Alex Jones interviews John Perkins – “Economic hitman for global empire” 5of6

All economic indicators and financial pundits agree we’re in for a long and deep recession that could get uglier before it stabilizes. However that doesn’t mean you can afford not to market or promote your book. In fact, this may be a better time for you to do so since conventional wisdom says the first thing to cut is advertising, marketing, and PR. What others fail to do shall provide you with less competition and more opportunity.
If you agree on the fundamental of business that the way to make a sound product or service profitable is to market it, then there’s no reason to shy away from that just because the economy is rocky. But what you should do is spend wisely and get the most return on your investment.
True, the nation is in an economic war, meaning everyone is battling for the same dollar. Money is scarce, credit tight. But in order to make money you need to spend some. If you still believe there’s a market for your book, then you must market to it. If you were convinced people won’t be interested in reading it, don’t promote it. But the economy didn’t change this – only your perception did. If you have a book that appeals to 60 million dog owners or 160 million women or some other large group or targeted niche, you should market your book. The only thing that’s changed with the recent economic tumble, is that you’ll need to market smarter and, more often than before. It’s a numbers game, always has been.
Over the past few months, despite a Wall Street freefall…
· The words in your book haven’t changed.
· The ways to market your book haven’t changed.
· The number of people who’d be interested in your book hasn’t changed.
What’s changed is fear rules reality, guessing trumps facts, uncertainty exceeds certainty. If marketing a book was good idea six months ago, then it’s still a good idea today.
Okay, so fewer people will buy anything, and they will spend less money than before. But what will they buy? They will buy the book that helps them escape (a great novel, humor, photography), they will buy books for their kids, they will buy business books (to find a way to make money), and they will buy any book they would have bought previously unless that book covers a toxic topic. Toxic books include books whose advice can’t be implemented: how to travel (no one is spending money on trips), how to buy a car (no one is buying cars) or how to buy and sell real estate during a boom (don’t make me explain this one).
The rules to promoting a book during a recession are the same when the economy is solid: get out there and speak before groups, do radio and television interviews, send your book to reviewers, blog and seek out online opportunities; and tie your message to what’s on people’s minds or in the news.
If you let the recession scare off your promotional efforts you might as well not publish your book either. But if you recognize that there is opportunity in the marketplace, rev up your PR efforts and put your best foot forward!
If you want to know more on how to promote your book during a recession, please send your queries to Brian Feinblum, Planned Television Arts, Chief Marketing Officer feinblumb@plannedtvarts.com 212-583-2718
Watch the video related to Economic Books
With Senator Bill Bradley, Niall Ferguson, Paul Krugman, Nouriel Roubini, George Soros, and Robin Wells; moderated by Jeff Madrick and introduced by Robert Silvers The New York Review of Books brings together contributors—Niall Ferguson, Paul Krugman, George Soros, and Robin Wells—with Senator Bill Bradley and Nouriel Roubini to discuss the economic crisis facing America and the world. Robert Silvers, editor of the Review, introduces the speakers and Jeff Madrick moderates. Cosponsored by The New York Review of Books www.pen.org
Help answer the question about Economic Books
What are some good (basic) books on economic theory?I'm looking for books that cover the following subjects at a relatively basic level (covers the concepts and the reasoning but not the complex details):
- Classical Economics (Adam Smith, David Ricardo, John Stuart Mill, etc)
- Marxist Economics
- Neoclassical Economics (including topics such as Game Theory, etc)
- Keynesian Economics
Any suggestions?
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