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EVERY DAY, countless radio shows around the country need interesting and
knowledgeable guests to interview, on a broad range of topics. Not just talk
radio stations but also the many music stations that liven up their content by
interspersing it with short interviews.
Talk shows represent an amazing opportunity to get what amounts to millions of dollars in free publicity and to potentially earn a nice four-figure sum from each "appearance," even if you give the interview by phone, from the comfort and convenience of your own home, in your pajamas (which is one of the reasons many pros prefer radio to TV). I know that for a fact because I've done it many times myself, selling thousands of books that way. When you do a show, you get to promote your book and the host promotes it for you, too. Of course, you don’t promote it as if you were doing a commercial, though the host will do that for you, as you probably hear it being done for others when you listen to radio yourself.
If it's such a great opportunity, you might ask, why isn't everybody doing it? The simple answer is that most people don't know how. To get on the talk show circuit, you need to know how the system works and how to approach the hosts and producers in a way that will get you onto their shows. You also need to know who the hosts and producers are and how to reach them (their contact information, in the form of a well-organized, up-to-date database). You can learn more of the details by accessing the information via TalkShowGold.com.
Talk shows represent an amazing opportunity to get what amounts to millions of dollars in free publicity and to potentially earn a nice four-figure sum from each "appearance," even if you give the interview by phone, from the comfort and convenience of your own home, in your pajamas (which is one of the reasons many pros prefer radio to TV). I know that for a fact because I've done it many times myself, selling thousands of books that way. When you do a show, you get to promote your book and the host promotes it for you, too. Of course, you don’t promote it as if you were doing a commercial, though the host will do that for you, as you probably hear it being done for others when you listen to radio yourself.
If it's such a great opportunity, you might ask, why isn't everybody doing it? The simple answer is that most people don't know how. To get on the talk show circuit, you need to know how the system works and how to approach the hosts and producers in a way that will get you onto their shows. You also need to know who the hosts and producers are and how to reach them (their contact information, in the form of a well-organized, up-to-date database). You can learn more of the details by accessing the information via TalkShowGold.com.