/may-book-promotion-opportunities-29-unusual-unexpected-and-quirky-holidays/#respond Wed, 24 Apr 2024 11:00:00 +0000 https://buildbookbuzz.com/?p=20614 Looking for a few light and fun May book promotion opportunities? Here are 29 holidays and occasions you can use to lighten things up.

As we wrap up a busy April that features more book-related days and weeks than any other month, it’s time to look ahead to other types of special occasions in May.

Here in the U.S. Northeast (where snow sometimes makes an appearance as late as mid-May), we welcome the typically warmer temperatures and how neighbors only mow their lawns when they see we have our windows open during Zoom meetings.

The merry, merry month of May brings us spring flowers and leaves on trees and, oh joy of joys, spending time outside without down coats and heavy gloves.

May bright spots

The fifth month brings with it in the U.S. “normal” occasions that include Mother’s Day on May 12, Memorial Day on May 27, and high school graduations and college commencements throughout the month.

Australia’s Queensland celebrates Labour Day on May 6 – which is also May Day in the Northern Territory – and Reconciliation Day on May 27 in the Capital Territory.

There are also so many unconventional, unique, and often downright irreverent holidays and special occasions to celebrate. And you can use them to bring attention to your book.

How to leverage May book promotion opportunities

What’s the best way to take advantage of so many fun May book promotion opportunities? Once you identify those occasions that are a good fit for your book or promotion goals from the list below, how can you use them?

Here are a few examples to get you started.

May is Mystery Month

Do you write mysteries, thrillers, or suspense novels? This is your month! And there’s so much potential.

Here’s just one idea: Use social media and your email list to poll people about their favorite mystery book and why they like it. You can use this information in multiple ways:

  • Compile what you learn into a round up article (“here’s what readers told me about their favorite mysteries”) for your blog or to use as a LinkedIn post.
  • Record videos where you read some of the nominations and reasons.
  • Create social media quote graphics with the entries.

May 9, Lost Sock Memorial Day

Are you a poet? Write your “Ode to the Lost Sock.”

May book promotion opportunities for poets

A humorist? Explain where the socks that don’t come out of the dryer end up.

Schedule an Instagram Live so you and your followers can pause together at a specific time to honor and remember all the socks they’ve lost. Be sure to promote it in advance.

May 20, Be a Millionaire Day

Do you write about money?

via GIPHY

Call attention to your book on Be a Millionaire Day by sending a tip sheet to the press or guest blogging about money mistakes people are making that will prevent them from being able to celebrate this special day.

Go live on Instagram to talk to millennials and Gen Y about how to save now so they can retire early.

To reach a younger audience, create a series of TikTok videos that explain each “must-do” for anyone seeking millionaire status sooner rather than later.

Your May book promotion opportunities

Here’s a partial list of the merry, merry month of May marketing opportunities you can add to next month’s book promotion calendar. Get the full list on the Holiday Insights site. (And while you’re there, look ahead to other months.)

Here’s a list of the merry, merry month of May marketing opportunities you can add to next month’s book promotion calendar.Click to tweet
  • Date Your Mate Month
  • Gifts from the Garden Month
  • Mystery Month
  • National Recommitment Month
  • May 1 Save the Rhino Day
  • May 3 Garden Meditation Day
  • May 3 Lumpy Rug Day
  • May 3 Space Day
  • May 4 National Candied Orange Peel Day
  • May 5 National Hoagie Day
  • May 6 National Tourist Appreciation Day
  • May 7 National Teacher’s Day
  • May 8 National Outdoor Intercourse Day
  • May 9 Lost Sock Memorial Day
  • May 10 Clean up Your Room Day 
  • May 11 Eat What You Want Day
  • May 11 Hanging Flower Baskets Day
  • May 11 National Babysitters Day
  • May 13 Frog Jumping Day
  • May 14 Dance Like a Chicken Day
  • May 17 Pack Rat Day
  • May 18 Visit Your Relatives Day
  • May 20 Be a Millionaire Day
  • May 21 National Waiters and Waitresses Day
  • May 23 Lucky Penny Day
  • May 24 International Tiara Day
  • May 25 Tap Dance Day
  • May 26 National Paper Airplane Day
  • May 31 Flip Flop Day

Be sure to check out the list of book-related occasions during May in our downloadable 2024 literary calendar, too.

Which of these surprising May occasions speak to you? How will you use next month to help generate conversation and call attention to your book in a lighthearted way?

