Why Doing More Marketing May Be Holding Your Book Back
Are you suffering from "book marketing bloat?"
The Real Problem Isn’t Effort
You’re working hard, and you’re showing up. Yet, your book still isn’t selling the way you hoped.
What if the problem isn’t that you’re not marketing enough? What if you’re trying to do too much?
I see this with nonfiction authors all the time. They publish with hope and good intentions. Then reality sets in, and the to-do list starts to grow:
I should post on LinkedIn.
I need to start a newsletter.
Maybe I should launch a podcast.
I probably need video.
Do I need TikTok?
Should I hire a PR person?
Before long, marketing feels heavy, exhausting, and confusing. And the book still isn’t moving.
That’s what I call “book marketing bloat.”
Where the Idea Came From
The concept comes from Sean D’Souza, founder of PsychoTactics, who writes about something he calls “article bloat.” His observation: writers start with one clear idea, then pile on more and more until the piece loses focus entirely. Professionals, he argues, outline first, and then remove the bloat before it wastes their time.
The same thing happens in book marketing.
You start with one goal: to get your book into more hands. Then the ideas pile on and gather momentum. Suddenly, marketing feels like a second full-time job.
Every Tactic Has Hidden Weight
Here’s what nobody tells authors: every marketing channel carries a load you don’t see at first.
Start a podcast? That means planning, recording, editing, guest outreach, promotion, and showing up every week, for months before you see results.
Launch a YouTube channel? Add content planning, lighting, thumbnails, titles, editing, and captions.
Speak more? Now you need outreach, proposals, travel, and follow-up.
None of these is a bad idea. But, trying to do all of them at once, that’s where the trouble starts.
Many nonfiction authors believe success comes from doing more: more posts, more platforms, more tactics, more hustle. The authors who gain real traction do the opposite. They pick a few smart actions and repeat them.
The Ripple Effect - One Pebble, One Pond
Think of book marketing like dropping pebbles into water.
Bloated marketing means tossing twenty pebbles into twenty different ponds. Nothing spreads far.
Focused marketing means dropping one pebble into one pond and letting the ripples expand.
One speaking engagement leads to book sales, referrals, podcast invitations, consulting opportunities, and introductions to organizations that buy books in bulk.
One podcast interview creates social media clips, email content, website credibility, and fresh conversations.
One local presentation builds visibility, relationships, and trust.
The ripple grows, and it starts with one pebble.
The Better Question
Stop asking: What else should I be doing?
Start asking: What matters most right now?
For most nonfiction authors, the answer is simpler than you’d expect:
One platform
One visibility strategy
One relationship-building activity
One revenue path
That’s enough. At least for now.
Sean D’Souza’s point is worth repeating: professionals outline first. They remove the bloat before they waste time. Nonfiction authors need the same discipline. You don’t need more marketing. You need better focus and fewer moving parts.
A Question for You
Where has your book marketing become bloated? What are you doing that sounds productive but spreads your energy too thin?
Reply and tell me. I read every response.
Paid subscribers: In tomorrow’s post, I’ll walk you through a simple “Book Marketing Bloat Audit.” This powerful tool helps you decide what to stop, what to keep, and what deserves your full attention.
If your book isn’t selling, it’s not the book. It’s the marketing.
Let’s fix that.
If you’re done playing small, click here to brainstorm some simple and practical bookmarketing ideas.
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