What Should a Nonfiction Author Website Actually Include?

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Not all nonfiction authors are the same, and neither are their websites. A CEO sharing leadership frameworks has different goals than a memoirist writing to help others navigate grief or recovery. But here’s what they have in common: both need a website that does more than display a book cover.

A nonfiction author website isn’t just a sales page. It’s an online podium. It’s a place where your credibility is established, your message is extended, and the right people (readers, media professionals, event organizers, and decision-makers) can find exactly what they need from you.

Key Takeaways: Author Website Essentials

  • Your website is more than a book page — it’s your platform, your credibility, and your pitch all in one place.
  • Strong messaging is the foundation. If visitors don’t know they’re in the right place within seconds, you’ve already lost them.
  • Every nonfiction author website needs the same core pages: book, about, speaking/services, media, and contact.
  • A media kit and speaker resources section sets you apart from authors who aren’t thinking beyond the book.
  • Build your email list before your book launches — not after.
  • The goal isn’t a beautiful website. It’s a website that works.

Regardless of your nonfiction genre, the most effective author websites share the same core elements. Here’s what yours should include.

Strong, Clear Messaging

This is where it all begins. Writing for a website is fundamentally different from writing a manuscript. Your readers aren’t settling in for a long read. They’re scanning. Strong messaging tells a visitor within seconds that they’re in the right place, that you understand their world, and that you have something worth their time.

A Dedicated Book Page

Whether your book is the centerpiece of a leadership program or a catalyst for policy change, your book page needs to do three things clearly: explain what the book is about, communicate how it helps the reader, and make it easy to buy. Consider whether you’re selling directly from your site, offering signed copies, or directing visitors to retail. All of that belongs here.

A Compelling About Page

Your book is not your brand — you are. Visitors want to know who you are, how you got here, and why you’re the right person to be writing on this topic. Don’t undersell yourself. Share your background, your expertise, and the experiences that gave you authority on this subject. Keep it relevant and specific; this isn’t a resume, it’s a connection point.

Testimonials

Social proof matters. If your book has already launched, reader and peer testimonials should be woven throughout your site, not buried on a single page. If you’re pre-launch, start gathering endorsements now. An ARC (Advance Reader Copy) team is an excellent way to build this before your book goes live.

A Speaking or Services Page

Your book is one way you share your message. Speaking engagements, workshops, consulting, and advocacy are others. If you speak publicly, list your top three to five topics with a brief description of each. Organizations and event coordinators are actively searching for experts. Social justice causes need public speakers. This page helps them say yes to you faster.

A Media Kit or Speaker Resources Section

This is one of the most overlooked sections on author websites, and one of the most valuable. Media professionals and event organizers need materials quickly. A dedicated speaking resources section with your long and short bios, book description PDF, speaker sheet, and professional headshots makes their job easier, and makes you look like a professional who’s done this before.

A Contact Page That Actually Works

Make it easy to reach you and easy to track who’s reaching out. Whether you use a contact form, a direct email link, or a calendar booking tool, the method should match the type of inquiries you’re expecting. A general contact form works for most, but if speaking and media are priorities, consider separate intake paths for each.

Media Features, Podcast Appearances, and Publications

If you’ve been featured somewhere, say so. A media page builds instant credibility and signals to podcast hosts and journalists that you’re a viable guest or source. Link your media section to your contact form or speaker resources so interested parties can take the next step without hunting for it. If you only have a handful of media mentions, consider combining them into a page with testimonials. You can always expand pages as you grow.

An Email List (Start Now)

If there’s one thing you build before your book launches, make it this. It’s not glamorous, but it’s necessary. Your email list is the most direct line you have to your audience — no algorithm, no platform dependency. Embed sign-up options throughout your site, offer something of value in exchange, and nurture that list consistently. When your book drops, your announcement goes to people who are already waiting for it.

A Few Final Notes

  • Use professional photography. Visitors notice, and it signals the level of seriousness you bring to your work.
  • Don’t overlook landing pages and thank-you pages. They’re part of the user experience too.
  • If you have an active speaking or event calendar, publish it. It reinforces that you’re active and in demand.

Your website is often the first place someone decides whether they can trust you. A reader considering your book, a podcast host evaluating guests, an organization looking for a keynote speaker — they all come to your website with a question: Is this person the real thing?

The elements above aren’t just boxes to check. They’re the architecture of a credible, professional author platform; one that works for you whether you’re launching your first book or expanding what your third one has already built.

Not sure where your current website stands?

If you’re not sure, or you’re starting from scratch and want to get it right the first time, that’s exactly what I help nonfiction authors figure out. Book a free consultation call and we’ll take an honest look at what your website needs to do and the best way to get it done.

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