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Authors: Hire An Agent’s ‘Agent’ to Sell Your Book
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| Guest post by: Scott Lorenz |
Article Overview: As a book promotion specialist who deals daily with the media, I learned a long time ago that a common mistake in crafting pitch letters is making them too long. The same is true of query letters to an agent. A query letter should be no more than half a page. You have to know exactly what agents want to hear, what they're looking for. Tell them only that and end the letter right there! Keep it short, keep it sweet and you'll be one step closer to landing an agent.
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Free Download - Book Marketing Strategy of the Future By Scott Lorenz |
Authors: Hire An Agent’s ‘Agent’ to Sell Your Book
Landing an agent for your book is
more difficult now than ever before. You have to know exactly what to say and
how to say it in your query letter to beat out your competition and to increase
your chances of ever getting signed.
As a professional book publicist,
I am frequently asked to find an agent for my clients. While I know many agents
and publishers and work with them, it’s not what I do. But, from time to time,
I find someone who can really help out my clients and I’ve found that person.
His name is Jeff Rivera, founder of Gumbo Writers based in New York City.
Rivera has been featured or
mentioned in the Los Angeles Times, Publishers Weekly, School Library Journal,
New York Observer, Fast Company, TMZ, NPR, Billboard Magazine, Huffington Post,
and many other publications. Rivera interviews high profile power players such
as Janet Evanovich, Jeff Kinney, Seth Godwin, Philippa Gregory and James
Patterson for Mediabistro’s “Galley Cat” considered the publishing world’s TMZ.
Jeff’s query writing service is
the #1 service of its kind. He crafts the perfect query letter for you, then
selects the right literary agents to pitch to and sends the query out to them.
Jeff guarantees at least 10 top agents will request your manuscript or book
proposal. Jeff says this has worked successfully for more than 100 clients.
That’s remarkable when you think that many writers cannot get even one literary
agent to request their work, let alone read it. His record is over 200 agents
requesting one client’s work. For one of my clients he got 19 requests. I was
astounded and so was my client.
“Most aspiring writers have shot
their chances of ever being represented by a literary agent before the agent
has even had a chance to read their query letter,” explains Rivera. “Why?
Because agents and people like me who work in the book publishing industry,
know in two-seconds flat who is professional and who is not, just by a simple
glance at their query letter.”
Rivera, who has ghost written
countless successful query letters for clients, stresses that first impressions
are everything and that there are a few common mistakes aspiring writers make
over and over again that block them from being taken seriously. “It's really unfortunate
because there are some very talented writers out there but writing a query
letter is a whole other art,” adds Rivera.
As a book promotion specialist
who deals daily with the media, I learned a long time ago that a common mistake
in crafting pitch letters is making them too long. The same is true of query
letters to an agent. A query letter should be no more than half a page. You
have to know exactly what agents want to hear, what they're looking for. Tell
them only that and end the letter right there! Keep it short, keep it sweet and
you'll be one step closer to landing an agent.
The next key to a successful
pitch letter to the media and a successful query letter to an agent is the
first sentence. Here are some ways to grab an agent’s attention in the very
first sentence:
·
Start with a question that makes them ponder
·
Talk about a dramatic moment in your personal
life that connects with the book you've written
·
Tell them immediately about your platform
·
Compliment them on a specific recent sale
·
Tell them who referred you
Remember that referrals are an
aspiring author’s best friend. If you can find someone the literary agent knows
to recommend you, or at least someone who will allow you to use their name in
an introduction, you’ll be ten steps ahead of everyone else. When someone else
refers you or recommends you to an agent, you are brought in at that same
level. You don't start from ground zero, like all the other aspiring authors,
but begin on a whole other plane. Always, always, always get the person's
permission to use their name before you mention them. And because you’ve gotten
their permission your referral person also may even be kind enough to give the
literary agent a call or email to let them know that you'll be reaching out to
them.
Remember that agents are in the
business of selling books. They're not our best friends, they're not our
therapists, and they're not our life coaches.
The best agents put their nose to the ground, they focus on what they do
best which is generating enough excitement on a book and sell it for as high a
price as possible. When you get paid, they get paid. End of story.
One novelist hired Rivera who
wrote one sentence about what the novel was actually about. "Don't you
think we should tell them more about it?" the client asked. Rivera told
him, "Who cares what it's about? You're a regular guest on Fox News."
A book agent or book publicist
can turn your manuscript into a best seller – if you listen carefully and
follow their advice. You know how to write – they know how to sell your book.
The bottom line: Why reinvent the
wheel? Sign up with an “agent’s agent” like Jeff Rivera by dropping him a note
at query at gumbowriters dot com and then listen to his advice.
Article Tags: agent for book, book marketingpitch letters, book promotion, book publicist, literary agent, query letter
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About the Author: Scott Lorenz RSS for Scott's articles - Visit Scott's website Scott Lorenz is President of Westwind Communications, a public relations and marketing firm which specializes in marketing authors, doctors, lawyers and entrepreneurs. His clients have been featured by Good Morning America, FOX & Friends, CNN, ABC Nightly News, ESPN, The New York Times, Nightline, TIME, PBS, NPR, the Los Angeles Times, USA Today, Washington Post, Family Circle, Woman's World, & Howard Stern to name a few. Lorenz works with bestselling authors and self-published authors promoting all types of books, whether it's their first book or their 15th book. He's handled publicity for books by CEOs, Navy SEALS, Homemakers, Fitness Gurus, Doctors, Lawyers and Adventurers. He's generated media coverage for numerous genres including, fiction, health, romance and business. To discuss how Westwind Communications helps its clients get all the publicity they deserve and more visit http://www.westwindcos.com or call 734-667-2090. For information about the National Publicity Summit visit: http://www.nationalpublicitysummit.com/?10373 Click here to visit Scott's website Big Ideas Launched By Big PR on CNBCs Hit Show Get Out of Your Rut Six Techniques To Put A Spark Back Into Your Creative Fizzle Won an Award Lately Heres Nine Awards For Small Businesses Opening a New Restaurant Tell The World Talking To The Media Is Like No Other Conversation You Will Ever Have |
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