You may remember Alfageek from his previous tips on book marketing with Twitter. He has recently shared his findings on using Booklinker to compose the perfect tweet about your book. Here is the gist of it, although you’d be well advised to check out the original post for the full details.
Using BookLinker
For those unfamiliar with Booklinker, it creates universal links–ie. book links that automatically lead to the Amazon bookstore that corresponds to your geographical location. This is extremely helpful, as no one who clicks on your link will get the dreaded “This title is not available in your region” error. Booklinker is hardly the only player in town when it comes to universal links (it’s part of the service offered by ReaderLinks, for example). Still, it’s probably the most commonly used one, as it offers links in the form of “mybook.to/[title]” and “author.to/[name]“–and it’s free (for more information on universal links and Booklinker, check out my older post, How to Use Global Links: GeoRiot and BookLinker Partner Up).
Booklinker allows you to create an account, so you can manage your links whenever you need to change them. But say you’ve made a mistake and you change the link to the right one. What about people who have already downloaded the link, though? Will those old links be updated automatically?
From what I understand, the answer is yes and no. Without wanting to get technical, Booklinker, like all other websites, uses a cache to speed things up. This cache will eventually be updated, but if you’re in a hurry and need to manually update right away, you can use the following trick:
Go to this address mybook.to/clear-link-cache.php?url={your nickname}
For example, if you created mybook.to/warandpeace you’d need to hit mybook.to/clear-link-cache.php?url=warandpeace
“My tweet doesn’t have the preview of my book!”
So, you’ve composed the perfect link and create your tweet. Then, you realize that all you get is the short link, not the pretty cover and blurb and star rating from Amazon (known as a “Twitter Card”). Why is that?
As Alfageek explains, this happens because when your book is brand new, Amazon doesn’t generate the right “meta tags” on the page for the Twitter card. No idea why, but it pretty much never does. So you have to hit the page over and over, until it finally generates the right tags. But there’s a catch. Twitter saves the first version of that page it sees, so even once Amazon is generating the right meta tags, Twitter ignores them (this, again, is a cache issue).
You can actually address both of these problems with one simple trick! There’s a tool that developers use to make sure their meta tags are good. You can use this tool to both force Amazon to re-generate the page and to force Twitter to pay attention to the changes.
Go here: https://cards-dev.twitter.com/validator and enter the mybook.to link. Be sure to start with http, like http://mybook.to/warandpeace. If you forget the http, it won’t work, and the error message is confusing. Click the “Validate” button and you’ll either see a card, or you won’t. If you see the card, you’re done.
If you don’t see the card, count to ten and click validate again. No card? Count to ten and click it again. You may have to do this many, many, many times. Trust me. This will eventually work. Once you see the card, you’re done. Go look at Twitter and you’ll see that the tweet which didn’t have the card, now suddenly does have the card.
The Story Reading Ape said:
Reblogged this on Chris The Story Reading Ape's Blog and commented:
Patience required, but advice given 😀
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Sharon E. Cathcart said:
Reblogged this on Sharon E. Cathcart and commented:
I didn’t know about Booklinker, but I’m a user now … and will be sharing this info with author friends!
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Don Massenzio said:
Reblogged this on Author Don Massenzio and commented:
Check out this helpful post from Nicholas Rossis on using Booklinker an Twitter. Booklinker is a great tool that I use for all of my books to create universal book links. Check out this post at Nicholas’s blog.
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kimwrtr said:
Reblogged this on Kim's Author Support Blog.
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claire plaisted said:
Reblogged this on Plaisted Publishing and commented:
Booklinker Anyone. It’s not one i’ve heard of before. Perhaps it will help you. 🙂
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Wanda Luthman said:
Thank you! I love book linker but didn’t know this trick to clear the cache and to get the right picture to show.
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Nicholas C. Rossis said:
Me neither!
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Wanda Luthman said:
🙂
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annabellefranklinauthor said:
I couldn’t see a validate button.
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Nicholas C. Rossis said:
I’m sorry, what is a validate button?
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annabellefranklinauthor said:
Not to worry – I got in a real mess with this site and sort of gave up on it! The only trouble is, I’ve now got a really awful-looking card with no book cover image attached to my book links so I can’t use them on Twitter without looking unprofessional.
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Nicholas C. Rossis said:
I’m so sorry! What site, Twitter?
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annabellefranklinauthor said:
The dev.twitter.com site. Don’t be sorry – I think it’s just a bit too advanced for me. 🙂
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Nicholas C. Rossis said:
It does sound rather daunting!
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annabellefranklinauthor said:
Just had a conversation with our friend alfageek about it, and it seems he’s done his black magic on my links because the cards look fine now. I don’t think I’d pressed the button enough times!
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Nicholas C. Rossis said:
Sweet! I’m amazed at his skills!
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Helen Pryke said:
Reblogged this on Pink Quill Books and commented:
A very useful article on how to use booklinker and Twitter, and get the most out of them.
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