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4 important reasons why I don’t recommend Substack for authors https://buildbookbuzz.com/substack-for-authors/ https://buildbookbuzz.com/substack-for-authors/#comments Wed, 03 Apr 2024 11:00:00 +0000 https://buildbookbuzz.com/?p=20577 You might be hearing a lot about Substack for authors. Is this newsletter platform a good fit for your audience and book marketing goals?

Affiliate Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links, which means if you click on them and make a purchase, I will receive a small commission (at no extra charge to you).

When a marketing-savvy author friend said recently that they were removing their content-rich, SEO-friendly blog from their site and relocating it to Substack, I nearly gasped. (And I’m not even a drama queen.)

This was part of their plan to use Substack as their email newsletter service.

“Why?” I asked.

“Because I want to monetize* my newsletter and Substack makes that easy to do,” they replied. (*Monetize: marketing buzzword for “earn money from.”)

I explained why I didn’t think this was in their best interest, but the author was locked in. Logic be damned.

I’ve since had this “Substack for authors” conversation with several book marketing coaching clients and, quite recently, in person with a group of local author friends over lunch.

Here’s what I’ve been telling them.

What’s Substack?

Substack is a newsletter platform. People who use Substack benefit from:

  • Free use until they start charging for their newsletter. Then Substack takes 10% of subscription fees, while Stripe, its payment provider, takes another 2.9% plus 30 cents per payment and 0.5% for recurring payments.
  • A newsletter network that makes it easy for Substack publishers to recommend each other’s newsletters.
  • An online home for each newsletter publisher’s archive of back issues. Think of each of these issues as a blog post.

Why authors are attracted to Substack

Here’s what authors tell me about why they’re considering Substack or have already signed on with the service.

Everybody’s doing it.

Yes, some people with large followings are using Substack. I’ll bet a bunch of your author friends are, too.

But, let’s remember the words of my wise mother: “If everyone jumped off a bridge, would you jump, too?”

“Everybody’s doing it” is a shallow rationalization that doesn’t work in this situation any more than it does when it comes to combovers for balding men.

With book marketing, what works for one author doesn’t necessarily work for another. How well you execute makes a difference, too.

With book marketing, what works for one author doesn’t necessarily work for another. How well you execute makes a difference, too.Click to tweet

It’s easy to set up.

This is true. You can be up and running quickly.

That’s partly because Substack is so basic. It lacks important features offered by other more conventional email marketing service providers, including the ability to personalize messages by adding a subscriber’s first name to a salutation.

It’s free.

That’s attractive to many.

But several other email service providers, including mine, provide far more functionality at the free level. (I use ConvertKit, which is free for up to 1,000 subscribers.)

But that’s okay. If you’re just starting out, the simplest and least powerful service available might be a good fit for you.

I want to monetize my newsletter.

Yeah, well, good luck with that.

Most authors scramble to get unpaid subscribers.

Generating enough paid subscribers to make a difference is harder than you might think. Be sure you’ve got a marketing plan in place for it.

via GIPHY

Substack makes it easy for other newsletter publishers to recommend mine.

That’s such a smart idea that my email service provider, ConvertKit, offers that feature now, too.

Readers can search for and find my newsletter from the Substack home page.

This is pretty cool…in theory.

I’ve found it hard to uncover lesser-known newsletters when all I’ve got is the topic, though.

I’ve played around with that function and discovered that you aren’t likely to be found unless someone is searching for your name or newsletter title. The most popular newsletters show up first in various categories. To find a less-popular one, you have to scroll … and scroll … and scroll.

Who has time for that?


Clearly, there are plenty of reasons to like Substack. But there are a few reasons not to like it, too.

4 reasons I’m not a fan of Substack for authors

Here’s why I discourage authors and others – especially bloggers – from using Substack for email marketing and blogging.

1. Placing your best content on someone else’s platform boosts that site’s SEO while undermining yours.

Let’s presume you’re giving your subscribers the information they need. They love it! They recommend your newsletter to others!

All – all – of the resulting traffic completely bypasses your website and goes to Substack.

Substack, not your website, benefits from all of the SEO (search engine optimization — what you do to your website so that it gets found by search engines) value generated by the newsletter content you create specifically to appeal to your target audience. That type of targeted content is precisely what you need for your site to show up near the top of online searches for your topic.

Why would you undermine your brand online to support another company’s business?

You’re redirecting traffic away from your site. Not. Smart.

