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Bloggers: Next Best Hope for Book Reviews?We meant to say something about Thomas Nelson's new "Book Review Bloggers" program sooner after its launch Wednesday morning; it's just been a busy week. The deal, which is largely a formalization of promotional techniques Nelson used on The Faith of Barack Obama and the Lynne Spears memoir, is pretty straightforward: "Any blogger can receive free copies of select Thomas Nelson products. In exchange, you must agree to read the book and post a 200-word review on your blog and on Amazon.com."
Some of the initial reaction among publishing insiders and other literati on Twitter Wednesday focused on what was perceived to be wrong with the Nelson system, like the imposed obligation to review the books, or the insistence that reviews need to appear not just on blogs but on catalog pages at online bookstores. (The latter was said to put people's Google rankings at risk; frankly, we'd be more offended at being "forced" to create content for websites from which we haven't bought a book in ten years, and that only because we looked in every local indie bookshop first.) Other suggested that printing 1,000 ARCs was a waste of resources—although Hyatt himself commented that "our 'cost per thousand' will be roughly a tenth of conventional advertising—and with much more impact." (NOTE: As per Hyatt's comments below, Nelson actually isn't sending ARCs, but finished books.) Or: It could work this way, and then everyone would be trying to duplicate Thomas Nelson's success... or just buy access to their database of contact information for influential bloggers. Email This Post |
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