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Goodreads Introduces Kindle Ebook Giveaways Beta Program (U.S. market)
Posted by Greg on May 3, 2016
Last year, Goodreads helped authors and publishers give away more than 300,000 print books in our popular Giveaways program! Thanks to this success, authors and publishers have been clamoring for the option to run ebook giveaways with Goodreads. Today, we have the news you’ve been waiting for! The beta launch of our new Kindle ebook giveaways program is now underway.
Here’s how it works: The author or publisher of a book – whoever controls the digital distribution rights to the book – can now offer up to 100 copies of the Kindle ebook in a giveaway. The author or publisher chooses how long the giveaway will run, and Goodreads does the rest. At the end of the giveaway, Goodreads randomly chooses winners and automatically sends the Kindle ebooks to their preferred devices and Cloud accounts. Winners receive real Kindle ebooks, complete with all the great features and security that Amazon’s Kindle platform provides.

Kindle ebook giveaways will initially be open to Goodreads members in the U.S. During this beta period, Goodreads is working with several publishers to host Kindle ebook giveaways, but once out of beta, the program will be open to any author or publisher - whoever owns the digital distribution rights for the book - who sells their ebooks on Amazon.
The cost of listing a Kindle book giveaway is $119, which allows you to offer up to 100 Kindle ebooks. Listing a print book giveaway will continue to be free. Why the difference? Both types of giveaways give authors and publishers a powerful way to market their books, reach lots of new readers, and drive buzz. With a Kindle ebook giveaway, we give you the opportunity to offer a large number of free books, reaching even more readers. We also save you on both costs and hassle. No more printing books, hauling them down to the post office, filling out address labels, and paying to ship them off to winners (which can cost hundreds of dollars for a 100-copy giveaway). No more delays in getting your books in winners’ hands. The readers who win your Kindle ebook giveaway will get their Kindle ebook instantly and will be able to start reading right away, which means you can get readers talking about your title faster than ever.
Authors and publishers have come to count on Goodreads print giveaways as a key part of their marketing plans. They are a powerful way to raise awareness of an upcoming book or reignite interest in a previously published book, and they generate the kind of engagement that makes readers take note. Giveaways are especially useful before a book is published, building the buzz and word-of-mouth excitement – through pre-release reviews and friends seeing their friends adding the book to their want to read shelves – that help successfully launch books.

Why should I run a Goodreads Giveaway?
The primary benefit of running a giveaway on Goodreads is generating excitement for your book. Many giveaway winners review the books they win, meaning that you can build word-of-mouth buzz early in your book’s life. The ability to offer up to 100 copies of a book will greatly increase your chances of receiving a good number of reviews.
Additionally, when a reader enters your giveaway, a post appears in all of their Goodreads friends’ and followers’ newsfeeds, which in turn, creates more entries, more people adding your book to their Want To Read shelves, and more awareness. That’s something you won’t get anywhere else.
Giving away 100 books or more is the technique that large publishers have been using for years with great success on Goodreads. For example, Riverhead Books has said that Goodreads played a major role in helping The Girl on the Train break out to early success. To help drive early reviews, they gave away 100 copies on Goodreads (case study). In total, they printed more than 4,000 advanced copies of the debut novel, as they knew that getting the book into a lot of readers’ hands was a key way to help make it a breakout hit.
Will I still be able to run print book giveaways?
If you love our print book giveaway program, don’t worry; it’s not going anywhere. Print book giveaways will remain free to list (though you are responsible for the costs of printing and shipping the books to the winners).
I’m an author and I want to run a Kindle book giveaway. What do I do?
For this initial beta, we are working exclusively with select publishing partners, but you’ll be able to list a Kindle ebook giveaway soon. We will open up Kindle ebook giveaways to all publishers and KDP authors with an ebook in the Amazon store in the near future. Stay tuned for more!
When will Kindle ebook giveaways be available outside the U.S.?
We’re starting off with the program in the U.S. Our goal is to make sure that we offer all of our features in other markets, but we do not have any timing on this.
My book isn’t published yet. Can I offer ebook ARCs?
You can run a giveaway for a book that has not yet been published yet. The only requirement is that the ARC must be in a Kindle ebook format and loaded into the Kindle store before you list your giveaway.
How are these giveaways different from Amazon Giveaways?
The two programs are completely separate. With Amazon Giveaways, you purchase each copy of whatever book you want to give away. With Kindle Ebook Giveaways, you pay a flat listing fee to give away up to 100 copies of your book. Additionally, Kindle Ebook Giveaways are available for pre-publication titles, while Amazon Giveaways are not.
Next: Six Lovely Lessons Learned at the Romantic Times Convention
You might also like: Five Tips for Running a Giveaway on Goodreads
Goodreads Authors can subscribe to the Monthly Author Newsletter by editing their account settings.
Comments Showing 251-300 of 323 (323 new)



I think the ONLY way I'm giving away books now is when I get something back. I'm going to suggest a refund for anyone who buys my books once they've left a review.

