Source: http://bob.yexley.net/creating-and-maintaining-your-own-bower-package/
Make the necessary changes to your package artifact(s) (bug fixes, new
features, etc, etc...whatever it might be) Update your bower.json file
with the new version for the package Commit your changes, tag the
repository and push your changes to git (don't forget to include the
--tags switch with your push command to your remote!) There's a couple of important things to notice here. As I mentioned previously, Bower
relies solely on git tags for package version information. This means
that in order to "release" a new "version" of your package, you have
only to create a new tag in your repository with the new version
number for the update. Its important to be sure to update the version
number in your bower.json file accordingly as well. With those changes
pushed to your package repository in git, you're good-to-go.
So to summarize that: make the desired changes to your package, update
the version number in your bower.json file (maybe version 0.0.2 now),
and commit, tag and push the changes to git.