Posted on

Your Romance Books Will Never Go Out of Style — Here’s How to Build a Content Strategy that Doesn’t Either

Most content expires within 48 hours. Romance book content can last for years. Here’s the difference between evergreen and trending content, why your backlist is a permanent asset, and the 10 evergreen content ideas that apply to every single book you’ve ever written.

Read more

Posted on

The One Core Piece System: How to Run a Full Content Strategy from a Single Weekly Blog Post

Most romance authors create content per platform — separate ideas for Instagram, Pinterest, email. They are working five times as hard for one-fifth the compound effect. The One Core Piece System is the architecture that changes that: one blog article, a week of content, everything pointing to the same permanent asset.

Read more

Posted on

Why Every Romance Author Needs a Dedicated Booklist Page — And How to Build One that Actually Works for Readers

An author booklist page isn’t just an inventory — it’s the store map that turns a reader who’s interested into a reader who cannot stop. Here is what goes on it, how to organize it for readers not for publication history, and how the three-format booklist system works as both a website page and a…

Read more

Posted on

The Author Booklist Page: How to Turn Your Backlist Into an Invitation Instead of an Archive

The reader who loved your book is ready to read everything you’ve written — if she can figure out where to start. The author booklist page is the store map that makes binge reading easy and irresistible. Here’s what goes on it, why it exists in three formats, and how it functions as both a…

Read more

Posted on

Romance Author Website Mistakes — And How to Fix Every One of Them

Most romance author website mistakes aren’t technical problems — they’re reader experience problems. Here are the ten most common, including three that most author marketing advice has never named, and exactly how to fix each one.

Read more

Posted on

Why Romance Readers Want You to Have an Author Website — And What They’re Actually Looking For When They Get There

Romance readers are searching for you right now. Not for your marketing — for your world. Here’s exactly what they’re looking for when they arrive at an author’s website, why most websites give them something entirely different, and what changes when the ecosystem is built around what they actually need.

Read more

Posted on

The Seven Pages Every Romance Author Website Needs — And What Each One Is Actually For

Most romance author websites have pages. Very few have the right pages doing the right jobs. Here’s the complete map of the seven core pages that turn a website into a reader-first ecosystem — and what each one needs to accomplish for every reader who arrives.

Read more

Posted on

Six Elements of Your Author Website Design — And What Each One Does for the Reader Who Arrives

Your author website design is not a branding decision — it is a reader experience decision. Every visual, structural, and navigational choice either helps a romance reader move through your world with ease or creates friction that makes leaving feel easier. Here are the six elements that determine which one happens.

Read more

Posted on

Your Itty-Bitty Bookstore: What Your Author Website Is Actually For — And the 7 Pages That Make It Work

Your author website is the only piece of online real estate you fully own. Here are the seven pages every romance author website needs — what each one is actually for, what makes each one work, and why the difference between owned infrastructure and rented platforms matters more now than it ever has.

Read more

Posted on

The Book Hangover Is Not a Problem to Solve — It’s a Reader Telling You Exactly What She Needs Next

There are over 70,000 Instagram posts tagged #bookhangover. Romance readers are publicly announcing the most loyalty-ready moment in their reading experience. Here’s what the book hangover actually is, why it matters for your platform, and how to build the infrastructure that holds readers when it happens.

Read more