I think that's a good idea, if there is a way to do so without Amazon thinking you're paying for reviews.



Agree -- this should be a cashless exchange on the part of Goodreads since the value here is mutually beneficial.
Amazon should give authors free giveaway codes like iTunes does. Goodreads should allow iBooks giveaways using those codes with no fee.

I agree with everything you wrote, Jessica Mae. :)


You're right. I just recently did a giveaway on LibraryThing. I hope they translate into actual reviews though.


Just be aware that on LibraryThing, after entering details of all of my books, creating my profile/bio, adding lots of reviews (every one legitimate and with a link to prove it so), someone who was obviously jealous came along and deleted it all. It seems that ANY member there can destroy your reputation/entries simply by "flagging" the reviews as not being real, without any evidence on their part. There is no recourse for the actions these people may take against you. Wasted several hours and now removed myself from the site entirely. I would NOT recommend it. Absolutely not. Place is, seemingly, full of arseholes with superiority complexes. I tried to raise it with the people in charge, but they never responded, except to delete my account. Unreal.

Just be aware that on LibraryThing, after entering details of all of my books, creating my profile/bio, adding lots of reviews (every one legitimate and with a link to prove it so), someone who was obviously jealous came along and deleted it all. It seems that ANY member there can destroy your reputation/entries simply by "flagging" the reviews as not being real, without any evidence on their part. There is no recourse for the actions these people may take against you. Wasted several hours and now removed myself from the site entirely. I would NOT recommend it. Absolutely not. Place is, seemingly, full of arseholes with superiority complexes. I tried to raise it with the people in charge, but they never responded, except to delete my account. Unreal.


Thanks for asking me through it.






Kobo is the distributor that covers Canada most. I've been at the Minamata Converntion on Mercury meetings in Geneva all week and there were a lot of Canadian delegates who were excited and I hope they will read it.

Jim, Did you get answers to these questions of yours? I, too, would like to know if there is a cost for the ebooks outside the $119.


Amazon owns Goodreads? You'd think they'd task some programmers to make this site function better.

Why would they? They can't even sort their own site out. The search facility on Amazon is nothing short of rubbish. Put in a search for me, "David E. Gates" - something pretty specific you'd think, and none of my publications appear on the first page. They own Audible too, but they state on my book, "Access Denied" page, that there are "Other works by the same author" that are NOTHING to do with me! It's absolute garbage. They can't fix their own site so god knows how they can be expected to fix someone elses!
Any update on when this will be available to all US authors?

Why just Kindle? Though I guess this is a stupid question since this is Amazon's gig now. Of course, they cut out any other vendor.
Speaking of mega-Amazon, it should be FREE like the print program is. Or create a tiered approach. To giveaway say, 20 books is free. After this, it's $20 for each additional 20 books...something like this. We're on Goodreads for a reason! Most of us struggle to publish our books and still have day jobs! Don't punish your own authors with a program like this.

I've given away in excess of 300 short-stories via Smashwords (who make it really easy to make your book/publication available for free, unlike Amazon). I've three or four reviews across the 300 that have been downloaded.
People are generally lazy. Unless they've got something to complain about or want to troll, it's near impossible to get them to post a review. Considering Amazon was built on its book-selling platform initially, it treats its authors terribly. It rewards authors who are already selling millions with more rewards/money, yet does nothing to help the new authors - they even remove reviews if the person who left the review is "friends" with you on Facebook. They don't help at all.

While I may be a lone voice shouting in the wilderness, I think we would all help each other if we worked to limit the number of free books we put out there, and we should certainly think long and hard before paying $119 get maybe two people to read our books.


I completely agree.

Try putting it on Smashwords - you can make it free there for as long/short as you like. It's clear no-one from Goodreads (aka Amazon) is going to bother with this here.


r/Steve
PS. I guess the roll-out never happened. I won't do the "free" print book giveaways because of postage cost, so an ebook giveaway sounded like a good idea. Not going to happen, I guess, because even if it was operational, there's no way I'll pay $119. I can do a lot of online marketing for that kind of money!

I agree with you. But Amazon is tricky. Now, you can only get 35% of your copyright or you're force to loan your books for two weeks as soon as published. This means that you'll loose more than the 35% they remove from your sales (usually you get 70% of $$ paid by the buyers).
They're thieves, that's all. :(




The only thing you get for the $119 price tag is the honor of being listed on Goodreads for your giveaway. Nothing else is included. Everything else comes out of the authors pocket.
Exactly, Joshua.