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1:21 pm January 11, 2013
| Doctor Stock
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| Member | posts 293 |
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I did a search of Yakezie today for the best practices for launching an e-book… and found several of you have e-books. Sometimes, there are some tips too… but for the most part, there is no one thread with what you've done that's worked or not worked in promoting your e-book.
I just completed my first e-book and plan on launching it in the next week or two… so I thought, why not compile a list of tips that you've found for launching an e-book. That way, when you go to launch your first or your next one, you'll be able to see the tips of others too all in one thread.
Who wants to start?
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2:24 pm January 11, 2013
| Edward Antrobus
| | Fort Collins, CO | |
| Member
| posts 1008 |
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I've always found the ebook "How to Launch the **** Out of Your Ebook" to be pretty solid although a bit dated at this point. Chris Guillebeau's Launch Checklist from The $100 Startup also has good advice, although it's not ebook specific. And Pat Flynn's ebook group on Facebook has tons of advice from other ebook authors and ebook professionals. And "How I Made Over $42,000 in 1 Month Selling My Kindle eBooks" is an absolutely fantastic resource as well.
What I'm planning on doing with my next ebook is to launch it on Amazon's KDP Select first to jump-start it with the 5 free download days available per 90 days. From what I've read, 2-3 days when you first launch and the rest a month later works best. Promote it during the free days, and then again on the day after the promotion ends. After the 90 days are up, then I will launch it on other platforms, including my websites.
- By starting out on KDP Select, you can get those free days. Depending on how well you promote them, you can get hundreds of downloads and several 4 & 5 star reviews. Those ratings will make your book more attractive when it isn't free any more. And several other platforms let you add reviews (that aren't from you or anyone else with a financial interest in the book) from other sites.
- Add a final page to the Kindle version telling readers that when they turn the page from there (for actual Kindle devices), they will be brought to a page to rate the book and ask them to do so. Provide a link to the product page for readers that are reading on other devices, such as the Kindle app for iOS and Android devices.
- Prior to the launch, join authors groups, such as on Triberr or the Pat Flynn ebook group. You promote their stuff and they will promote yours.
- Tweet every milestone you reach, such as <10 ranking in a category or getting on the Top 100 free ebooks list.
- Provide review copies to other bloggers in your niche. Nothing sells like a good review.
- After your KDP Select exclusivity period is up, pull it from Select and submit it to other platforms. My SEAM Publishing site has tutorials for getting listed with the other major players. As you get listed on each retailer, share that with your followers as well. Some people have had fantastic success staying in KDP Select, but I think the average author will do better to be available on as many different platforms as possible. I can't confirm from direct experience, but I have heard that in Canada, the Canadian bookseller Kobo is more popular than Amazon for certain genres.
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I'm looking for editors, beta-readers, and some demographic research for my upcoming novel, Once Upon a Saturn Moon. If you like reading soft sci-fi thrillers, maybe with a touch of romance thrown in, you can find more information at http://seampublishing.com/once…..aturn-moon
If You Can Read, You Can Cook – http://www.ifyoucanread.com | Think you can't cook? If you can read this sentence, then you can.
SEAM Publishing – http://www.seampublishing.com | eBook formatting and publishing service
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7:36 am January 12, 2013
| My Personal Finance Journey
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Great advice! Thanks so much!
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9:21 am January 12, 2013
| jonrhodesuk
| | UK | |
| Member | posts 277 |
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I wrote a big post a while ago that might help you. It covers a lot on e books. It has details of how to make them, where to sell them, and other tips for distribution. It can be found here
How To Make Money With E Books
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4:27 pm January 13, 2013
| Doctor Stock
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| Member | posts 293 |
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Some great ideas so far…
Has anyone used Smashwords? If so, who did you get to do the formatting and was it a worthwhile process? From what I can see, Smashwords will submit your ebook to a variety of services, not just one… giving you maximum exposure.
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4:45 pm January 13, 2013
| Edward Antrobus
| | Fort Collins, CO | |
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| posts 1008 |
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I'm in the process of testing Smashwords right now. They are now beta testing epub submissions which takes away my major objection to their operations.
As far as who I used to format the book, that was me, of course. My SEAM Publishing gave me a really good deal. :) (not to plug my services, but I do offer a 10% discount to Yakezie members/ challengers)
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I'm looking for editors, beta-readers, and some demographic research for my upcoming novel, Once Upon a Saturn Moon. If you like reading soft sci-fi thrillers, maybe with a touch of romance thrown in, you can find more information at http://seampublishing.com/once…..aturn-moon
If You Can Read, You Can Cook – http://www.ifyoucanread.com | Think you can't cook? If you can read this sentence, then you can.
SEAM Publishing – http://www.seampublishing.com | eBook formatting and publishing service
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2:35 pm January 28, 2013
| debtfreedivas
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| Member | posts 121 |
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Doctor Stock,
Great thread. We're launching an ebook as well. We're trying to decide whether to offer and ebook for free as an email list building tool or sale it while maybe providing a portion for preview. This will be our first attempt at distributing an ebook and our email list is very small…only 400 right now. I'd love to hear thoughts from everyone?
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