How You Can Sell e-Books To Mobile Twitter Users By Piotr Kowalczyk

Today, I have invited back a return guest author to share his knowledge of book marketing and mobile phones. Piotr Kowalczyk is at the cutting edge of mobile technology and shares his knowledge through his site, Password Incorrect and he highlights e-books on his Ebook Friendly site. Piotr is also a co-sponsor on this blog's Sunday Kindle Book Giveaway, where you can win a Kindle book each week just for leaving a comment. Check the right sidebar of my blog for this week's current titles you can win.
In today's post, Piotr will show you how you can sell your e-book to mobile Twitter users.
How You Can Sell e-Books To Mobile Twitter Users
By Piotr Kowalczyk
There are great services like Ether Books, which are designed to reach mobile readers and populate their minds with high quality reads tailored to mobile conditions. But what to do when you are not lucky enough to be one of Ether authors?
If you are a self-publisher actively using social media to find readers and draw their attention to your books (probably published in an electronic form), this post is for you.
I'd like to share a simple way to make your e-book available for instant purchase by mobile phone users. As you'll see – it's very easy.
What to do?
Use Twitter to share links to your books self-published at Kindle Store – with an extra information addressing owners of mobile Kindle applications.
An example of a tweet is shown in screenshot 1. When you tap on a link you'll be redirected to a mobile browser, like Safari on an iOS device, or a browser working within a Twitter app.

Screenshot 1
As you see, just after one click (screenshot 2) the reader can make a purchase decision. What's more important, the time of actually reading this book on a Kindle app is delayed only by a couple of seconds more. It's the essence of an instant purchase.
Experts can say: "yeah, but it's so obvious, that you can buy goods via Amazon's mobile site."
The thing is not what expert know, but what readers don't know. And most of them still don't know that:
Amazon has a mobilized version of its site (even those users who already have Kindle app on their mobile phones – as they never tried actually buying anything yet)
1-Click purchase works on mobile phones
It's extremely fast and convenient – it takes a couple of clicks and a less than 30 seconds from discovering an e-book on Twitter to reading it.
In fact, buying an e-book via Twitter link is faster than doing it via Kindle application, where you're just redirected to an Amazon site and have to browse for a book.
Why mobile phones?

Screenshot 2
Mobile web is growing extremely fast, anyone knows it
Half of Twitter users is connecting with a service via mobile phones
They don't have to switch devices to complete a purchase – even if they won't read the e-book on a mobile phone, but on a Kindle device
Mobile phone can be a purchase device for owners of Kindles not equipped with 3G
Mobile phone users make purchases in application stores of their mobile operating systems. Buying Kindle e-books via Twitter is the similar kind of experience.
Why Amazon?
Availability of Kindle apps (iOS, Android, BlackBerry, Windows Phone 7)
Well designed Amazon mobile site – with 1-Click functionality
A growing number of Kindle owners and mobile device users with an Amazon account
Very important – book syncing. We can assume that this functionality from Amazon will always be a step ahead of competition
Right at the beginning, after landing on an book's page at Amazon, the reader has a choice: to buy a book or to download a free sample
Automatic detection of mobile browsers – if you open a link from a mobile phone, a mobile site appears.
Why Twitter?
Great discovery & recommendation tool
Instant delivery of messages, tweet streams, many users – all that is a great surrounding for instant micro-purchase decisions
Amazon link (amzn.to) is a guarantee of a safe purchase. If you use bit.ly shortener it automatically changes to amzn.to when you share a page from Amazon.com.
* * * Obviously the most important factor is the information contained in a single tweet. The user has to know that the book can be downloaded in a couple of clicks. You have to pick up the owners of customer accounts at Amazon.com – those ones who are right now reading your tweets on their mobile phones.
As you see in an example shown above, this is doable. I sent this tweet yesterday and sold 10 copies of my short stories. Not a bad result for a self-published e-book of a niche genre (I call it "geek fiction").
There are many ways to address – in a single tweet – mobile users who have access to Kindle e-books:
Use "Kindle", either as a word or a hashtag
Use hashtags, not only #kindle, but also #ebook, #ebooks, #mobile
Name devices or mobile operating systems: iPhone, iPad, Android, HTC, etc. (also as hashtags).
Having in mind that from 30 to 50% of users are connecting with Twitter from their cellphones or tablets, it's really interesting to explore mobile channels to reach them - especially, that they are given an opportunity to instantly try and buy your book.
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About the author
Piotr Kowalczyk (Nick Name)
Geek fiction writer and self-publisher. His books were downloaded from different self-publishing platforms more than 70,000 times.
Technology geek. E-book enthusiast. Guest writer at TeleRead and partner of Read an E-book Week.
Runs experimental digital literary projects including Google-translated fiction and picture stories created solely on an iPhone.
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Tony Eldridge is the author of The Samson Effect , an action/adventure novel that Clive Cussler calls a "first rate thriller brimming with intrigue and adventure." He is also the author of the Twitter marketing book, Conducting Effective Twitter Contests . His new novel, The Lottery Ticket , was just recently released on Kindle.








Published on June 23, 2011 04:00
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