Marketing Tip
Test Your
Book Idea Using Keywords
Find Out If There's a Market for Your Book Idea before You
Write Your Book (and Get New
Ideas!)
by Diane Eble
One of my subscribers wrote to
me recently, "Are there any ways to test the idea(s) one would
have for a book? No sense working hard on a manuscript if it
wouldn't have market appeal."
I agree. Writing a book is a big project. Indeed, why do all
that work unless you have some assurance of
success?
So, how do you assess whether there's an audience for your book
idea?
First, let me wax on just a bit about why we are so lucky to be
living now if we want to become an author.
In the old days (say 10 years ago), if you had an idea for a
book, you would have to look at Books In Print, the library, or
a bookstore. You'd see what other books were out there, and
you'd only be able to guess at which ones sold well (unless
they made it to the bestseller lists, of course). You'd do a
lot of guessing, in fact. Only when you actually secured a
publishing contract, wrote the book, and tried to sell it,
would you know if your idea was actually
marketable.
This is still the way a lot of publishing works, by the way.
Few authors or publishers actually test their ideas
first.
Which is really a shame, because now we have an amazing tool
called the Internet that allows us to find out so much, and
very quickly.
Now, it takes a whole course to show you all the ways to
harness the Internet to find your audience. To make it easy,
I'll give you one of the most powerful tools I've
uncovered for using keywords to investigate your potential
audience.
Using Keywords to Research Your Audience
One of the great advantages the Internet Age affords us is
search engines. We can now find out what actual people are
searching for. No more guesswork!
However, here's an important note to keep in mind as you read
on: People search for information that they want to know.
That's what keyword research gives you. It does not
necessarily give you accurate information about what people
might actually buy.
However, it's a very good place to start, especially since a
book is information. Thus, it makes sense to look for what kind
of information people actually search for. Keyword
research is a valuable first step in figuring out whether
anyone might actually want to read what you think you want to
write about.
So, the first step in assessing your audience is to think about
what phrases people would use if they were looking for the book
you're thinking of writing. Then, do a keyword search to
see how many people actually searched for those
phrases.
Here's a helpful place to go to. It's called SEO Book
Keyword Research Tool. You type in your search
phrase, click "submit" and it comes up with a whole
list of searches that include your keyword or keyword
phrase. It tells you how many people searched for those
phrases in each of the major search engines.
There's also a whole lot of other cool links on this page. (See
below for additional info on this amazing resource.) For now,
just pay attention to the far left column, with the keywords,
and the numbers in the "Overall search" column.
Example: When I do a search above for "book titles" (to see if
people are searching for how to come up with a bestselling book
title), I get a whole list of terms that people search for that
include "book title."
Not all keyword phrases will apply to your topic. The
most-searched keyword phrase here is "dr seuss and book
titles.
" (Who would have thought 134 people would search this every
day!) But I can see that (as of this writing) some phrases are
relevant to my topic:
- book titles
got searched 129 times in a day.
- how to write a
book title
got searched 18 times in a day.
- find a book
title - 12 times a day.
- how to title
your book - 9 times.
Do you
think that there would be a market for my "Choosing
Your Bestselling Title" course? If 168 people per day
are searching for these key phrases, what would happen if I
had a great article (or several!)that
led them to some great information, that then led them to a
way to buy a course or book of mine?
Do the
same with your topic. Plug it into that search tool, and see
what you come up with.
Side
note: Another cool thing about this tool is that you
can find out what other phrases people are
looking for related to these key words. Who would have thought
that 58 people a day search for "famous book titles"? Hmm,
maybe this would be a good topic for a blog post or article,
that would lead people to my courseā¦.
Do you
see the power of keyword searches to both test your idea and
brainstorm specific directions for both your book topic,
articles, blog post topics and other ways to get traffic to
your site?
One more
suggestion: As you find and hone your keywords, make a
file of the top 25 or so. Print them out on a document that you
review every day. This will begin to focus you on your topic
and bring to mind ways you can write about it ...
ways
that will lead to your unique angle, which becomes your book
and unique contribution that you know people will want to
read!
Action Steps ...
1. Take some time to learn
more about this amazing keyword search tool. There's a
training
program that explains all you would ever need to
know about Search Engine Optimization and free articles
that will help you understand some of the basics of
using keywords effectively.
2. Google
also provides some good tools and training for researching
keywords. Learn more here.
3. I also
mentioned several other ways to research your audience in
the Sept. 11, 2008
Publishing Coach Weekly teleseminar.
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