
JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: I think almost everyone in the crime fiction business has at least heard of PJ Nunn. She's been the owner and chief publicist of Breakthrough Promotions, one of the most effective (and affordable) PR firms around. How effective? Well, I did more radio, television and print interviews in the four years I was her client that I have before or since.
I have to admit, I never stopped to wonder why PJ specialized in crime fiction. Or how it was she seemed so sympatico with her authors. It turns out PJ wasn't just promoting crime fiction. She was writing it, too. Her new mystery, Angel Killer, has just been released by Oak Tree Press. Today, she tells us about her writer's journey and about how she - and we - can help get the books we write into readers' hands.

If you haven’t met me yet, I’m a publicist and I specialize in promoting authors and their books. I’m also an author, but I didn’t start out that way. My career path has been long and varied, but I like to think of it as a tapestry that creates a picture. You have to examine it closely to see the detail in individual threads but they all come together in the end.
I didn’t start out to be a novelist, and still don’t
necessarily consider myself one. I actually started out in college with every
intention of going to medical school. A certain young man caught my eye and I
went home with the old M-R-S Degree instead. By the time I found my way back to
college, I had three kids and med school was out so I changed my major to
psychology. Soon I was doing a practicum and internship as an abuse counselor,
serving on the local county child welfare board and consulting with the local
police department on child related cases. 

I loved my work, but it was intense and after several years,
I couldn’t seem to escape the darkness that came with it. I gave up the
counseling and child welfare work when we moved back to Dallas and opted for
teaching instead. When I had to leave my job teaching at the Dallas County
Community College District because my son was too ill to be left on his own all
day, I put my background in psychology to work with my skill for putting words
to paper and built a pretty good reputation as a freelance journalist
specializing in mental health and abuse issues.


I drew ideas from the caseload I’d worked for all those
years, but in my writing, there was time to examine things more closely. I
wasn’t bound by the urgency to get a child out of a situation or to get a case
ready for court. I could take as long as I needed to study it and figure things
out.
Over the next several years, I refined my craft and made the
shift from freelance writing to book promotions for some of the friends I met
along the way. First one then another had their books published, but balked at
making calls to set up book tours and couldn’t afford a publicist. I saw a need
and a business was born. Over the years BreakThrough Promotions became
successful, so I tucked my manuscripts away (and there were several by now) and
gave myself to promoting everyone else’s work.


Suddenly a lot of things seemed to make sense. I’d studied
for years to get my writing into professional form, and had on-the-job training
learning how to best promote new authors and their books so that I had the
knowledge to promote my own. It was almost like it was pre-arranged.
With Angel Killer in the hands of the
publisher, I decided to polish another manuscript that is the start of a
different series and publish it myself as an ebook to see how that went. I was
taking on more and more clients who wanted help promoting their ebooks. It
seemed a logical way for me to learn the ins and outs of the process.
Since the main reason someone hires me is to help increase
their sales, I need to know why people buy books. As a psychologist, it’s
natural that deductive reasoning comes into play and I’m always looking for
cause and effect. Enter the process of elimination. I might not be able to tell
you what does sell your book every
time, but I can tell you what doesn’t.
Just like I can tell you that talent is no guarantee of recognition as an
author. If I had to choose whether to have talent
or perseverance as a trait that
would lead to my success, I’d choose perseverance. Of course talent would be
nice too, but things are just not always as they seem. I could name a long list
of very talented writers that you’ve never heard of because they didn’t have
the perseverance to stick in there until they got published. 

People look for a publicist to help increase their book
sales. They judge the success or failure of a book by the number of sales, and
often, logically, assume if a book has high sales figures, it must be good. But
it’s kind of like that old riddle that says bananas are yellow so if it’s
yellow, it’s a banana. Obviously that logic is faulty.
If a book has high sales, it doesn’t mean it’s good.
If a book is good, it doesn’t mean it will have high sales.
Everyone wants to think his or her book is good, and I’m the
first to admit it’s a HUGE plus if it is. But being good just isn’t enough to
rack up the sales. People buy books for lots of reasons:
Because they like something else the author has
written
·
Somebody told them it’s good
·
They like the cover
·
They like the description
·
They met the author and like to tell people they
know her
·
One of their favorite authors wrote a blurb on
the cover
·
They read a good review
·
They won a previous title in a drawing and liked
it
Obviously, what people see and hear about a new title is at
least as important as how good it is. If the description or cover or whatever
doesn’t capture their interest, they may never see what’s inside.
That is where I come into play so often. Presentation. First
impressions. It’s my hope that I can help my clients present themselves (yes
themselves and not just their books)
in a way that will appeal to the group that is most likely to want to read
their book, and to set the stage by finding the right reviewers, the right
publications, the right radio and television programs to make the author shine
and make their book seem highly desirable.
And now that I’ve schooled myself in all those things, I
need to figure out how to do them for myself. I was working with a web designer
just today, helping him to get the right content on a new website for one of my
clients. He came back later and said, “Just so you know, I put links to your
books on my website. Hope that’s ok.” I was really surprised and asked him why.
He said, “I think you spend all your time promoting other authors and somebody
better promote you.”
Wow. Busted.
You can find out more about PJ Nunn and the Shari Markham mysteries at her website. You can friend her on Facebook and follow her on Twitter as @PJNunn. If you want to find out more about PJ as a publicist, check out Breakthrough Promotions or contact her directly at pj@breakthroughpromotions.net