As I sit down to write, I’m remembering that game we used to play as kids—the one where someone starts by saying, “I’m going on a trip and in my bag I packed…” You sit in a circle, and the starter names one item with each player listing previous items in turn and then adding another until you can’t remember the sequence anymore. I’m hoping to start a list that others will want to add to in the comments section at the end, because an author’s media kit may contain any number of items and no two media kits are alike.
You worked hard to publish your book. But now the promotional push has begun, and it will continue until you retire. A well-stocked media kit will save you oodles of time as your book list grows and you venture forth into various promotional arenas. Here are some ideas for what yours might include:
- Your Photo. If you’re lucky you can sign up at the Colorado Gold Conference and have author and super-photographer Mark Stevens shoot you. J But if the timing doesn’t work, invest in a headshot done by one of your local professional studios. You’ll want the high-resolution digital version, and be sure to obtain a written release of the photographer’s rights transferred to you.
- Your Book Cover. Again, you’ll want a high-resolution cover shot.
- Your Business Card. You can have one professionally designed or do it yourself at a company like FedEx Office. I’ve done it both ways. Since I like to add a new book onto my card each year, I’ve saved some money by learning to design my cards myself.
- Author Bios. You’ll need at least two: a short bio of less than one hundred words and an official bio that can be longer.
- Book Endorsement List. Create one document to copy all of the industry review pull-quotes and author blurbs that you accrue as you publish your books. Whenever you need a media quote for a given book, one will be right at your fingertips.
- List of Links to Online Articles, Interviews, and Guest Blogs. Again, build one document by pasting in each link. It saves so much time to have that information in one place, and the guest appearances add up over the years. If you have audio files from radio interviews, you can add those here too.
- List of Cover Flap Blurbs and Short Book Descriptions. I like to have all of my book descriptions in one place, the longer ones from the cover flap or back of the book as well as the short one-to-two liners. When you need a book description for an announcement, you won’t have to search to find it or take the time to re-create one.
- The type of promotional items to give out at events is a personal decision and varies from business cards only to elaborate gifts—and everything in between. My first year I used business cards, the second I added bookmarks, and this year I’m adding pens as well as bookmarks, for no reason other than I simply enjoy receiving these two items from other authors when I attend their events. I’ve read that swag should reflect your book content if possible, which seems like a good idea, so I sometimes give out doggie milk bones in party favor bags at my signings. And though not related to the content in my murder mysteries, but a gesture that reflects my gratitude, I love to give out kisses and hugs to readers…the chocolate kind.
Okay, here we go now. Smile and enjoy the journey! This is a good list for starters—but what else should we pack in our media kit?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Margaret Mizushima is the author of the Timber Creek K-9 mystery series, which includes Killing Trail (2015), an RT Reviewer’s Choice Award nominee; Stalking Ground (2016), a Colorado Book Award and International Book Award finalist; and Hunting Hour (2017), an RT Book Reviews Top Pick. She lives in Colorado where she assists her husband with their veterinary practice and Angus cattle herd. She can be found on Facebook/
Awesome, Margaret, thanks! You mentioned having a doc with all interviews in the same place. I’ve also read it’s helpful to have a list of interview topics or questions an interviewer can ask. 🙂
That’s a great idea, Rene’. Thank you for mentioning it. And on the flip side, a list of questions that I might ask when I host a guest interview is another good idea. I want to tailor my questions for a specific guest, but sometimes I forget an important basic. A reference list would help me with that. Great addition to the media kit on both sides of the interview!
Thanks for the kind words, Margaret! And anyone who would like to contact me directly for an appointment, feel free to do so !
So good to know that we don’t have to wait for the annual conference event. Thank you for your comment, Mark!
This is a gentle reminder that I have a lot of work to do on my website/blog combo as my old website goes away. Thanks, Margaret!
Glad to be of help, Pat! Best wishes to you as you continue your promotion activities leading up to your December release of Wishing Caswell Dead!
Great blog on what we need to keep at our fingertips. Thanks, Margaret.
Thanks for your comment, Chris. I appreciate it.