Speaking Event Test #6: Mom & Baby Tea

Besides learning one valuable lesson during my last book signing of the tour, I also enjoyed the peaceful, cozy ambiance of the Crazy Wisdom tearoom.
Yesterday I hosted my final talk and book signing on my drawn out little book tour around Ann Arbor. This time, I repeated a few marketing techniques that worked in the past (flyers in a few choice locations, local event calendar submissions, etc.) but mostly relied on the article in the Crazy Wisdom Journal that had been out for 3 months by the time I did my talk. This is the journal put out around town by the bookstore on local events of interest to the bookstore’s patrons (green, Zen, etc.). I also created a Facebook event for this talk to invite people who might want one last opportunity to come see me, or to invite their preggo friends.
THE RESULTS
One person came. Seriously. Well, unless you count the homeless woman who fell asleep next to my guest and snored through my talk. (I couldn’t make this stuff up.) I attribute the turnout mainly to the fact that we planned the event during the week, so many people were working, but that’s still pretty crazy considering the number of people–a blog reader, friends, local folks–who said they were coming. Well, it was also dismal weather, which never helps. And the bookstore got the date of the event wrong on their calendar twice, but I don’t think many people look at their calendar.
1) As if I didn’t already know this, I learned well and good this time that RSVPs mean nothing. Hardly anyone who says they are coming to your book signing will actually show, whether that’s your mother-in-law, your best friend, or a person who is very excited about your book. Don’t plan a book signing around RSVPs.
2) Good news! I also discovered that the bookstore wanted to stock up on their copies of the book, so after selling 2 books at the event (one to the lone attendee, one to the girl manning the tea counter), I sold several more to the bookstore. That’s actually not bad. Double your sales by stocking up the store whose stock you just depleted. That’s a great lesson!
IN CONCLUSION (OR MEMORIUM?)
I feel conflicted about book signings and talks. On the one hand I sell more books at certain kinds of these events than I would any other way and I’m great at public speaking, but on the other hand it’s a lot of trouble to go to for mediocre results. Next time around, I’m planning to:
1) Focus my book signings on one or two events early on and promote them heavily.
2) Arrange to teach classes at my local hospital, which will guarantee me a certain number of attendees before I have to commit to show up. No more wasting my time, and this will qualify attendees as interested persons and weed out the hecklers (and presumably the homeless).
3) Always bill my book signings as free talks to attract attendees. This was my biggest draw, because people wanted to know the book delivered on its promise of saving 70% off baby’s first year before they would shell out for it.
4) Keep a good attitude regardless. The only thing more demoralizing than having a crappy turnout is pouting about it. I have to keep my spirits up and treat this as a learning experience or it will get me down and suck away the energy I need to get the next book out.
5) Good riddance to authors days at libraries or any other event that doesn’t focus on my subject area. This is too niche of a book to sell any copies at a generic authors event. The only reason my initial book signing was successful despite being part of a multi-author event at Barnes & Noble was that I promoted it on my own steam as an event featuring moi.
6) Along the same theme, always host my events in a venue that attracts pregnant women and their relatives who are already interested in green parenting. It’s a waste of time to try to convince someone of the merits of keeping chemicals away from their baby if they don’t understand what I’m talking about.
7) This one is unavoidable with this book, but in the future I probably won’t publish a book targeted toward people who want to avoid spending money, or who don’t have money to spend. This makes it a much harder sell and is probably why the publishers I approached early on turned me down. The guy at the library authors day who had published a book on zero cost living said it nicely: “If you ever publish a book, publish a book for people who have money.” Touche, sir.
I Would Be Better Off Writing Porn, or Speaking Event Test #5: Library Authors Day

New rule: no photos for events that feel demoralizing, even if it does make for a prettier blog post.
Yesterday I took part in a local library’s local authors day. This is the second to last event I have lined up to promote EcoFrugal Baby: How To Save 70% Off Baby’s First Year before I come out with the third edition. I didn’t expect much from this event, because:
1) The event was not targeted toward green living or toward parents.
2) There was very little promotional work put into it, by me or the library.
Frankly, I’m running out of steam on this promotional stuff until I have a new edition of the book to promote. I’m looking forward to my last speaking event in 2 weeks, which is a mom and baby tea at the Crazy Wisdom Bookstore and Tea Room in Ann Arbor (April 19th, 3:30 pm), but a generic authors day wasn’t something I wanted to throw my promotional energy behind.
The Result
Pretty much as expected. I talked with a lot of people and was complimented several times for giving a good talk, but I got the following responses:
From the older set: “Oh, this is about GREEN parenting?” *snicker snicker*. Right. So glad my lifestyle amuses you. Next.
