A Solid Gold Marketing Budget - Andrew Crofts
Browsing through the Financial Times a couple of Saturdays
ago I was struck by a full-page colour ad for a couple of books by an author
named Nobu Su. One was called “The Gold Man from the East” and the other
“Dynasty Escape”. The imagery was very “James Bond” with a hint of infamous
artist Banksy’s shredded million pound painting stunt a few months ago. All
very sumptuous and eye-catching.
Nobu Su, it turns out, is a
flamboyant shipping tycoon from Taiwan
who believes he was badly ripped off by the banks in the 2008 crash and has
written these books to tell his side of the story.
More interesting still, however, is
his claim that he has invented a process whereby readers can “hire” the e-books from his nobu-store for a few weeks for a few dollars, after which they will
disappear from their devices; a smart new take on the good old-fashioned
library concept. You can even borrow a book for free for the first couple of hours,
(if you are a fast enough reader).
Being something of a sucker for
eccentric billionaires, and having an unendingly optimistic streak which keeps
me searching for new ideas on how to market books, I decided to do some serious
journalistic digging on behalf of Authors Electric – you are welcome.
To start with I had a peek at the
FT’s rate card, which is extremely complicated and there is no way of knowing
what deals might have been struck, but I can confidently guess that the ad
cost several tens of thousands of pounds, (impressively detailed research,
no?)
My next bit of googling revealed that
Mr Su had hired Palamedes, one of the better known publishing PR companies in London, to
handle the dissemination of his story. Anthony Harvison of Palamedes graciously
returned my call and did his best to answer my questions. The ad in the FT is
the full extent of the above-the-line advertising campaign but there has been a
fair amount of editorial coverage in the regional press, some of it apparently promotional
and emanating from a news agency with links to Palamedes.
There has also been a film made
about Mr Su and his banking foes called “The Outsider”, which has received a
review in the Guardian.
As an international image-raising
campaign for Mr Su, it seems pretty effective, (if expensive), and if the
“exploding book” technology takes off that too will be an interesting
development for writers and publishers of all sorts. I have a feeling, however,
that Mr Su is used to making and losing money on a very different scale to most
of us in the publishing world and he may be disappointed with the amount of return
he sees from actual book sales or rentals.
As a colourful tale of
international business showmanship, however, the whole thing is hard to
beat.
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