This article is for authors to help them understand how we get readers to your book lists (so they can meet you and your book).
If you want the bigger picture of how we drive traffic to Book DNA, go here.
Our recommendations are forever (key point)
Once your book recommendation list is in our system, we will promote you and your book list forever. This is unlike a magazine, where you are featured only in the November issue.
Book DNA is timeless, and we are constantly creating new ways to help readers discover you, your book, and your book list. For example, we recently rolled out our weekly 100% personalized book recommendation email, which also features your list of readers we match it with based on books they love.
How does Book DNA get readers to my book list?
External Marketing Channels For Your Book List
This is how we drive readers directly to your book list from outside our website.
Search Engines
If your list is a good fit, we will rank your book recommendations based on what people are searching for on search engines.
For example, if someone searches for "best children's books about elephants" and your list is "the best children's books about the world of elephants," we will work to rank you in search engines.
This usually takes 6 to 36 months to achieve, but delivers interested readers daily from search engines like Google, Bing, or DuckDuckGo.
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- From a reader's POV: I search for "best elephant book for kids" on Google and click on a book list at Book DNA.
Author's Social Media
We give authors the tools to share their book lists on social media. Not only does this help authors engage their audience and sell their book(s), but it also helps readers find our website and our entire author community. This is a virtuous circle as we help people to find better ways to find books.
You can also share your content multiple times a year to engage your communities (especially if you do it in a way that causes discussion).
- From a reader's POV: I am browsing Twitter and see a tweet a friend retweeted about a book list on "nonfiction that will make you hopeful." I click it and land on a book list at Book DNA.
Email Marketing
We've taken our first steps into email marketing with our 100% personalized book-recommendation newsletter. Try it here and see what you think!
So far, we are seeing fantastic results, and this is another way we get readers in front of your book recommendation list to meet you and your book.
Internal Marketing Channels For Your Book List
We want to help readers follow their curiosity and browse books more like they would in a bookstore. So, all our systems are designed for book browsing with a healthy dose of serendipity.
How do readers find my book list once they are on Book DNA?
Bookshelves
Bookshelves are collections of books around topics, genres, or age groups (or combinations). These are things like World War 2, dragons, science fiction, or middle school books. On these pages, we feature books that authors have recommended, and the book lists those books come from (as well as the author of that list and their book). One of our goals here is to entice readers from here to your book list.
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- From a reader's POV: I am on a Book DNA bookshelf about science fiction; I filter to see only sci-fi books with detectives. I click on a book list I find through that filtered result about "the best mystery books that happen to take place in outer space."
So, on the bookshelves, we feature your book recommendations and use those to pull people toward your book list (where they can meet you and your book).
Recommendation Engine
We use our recommendation engine to help readers find your book list from different parts of Book DNA. We use this system to recommend related book lists throughout our website based on topics (and soon genre and age as we integrate that in 2024).
- From a reader's POV: I am an author's book list about "funny cats." At the bottom, I see a list of recommended book list and click on one called "the best nonfiction books to understand cats and what makes them tick."
Here are two examples:
Internal Search
Our search feature allows readers to search authors, books, topics, age-groups, and genres they are interested in. We then deliver a search results page to help them find books to explore.
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- From a reader's POV: I search for "Stephen King" and click on a book list for "The scariest books about going crazy."
Try our search results page for the following:
- History (Genre)
- Kitchen Confidential by Anthony Bourdain (Book)
- Christian Cameron (Author)
- Middle Graders (Age Group)
- World War 1 (Topic)
"Books Like" pages
These pages will help readers who love a specific book find more books like that one. And it also helps authors by connecting them with the book list that the recommendation came from. You can try this example with books like Kitchen Confidential. This helps readers find your book list and connect with you.
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- From a reader's POV: I search Google for "books like Six of Crows," and on the results, I find a book list that sounds perfect for me called "The best books if you want to go on a magical adventure."
Individual book pages
This page will show readers why they should read that specific book is recommended within Book DNA. This helps them find lists they are interested in as well. Try Kitchen Confidential or Dune. We also added a page so you can easily see the book list where the book appears.
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- From a reader's POV: I am on a Book DNA book page for the book Six of Crows. I loved this book, and I see that J.L. also loves it. I click to read JL's favorite 3 reads of 2023.
Frontpage
The front page helps readers find the best place to start browsing for books (mostly through search in its current form).
The best books of the year event!
Every year, we ask thousands of authors and readers for their favorite 3 reads. Readers can browse this page to see what books everyone loved more than everything they read that year. This is a new feature, and we are working to improve it further as we grow.
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- From a reader's POV: I am looking at the best biographies of 2023. The book cover for "I'm Glad My Mom Died" grabs me. I click on that and then on why the authors picked it. That takes me to the book's page, where I click on Mary's list of her favorite 3 reads in 2023.
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