Getting Bang for Your Indie Book Bucks, Part I: E-Book Promotions

List of e-book promotions Old school


By Dorian Box


Among the hardest decisions for indie writers and publishers is figuring out where and what to invest in on a limited budget to promote one’s book. In a series of posts, I’ll be talking about, respectively, our experience in promoting Psycho-Tropics by investing in: e-book promotions, book award contests, and print ads. (An earlier post examined our experience with Amazon ad campaigns.)


In November, borrowing advice from Andrew Diamond (author of Warren Lane) set forth in this excellent blog post, we decided to follow Andrew’s strategy by running multiple e-book promotions for Psycho-Tropics. By e-book promotions, I’m referring to the many available services that, for a fee, will send out an email blast and post your book on their webpage (and maybe Facebook) advertising a discounted price for a limited period.


We weren’t as organized as Andrew, and started too late to take advantage of some promotional services, which were already filled up for the dates we wanted, but we still sold 100 copies of Psycho-Tropics in four days at the discounted price of 99 cents. That is a whole lot more books than we usually sell in four days.  So, it works!


Writer's Digest Award Winner


The accompanying photo lists the services we used and the cost of each. An additional service we used that’s not on the list is JustKindleBooks, which charged a fee of $50.


Andrew’s blog post lists and links to these and other services. Once you get rolling, it takes about 10 to 20 minutes to sign up for each. To speed things up, we followed Andrew’s advice of collecting any and all submission info we might need (e.g., ASIN numbers, book length, synopsis) in one document to make it easy to cut and paste, and also used PayPal to avoid having to share or enter credit care info again and again.


Like most promotional investments for an indie book, this one is not a money-making strategy, but it is a reasonably priced method for getting your book out to a much larger group of readers without having to actually give it away. Will these 100 people read Psycho-Tropics and post reviews? That would be nice, of course, but from Andrew’s experience and ours so far, discount sales don’t seem to generate that result. Speculating, it may be that a lot of people are willing to drop 99 cents on a book without feeling compelled to get the return on their investment by reading it.


Still, we rate e-book promotions two thumbs up in terms of “bang for the book bucks” because of their effectiveness in generating sales as weighed against their relatively modest cost.  Consult Andrew’s much more detailed post to maximize your investment.


The post Getting Bang for Your Indie Book Bucks, Part I: E-Book Promotions appeared first on dorian box.

1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 19, 2015 09:31
No comments have been added yet.