Book Marketing as Storytelling

Nat 'Nose' Connors
<nat@kindletrends.com>

Central Ohio Fiction Writers August 2025

Finding your neighborhood

Follow along!

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This talk is going to be a bit more nerdy than usual

although not in a data science/tech sense

But it's not going to be very sales-y

Me (v. briefly)

A technical writer

IT project management

Cancer research

...now, mostly, I just write about lurve

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Some free resources:

Listing all Kindle Store categories
Downloading the Top 100
Searching the Kindle Store

This talk

Some waffly conceptual stuff

Step-by-step procedures using free resources

Some waffly conceptual stuff

Why I keep saying 'market awareness'

Your author 'neighborhood'

Book marketing as storytelling

I want you to think of book marketing as storytelling

Book marketing as storytelling

Not this:

  • One weird trick
  • Marketing as selling
  • Doing things you don't like, but feel compelled to do because of perceived reader expectations

But this:

  • Flash fiction
  • Multimedia theatre
  • Story prompts
We're telling stories,
...we just have a very limited amount of space in which to do it

Why?

Why?

  1. Because it helps us focus on the communication aspect of what we're doing

  2. It (probably!) makes it more enjoyable

We're telling stories,
...we just have a very limited amount of space in which to do it

I got the Top 400 books

and looked at the most common elements each month

The point

...at a macro level, markets aren't as 'trendy' as we tend to think

There are some caveats, but overall I think this is a pretty solid result

but if so...

why bother studying the market at all?

Because

Marketing as storytelling starts with market awareness

Market awareness
vs market research

 

An ongoing process...

that informs and is connected to your craft

and includes different activities,

but is part of a whole

Market awareness

in your neighborhood

Your 'neighborhood'

Your 'neighborhood'

isn't just your comps

or your (sub)genre

It's the place where you, your readers, and your work meet up, intellectually and emotionally

Your 'neighborhood'

Popular tropes/elements, yes, but also:

The visual language of covers

Words and actions used to describe books

Other media your readers enjoy

Marketing channels come and go,

...and there will always be a new one on the scene

Why is the concept of a neighborhood useful?

  • It helps reduce the sense of being overwhelmed by marketing
  • It reinforces the idea that it's made up of different parts with different natures

To tell effective (marketing) stories,

we need to learn the language of our neighborhood

Finding your neighborhood

Tool #1:
Kindle Power Search

(I'll include all the links in the show notes)

Tool #2:
Categories List

Identify some books

Read some reviews

Check out the authors

Exploring your neighborhood

Tool #3:
Also Boughts & Top 100s Downloader

Tool #4:
Infographics

(We can do this for other areas too)

What language is used?
What common elements?
What makes your neighborhood special?

Use those things to tell your story, across any marketing channel

Some worked examples

Seeing marketing as storytelling

for two of the most common channels: covers and blurbs 

In a storytelling sense

Covers make a promise to the reader

That promise is developed in the blurb

Then delivered in the story itself
"Will she marry him?"
"Reader, I married him."

Covers

or, what's on the front of a book

The story of a cover makes a specific set of promises to the reader

About content

About branding

We can see this clearly with a cover montage

Styles

Look at books in your neighborhood

e.g:
Medium shot, no faces shown
Long shot, couple with faces shown
Object relevant to story
People: how many?
Shot choice: face, full/half, medium, long (whole body)
Objects: what and why?
Dominant colours and shades
Typography
Other recurring visual elements (branding)

Examples (1): Romance

Examples (2): Mystery

Examples (3): Fantasy

Summary: Covers

What story does each cover tell?

Ultimately this comes down to branding

but not just visual branding - atmosphere too

Blurbs

or, what's on the buying page of a book

Tropes, yes - but also plot beats and character voice

Examples (1): Romance

Tropes

Character voice

Plot beats

Examples (2): Mystery

Tropes

Plot beats

Examples (3): Fantasy

Tropes

Plot beats

Character voice

Eventually

Content
Blurbs
Covers

Freida McFadden

The Widow's Husband's Secret Lie is an utterly addictive, unputdownable, nail-biting, absolutely gripping psychological thriller novella with a shocking, breathtaking, heartstopping, spine-chilling twist that you won't see coming, will leave you stunned, and will literally have you picking your jaw up off the floor and bringing it to the nearest hospital for major facial reconstructive surgery.

Conclusions

Keys to marketing as storytelling

  • Find your neighborhood and spend time there
  • ​Learn the local dialect and stay aware of the market
  • Find ways to tell stories that work for you
There will always be a new channel coming down the pike,
and a new set of expectations coming with it.  

Tools for your neighborhood

Kindle Power Search
https://kpowersearch.com/

List of all Kindle Store categories
https://kindletrends.com/categories/

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Acknowledgements

Lana Love

Becca Syme

AJ Lancaster

TK Eldridge

Lizzie Dunlap from Pixie Covers

Elizabeth Brady

Thank you to all the authors and artists who helped with this talk

Leah and Shari for giving me the chance to speak

All of you for your time and attention

Thank you for watching!

For more free resources, check out:

https://kindletrends.com/resources

For the slides for this talk:

https://kindletrends.com/cofw2025