From the younger set: “This is great! I’m getting married this month, so I may be back later to check out your book when I have kids.” That’s great, but no short-term results. I did get some sign-ups for my blog email list, though.
From the middle-aged set: “There aren’t that many people in this area who want to save money, but let me think of people I know who are about to have a baby… (still thinking)….”
That last comment taught me something, because I had expected this area north of Ann Arbor to be more family-oriented, but it turns out most people in this particular area have too much money to bother with frugality, and the culture isn’t oriented toward green living the way Ann Arbor’s is.
Lessons Learned
First, next time I promote this book, I’m focusing on Ann Arbor’s green-minded new parents plus online sales. It’s a total waste of time to try to convince people why green parenting is important in the space of 5 minutes.
Second, I’m targeting my efforts toward green living fairs, baby-focused events, or talks/book signings where I’m the headliner and where I can command a speaking fee where possible. These were the speaking events where I got real interest and results.
Third, I would be better off writing porn….
8)
I kid you not, the most successful author at the authors day was a romance writer who writes everything from erotica to paranormal romance to urban fantasy romance to steampunk romance. She writes an astonishing 10-12 books a year and is under contract at multiple publishers, including a subsidiary of Harlequin Press. She was friendly and intelligent, too. Damn. If only something in me didn’t resist writing books people are embarrassed to buy….
Speaking Event Test #2: Mom’s Night Out
As part of my local test of various formats for giving a talk about Ecofrugal Baby and selling books, I agreed to participate in Children’s Orchard’s Mom’s Night Out last night (gosh that’s a lot of apostrophes in a row–sorry!). The event was hosted at Children’s Orchard, a used children’s clothing store in Ann Arbor that has an email subscriber list of customers who receive special offers for invite-only sales and such. They had been invited to this closed-door shopping and pampering event that involved prize drawings, snacks, and shopping. I was joined by several other entrepreneurs with products that would appeal to moms, but for some reason–I suppose because of the appeal of having an author at the event–I was given the table front and center. That’s a good start, right?
In participating in this event, I wanted to achieve the following goals:
1) Further develop my ability to talk with people at an event without overselling my book
2) See if this format for an event sold more books than my book signing
3) Gain more local publicity and word of mouth for my book.
Here is what I learned:
1) Women who shop in used clothing stores are often very interested in the topics covered in Ecofrugal Baby, but they weren’t really prepared to purchase the book at this event, either because they weren’t physically prepared to pay for the book or because they weren’t mentally prepared to buy a book when they arrived. Both these problems could have been solved with more advanced planning and marketing.
2) Some women love to talk forever and ever about saving money or green parenting or being a mom, but others clearly feel like they’re being sold something even when you’re just trying to engage them in basic conversation. I understand that defensiveness and I want to respect it. I feel like I’m getting better at identifying these women very quickly so I don’t come on too strong.
3) The first woman who visited my table said she had seen the book in the local paper. That’s exactly what I wanted to hear! There is a tipping point somewhere, after which people will start to buy my book because they’ve seen it enough places and heard it recommended enough times that they want to check it out. I’m still working toward that point, because that woman walked away.
4) I didn’t sell a single book at this event, but I did have four women say they would likely pick it up from my 29Diapers.com blog later. I know the key to sales is to close the deal before the prospect walks away, but I just don’t like to be pushy about these things and I hadn’t qualified these leads before they walked in the door, so what could I expect? Once I realized the low potential for sales for the event, I focused on meeting people, whether they were customers or employees or my fellow entrepreneurs manning tables at the event. We had a great time, I met a woman who has a similar mission as me that I may be working with for some cross-promotion of each other’s writing, and I got the store manager’s permission to leave brochures at the counter for employees to stuff in customer’s bags on an ongoing basis. Given the situation, I think this will be a much better way to get the word out to even more people, without having to spend any more time in 4-inch heels (though the shoes got as many compliments as the book, lol).
So, the conclusion is that I will likely skip any similar events I was planning at other local used clothing stores, unless those stores heavily promote the event and my attendance in particular. I could do it just for the extra publicity and heavily promote it myself, but it doesn’t seem worth the effort of making my husband watch my daughter for two hours and keeping her up past her bedtime. In a few years that won’t be a big deal at all, but she’s still nursing so I’m constantly aware of not being with her, and I think she feels the same way. Baby girl and husband come first! And you know what? I told my husband I was hoping that this event would either be a great success or a total flop sales-wise, because I need a clear winner for sales that I can then focus my efforts on and scale up nationally. As a one-woman show I definitely have to work smart and not spread myself too thin.
I hope this was interesting and helpful to any of you planning similar events. Please let me know your best tips for book sales, publicity, or any questions in comments. Blessings!
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