Thinking outside the box (or inside the book package)
In spite of these highlights, I normally eschew gimmicks. I am leery about sending along something with a book unless it's really different, makes an intriguing pull into the book, or frankly, is just plain cool. Maybe the era of "here's a t-shirt with our book title, and a hat, and a mousepad" turned me off, especially when the tchotchkes didn't do anything to pull people into the book's message.
But this month, I changed my mind with one of our January titles, THE FULL PLATE DIET. The plan, penned by two MDs and a licensed dietitian, is simple – no special food, no restricted menu, no complicated rules to follow. Instead, the authors (who run a nonprofit clinic to help people battle weight issues), espouse upping fiber intake to 40 grams a day. That’s it. Rather than subtracting food, the diet calls for you to add – blueberries to your morning cereal, bean-rich chili to your baked potato, veggies in your marinara sauce. To introduce the book to the media, we sent a box with sample pages from the book along with a package we created that contains a serving of cereal and dried raspberries (combined, they contain 40% of the daily fiber recommended in the book).
We’ll weigh in soon (pun intended) with the results; but would love your feedback in the meantime!
Labels: full plate diet, promotions

2 Comments:
I like lumpy mail, especially relevant lumpy mail. Andy Nullman did something similar with his book, and it got some good attention. If the book is any good, this should get some play.
Good luck! My interview with Erika goes live Wednesday, so book quality matters too! :)
Thanks Phil! Always good to hear from you.
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