2. Substack doesn’t offer enough automation.

As you learn more about the power of email marketing, you’ll want your email service provider to perform a range of pre-determined functions. You tell it what to do once, and the system automates it for you.

For example, one best practice in email marketing for businesses of all sizes involves sending a series of welcome email messages to new subscribers on a schedule that’s unique to when they subscribed. Each message shares new information that’s relevant to your subscriber.

Substack can send a single welcome message to a new subscriber, but that’s it.

This lack of automation isn’t a deal breaker initially. You might not want sophistication if you’re using email marketing for the first time. But as your success grows, you’ll want more power.

(For more on that, read “Book review: Newsletter Ninja: How to Become an Author Mailing List Expert.”)

3. Monetizing is a lot harder than it looks.

The hype around how Substack makes it easy to earn from paying subscribers is incredibly misleading.

We’re accustomed to subscribing to free newsletters that might offer value. But paying for a “premium” version of that content requires a big shift that most aren’t ready for yet. And it sure doesn’t happen instantly.

I need to get value from your content before deciding if I want to pay you for more of it. Determining if the value is there takes time.

In addition, maybe it’s just me, but I don’t like how many of these newsletters persistently beg for money.

As a user, I find the constant requests to pay for the newsletter or “premium” add-ons tacky and intrusive. How do you build relationships with your subscribers when you’re annoying them?

Here’s an example of what I see in Substack newsletters when the publisher decides to use theirs to earn money.

This is from a writer who added me to their subscriber list (I did not opt-in). I’ve blocked out the newsletter title and the introductory text so the sender can’t be identified; I’ve left the requests to pay for more issues where it appears in the beginning of the newsletter. It appears at the end, too.

exmaple of monetizing substack for authors
It’s so easy to hit people up for money in a Substack newsletter.

Repeatedly asking for money is no classier than asking your dinner guests to pay for their meal as they’re leaving at the end of the evening.

4. You’re hosting all of your content on something you can’t control.

Admittedly, I might be a little paranoid about this.

But what if Substack crashes and you lose all of your archived content?

I feel like I have more control over that with my own little website, where I can constantly and consistently monitor all threats and keep them from taking my site down.

reasons to avoid substack for authors

Should you sign up for Substack for authors?

I realize that these negatives might not outweigh what you see as positives. So, should you sign on with Substack, or should you spend time comparing it to alternatives?

I don’t recommend making an important business decision based on what “everyone else” is doing.

Instead, whether it relates to email marketing or the latest social network or whether you should host a podcast, I always recommend learning as much as possible about a tactic and its options before making a choice.

Instead of chasing the latest bright, shiny object, consider where you’d like to be with email marketing in one, three, and five years. Then explore enough solutions to understand which will do the most to get you there.

Want to experience ConvertKit, the email marketing tool designed for creators like us? Use my affiliate link to try it for free.

FAQs about Substack for Authors

1. What exactly is Substack?

Substack is a newsletter platform that allows users to create and distribute newsletters to subscribers. It offers features such as free usage until monetization, a network for newsletter recommendations, and an archive for back issues.

2. Why are authors attracted to Substack?

Authors are drawn to Substack for several reasons:

  • It’s a popular choice among authors and peers.
  • Setting up a newsletter on Substack is quick and easy.
  • Substack offers a free plan, which is appealing for those starting out.
  • Many authors wants to monetize their newsletters, and Substack provides tools for this.
  • It facilitates cross-promotion among newsletter publishers and offers visibility through its homepage.

3. What are reasons for authors to avoid Substack?

There are several reasons why Substack might not be the best choice for authors:

  • It redirects traffic away from your own website, potentially undermining your brand and SEO.
  • Substack lacks advanced automation features that are common with other email marketing platforms. This limits how much your email marketing will contribute to your goals.
  • The constant payment solicitations within Substack newsletters can come across as inappropriate.
  • Hosting content solely on Substack means relinquishing control over your content and risking potential loss if the platform has issues.

4. How does Substack compare to other email marketing solutions?

While Substack has its merits, it’s essential for authors to weigh its pros and cons against other email marketing solutions.

Be sure to consider factors that include control over content, automation capabilities, and how well the platform is aligned with your long-term goals.

5. Should authors choose Substack based on its popularity alone?

No, popularity shouldn’t be the sole factor in choosing an email marketing platform.

Authors should assess their specific needs, long-term objectives, and the various service provider capabilities before making a decision.

It’s crucial to put informed decision-making over blindly following trends.


I know that many of you love Substack. Please tell us why in a comment!

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