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GUEST POST: 5 Tips to Market Your Picture Book as a First-Time Author by Desiree Villena

Authors, Craft, Authors + Illustrators, book releaseLindsay Ward2 Comments

Happy Thursday Critters! This week we have a guest post by Desiree Villena, a writer with Reedsy, who’s sharing some tips with us about marketing your picture book as a first-time author. I’m so excited to have Desiree with us today and we hope to share more posts like this in the future along with our stellar line-up of author interviews. Critter Lit’s mission is to help give authors and illustrators a platform to share their work. We hope you find the information we post, share, and promote useful on your creative journey.

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5 Tips to Market Your Picture Book as a First-Time Author

By Desiree Villena

If this is your first time publishing a picture book, you’ve got an exciting journey ahead of you! The playful world of children’s publishing will make marketing your book one of the most joyous tasks you can find in the literary industry. It’s still important and serious work, of course — but you can also benefit from that freedom to be a little extra creative and silly! With that in mind, here are five tips to market your first picture book both effectively and enjoyably.

1. Craft a fun author bio

As a children’s book author — and a picture book author at that — you can afford to be a little less formal than you’d usually be in a professional context. One place where this informality might manifest is your author bio, which can be as absurd and nonsensical as you like.

Take, for example, the beloved Greek children’s author Eugene Trivizas: a criminology professor who completely eliminates his real life from his bio in favor of a more whimsical, child-friendly persona. “Eugene Trivizas is an explorer, inventor and a juggler of runny eggs,” his bio reads. “Eugene lives on the Island of Fireworks together with his Parrot, Cynthia, his White Elephant, Pukipon, Lilly, his Spotted Leopard, the Invisible Horace, the Invisible Kangaroo and many other friends and acquaintances.” 

If you’re publishing your picture book traditionally, you probably put together an author bio when you were looking for a literary agent. However, the bio that will appear on your website can be more playful and intriguing than that, and more in line with the eccentricity of many pictre books! 

That said, as a first-time author, it’s understandable that you may not want to go all the way with a completely wacky author bio — and you might be inclined to keep it shorter, too. Still, you can introduce an element of playfulness at the end of a completely serious bio. Anything that makes your reader smile will do the trick!

As a concrete example, pets are always a safe bet. If your bio ends with, “She lives in Ontario with her cat, Estelle,” you could add a detail about that pet, like “She lives in Ontario with her cat, Estelle, whom she deeply admires for her ability to communicate with household objects.” This sort of bio may be especially effective if your picture book is related to animals, like Sarah Kurpiel’s Lone Wolf. But animals aren’t the only way to make a bio fun; check out Abi Kushman’s bio at the bottom of this interview with Critter Lit for another great example.

2. Keep your design materials consistent

To ensure that your author brand is recognizable, you should aim to keep all design materials within a consistent aesthetic. What I mean by this is that the visual impression conveyed by the  design of your book cover should not be at odds with the appearance of your website, or any other promotional materials (like social media image posts).

In fact, these visual elements should not just avoid clashing messages; they should be perfectly synchronized. This is a key concept of branding, which involves establishing a clear visual identity. Such an identity includes things like your color scheme, typography, or any logo-style shape by which you might market a series of picture books.

Visual consistency helps make your marketing campaign more memorable and holds your online presence together. So as you embark on this journey, talk to your illustrator/designer and agree to some rules that will guide the visual side of your marketing strategy.

3. Go out and meet your readers

Possibly the most exciting part of a marketing campaign for both yourself and your young readers is going out and meeting each other! If your book is being published traditionally, talk to your publicist about attending book festivals, visiting schools, and doing readings in libraries and bookstores. If you’re self-publishing, reach out to the people organizing these things yourself, and simply state your interest in (and enthusiasm for) being part of their future events!

You can even suggest some activities yourself to keep your requests from being too broad and vague. For example, say you’re happy to visit their school and hold a writing or illustration workshop, followed by a short reading of your picture book. And it should go without saying, but I’ll say it anyway: whatever sort of event you end up suggesting, always make sure to arrive armed with copies of your book to sell! 

The pandemic may make it tough to implement this part of your marketing plan at the moment, but that doesn’t mean you can’t do anything to reach your target market. Plenty of bookshops are holding their regular events online, so don’t hesitate to get in touch and highlight that you’d still be happy to be part of an online event. It’s less than ideal, but better than nothing!

4. Use social media to your advantage

While we’re on the subject of online promotion, social media will be enormously helpful to you during this difficult COVID-19 period. If you’re successful in holding some online events, as mentioned above, you’ll hopefully see flurries of interest on your social media pages. Stay active on these pages by sharing both promotional and fun, helpful materials (such as book recs for parents who are struggling to keep children occupied at home).

Again, if you have a publishing deal, your publisher’s marketing team will be able to help with this; otherwise, be creative! Can you put together any educational activities using some of the illustrations from your book? Or perhaps you can ask your illustrator for outline-only drawings of your characters, to supply to young children as a coloring exercise? Anything that will get your audience to interact with you digitally is a hugely positive addition to a marketing campaign conducted from home!

If you have a mailing list (as you should), make sure to repeatedly provide sign-up links on your social media pages. A mailing list is an incredibly valuable tool, even for picture book authors — your young readers may not have email yet, but their parents do! Use your mailing list to keep up a friendly stream of communication and resources for these parents (and teachers and librarians and more), and always notify them when you have a new book coming out.

5. Give author interviews

On the note of promotional activities you can safely conduct from home, one of the most fun ways to improve your digital networking is to give author interviews — just like the interviews on Critter Lit’s website! Aside from children and their family members, another part of your audience is going to be fellow authors, illustrators, and  publishing professionals who love picture books and will be keeping up-to-date with new releases.

These readers will be curious to hear where you find inspiration, how you arrived at your picture book idea, and how your overall creative process works. Remember: interviews are a crucial aspect of belonging to a professional literary community in which authors help one another promote their books. And these interview articles will definitely be something to share on those social media accounts we discussed!

I hope these tips are helpful to you and that they inspire you to create (or expand upon) an amazing marketing plan of your own. As a first-time author, it’s okay if you make some mistakes — what you don’t want to do is be too afraid to be creative, and end up launching your book with a fizzle rather than a bang. Be brave, and best of luck!


Huge thank you Desiree for stopping by Critter Lit today and sharing some wonderful tips with us!


DESIREE VILLENA is a writer with Reedsy, a marketplace that connects self-publishing authors with the world’s best editors, designers, and marketers. She's very passionate about helping authors reach their dreams, and enjoys reading and writing short stories in her spare time. Desiree hasn't yet written a children's book of her own, but maybe someday!

Interview with Debut Author Cathy Ballou Mealey

Authors, book release, Debut InterviewsLindsay Ward7 Comments

Happy Thursday Critters! Today we have an interview with author Cathy Ballou Mealey! Her debut picture book, WHEN A TREE GROWS, illustrated by Kasia Nowowiejska, just released this month with Sterling Children’s Books. I’m so excited to share this brand new book with you all today! Here’s a sneak peek:

When Moose sees the inviting tree where Squirrel has built his nest, he rubs his itchy antlers against the trunk—and sets in motion a chain of comic catastrophes. The tree falls and wakes Bear, who stumbles into Moose, who causes a truck driver to swerve off the road. But then Squirrel jumps onto that truck and ends up in the city, all alone. Who will help him get home? And how will Squirrel thank them? Kids will love this adorable picture book, with its irresistible animal characters and rhythmic text that’s made for reading out loud.

So without further ado…please welcome Cathy Ballou Mealey!

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Where do you live?

I have lived in Massachusetts all my life. I grew up just below the Vermont/New Hampshire border, and went to college in Metrowest. After a decade in Cambridge, I’m currently on the fabulous North Shore.

When did you know you wanted to write picture books?

I wrote my first picture book in 2010 to enter the Cheerios “Spoonful of Stories” contest. Even though “Ozzie the Oyster” was definitely not ready for publication, my prize was discovering a passion for the craft of picture book writing. After attending conferences, classes and workshops, I joined SCBWI, the 2012 12X12 Challenge and two critique groups. I have been writing, revising and studying ever since.

Tell us about your road to publication, what did that involve for you?

Drafting TREE took roughly 6 weeks before I had a preliminary version to share with critique partners. I used multiple revision tactics to trim text and tighten the storyline. I plastered sticky notes on my door to rearrange the scene sequence. I pasted sentence strips into a book dummy loaded with stick-critter sketches. When friends urged me to send out the revised TREE, I started to query agents. In May 2015 I signed with Liza Fleissig of Liza Royce Agency and by December TREE was putting down roots at Sterling Books for Children.

Can you share a bit about your process?

Scribble my idea into a notebook and mull it over. Develop a pitch. Research some related non-fiction titles from the library about moose, squirrels, bears, etc. Mull some more. Write a long, rambling draft. Chew on word choices. Revise, re-write. Plunk text into a word cloud generator like WordItOut or Wordle, draft a few rhyming lines, make a dummy with stick figures. Revise until it is ready for critique group. Mull over feedback. Revise, rinse, and repeat until ready!

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What do you do to shake the rust off or get new ideas?

Go for a long walk outdoors. Visit a museum. Browse the greeting card section of my favorite stationery store. Bring my son to a playground and eavesdrop on the kid chatter!

Anything you can’t live without while you write?

A window. Natural light. Being able to gaze at the sky or trees. I watched a lot of squirrel activity while writing When A Tree Grows, and kept my camera close at hand.

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Any authors and/or illustrators who inspire you?

Every up-and-coming writer yet to be published inspires me. Making book dreams come true is tough, especially when balancing the demands of career, family life, and community responsibilities. Those who consistently carve out time to nurture that writing spark inspire me to work harder, write better, persevere.

I have so little drawing ability that I am floored by almost every illustrator’s work in one fashion or another. Particular favorites to pore over include Catherine Rayner, Hadley Hooper, and Melissa Sweet. I’m so grateful to Kasia Nowowiejska for her dedicated efforts to make WHEN A TREE GROWS the very best book it could be.

Dream project to work on?

This is such an interesting question! I can’t name a specific dream project. However, there are certainly manuscripts that I’ve pored blood, sweat and tears into that I would love to see become real, live books one day.

Interior Spread - WHEN A TREE GROWS

Interior Spread - WHEN A TREE GROWS

Tell us about your debut book.

WHEN A TREE GROWS is a rollicking read-aloud that follows a zany chain of events triggered by a broken tree, a cranky Bear, a nut-loving Squirrel and his loyal friend Moose. Kirkus gave it a lovely review, saying “Laugh along as a story about a tree in the forest comes full circle, bringing three creatures along for a bumpy but fun ride.”

What’s up next for you?

Next up for me is a still-secret picture book with an amazing publisher in Canada. A sloth and a squirrel team up for a special mission. Look for an announcement soon, and a book sometime in 2021!

And last, but not least, favorite 80’s movie?

An 80’s movie set in 1963 - Dirty Dancing.

RIP Patrick Swayze.

“Nobody puts Baby in a corner.”


Huge thank you to Cathy for stopping by Critter Lit today! We are so excited for your debut and can’t wait to see what’s next!


CATHY BALLOU MEALEY lives with her family north of Boston, where she delights in watching silly squirrel antics and is waiting patiently for a moose to appear. Her favorite nut is the hazelnut and her favorite cupcake is cardamom crème.

Her debut book, WHEN A TREE GROWS, is a rollicking read-aloud that follows a zany chain of events triggered by a broken tree, a cranky Bear, a nut-loving Squirrel and his loyal friend Moose.

FOR MORE INFORMATION about Cathy and her work, visit her online here or follow her on social media:

Twitter: @CatBallouMealey

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/cathy.mealey

Instagram: @catballoumealey

TO ORDER Cathy’s book, ring up your local bookstore or click here.

BOOK GIVEAWAY!

Want a chance to win a copy of WHEN A TREE GROWS?! Comment on this post or share it on Twitter. One lucky winner will be selected Thursday, April 18th! US addresses only please.

What's up on deck? Tune in next week for an interview with debut author Natascha Biebow!