Thursday, July 12, 2012

Book Promotion: How to Abuse the Privilege


Would you like to abuse the privilege of embarking on a book promotion campaign and scoring A-list media coverage? Then follow the example of Chase Brandon, former CIA agent. Brandon is promoting his new novel, The Cryptos Conundrum, whose publication was more or less timed to coincide with the 65th anniversary of the incident and subsequent cover up(or non-event, and the crazy myth-making and rumor-spreading that followed the non-event, as the case may have been) as the case may have been) at Roswell, NM.

Brandon (and his new novel) garnered coverage in Time Magazine, the Huffington Post, and other top media outlets. All of that book publicity and the nice timing of the book's publication have helped the book's Amazon ranking; it's just a shade about 5,000 as I write this.

So, evidently, Brandon saw something in the secret files about Roswell that he'd like to tell us about but just can't bring himself to divulge (just like all the other intelligence agency people who saw things in the secret files about Roswell and can't bring themselves to talk about). Touching, isn't it? Brandon has a secret (Brandon has a secret, Brandon has a secret, Brandon has a secret!) but doesn't want to share it with the poor schlubs who'd be scared to death (and, perhaps, scarred for life) if he did.

Now, I'm not taking sides here. Maybe there really was a UFO that crashed at Roswell, NM, or maybe it was a weather balloon, or maybe something else happened that I just don't happen to know about (and, maybe, wouldn't want to know about, since evidently Captain Kirk or Captain Picard weren't around to deal  it -- whatever "it" was). But if Brandon knows more about this then I do, and he'd like to earn the editorial space and airtime that the top media outlets are granting him, then let him spill it: all of it. Book promotion, in this book publicist's opinion, isn't about teasing. It's about saying it. Either saying it, or hushing. In this case, since Brandon has no specificity to offer, I wish he'd taken the latter route and just hushed altogether. And I wish his book promotion campaign were a bit lower key. That's all I have to say.

Stacey J. Miller is a book promotion specialist and founder of S. J. Miller Communications. Visit her at www.bookpr.com (connecting with her on Facebook or Twitter is strictly optional).

No comments: