UK Amazon Kindle Forum discussion
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How to publicise an e-book?
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Taken part in various read+review thingies that some groups have on here, whereby I give out free copies in exchange for reviews.
Also uploaded them to torrent/pirate sites, and posted on the respective forums pointing people towards them.
I'm not rich, so please don't think I'm any kind of expert.

I want to know if anyone has any advice or experience in marketing e-books and if so would you be willing to share your fountain of knowledge with the group? Any info, experience or advic..."
Hi Erin!
Any Indie will tell you that writing, editing, proofing and publishing your book is the easy part!!! Selling it is the hard bit!!!
Some people enter their books into KDP Select. I have never attempted that strategy and have not really heard much to recommend it. Often, despite many downloads, 'sales' remain as good or as bad as before the book was free.
Actively taking part in forums such as this one is an excellent way for you and your book to remain visible. But be careful, people are not as interested in your book as you are (unfortunately!!!). They will soon get tired of you if your posts are always about your novel. Make a real effort to engage with readers on another level and they will respond favourably to you. Most importantly ALWAYS BE POLITE!!! Even if some idiot has just jumped down your throat for no reason (not a problem in this group but elsewhere… well it’s a jungle out there!!!). As the Author you have to take the moral high ground and fume WITHOUT TOUCHING YOUR KEYBORD!!! Remember; the internet NEVER forgets!!!
Have you tried contacting review blogs??? Most groups have a 'bloggers thread' where you can find reviewers who are interested in the genre you write. I know this is a really obvious thing to say, but be polite in your cover email. Make sure that the reviewer you are contacting is happy to review Indies and stick to their guidelines. If they say that they do not read Horror/ Y/A / Erotica etc. that means THEY DO NOT READ Horror/ Y/A / Erotica etc.
If you receive a review that is unfavourable DO NOT RESPOND!!! Unless you intend to be super duper conciliatory and thank them for their honest opinion. They bought your book; they are ALLOWED to hate it. If they are a reviewer you contacted, YOU ASKED THEM for their opinion. A review is a subjective opinion and cannot therefore be 'right' or 'wrong'. Bad reviews hurt and it sucks to get one but just remember; there are people out there on this planet right now who don't like chocolate. If something as universally yummy as Chocolate gets bad reviews then what hope do the rest of us have?!?!?
Not sure if this is of any help, but from one Indie to another: Go forth and conquer!!!
:-D

Which is why we love you, Peppermint P.!!!



I agree that the Kindleboards are a great place to hang out for information about promotion possibilities, but I have to admit there are times when the perspective of a few there annoys me and I swear never to go back...but then I do.
The best thing you can do, I think, is just to be yourself wherever you go. Relax, forget trying to sell your book for 99% of the time and just enjoy the company. If people like you, they'll look at your book/site/blog/FBPage out of interest. If you constantly push your book in front of their faces, they'll ignore it and you.
If you feel you must promote, there are definite places where you can promote and others where you definitely can't. Read rules very carefully wherever you go. Put yourself in the place of the reader and don't overdo it, even in those places where it's allowed.
Good luck!

I was finding myself always on forums and fb and not enough time writing.
I keep considering SW and Kobo, but tbh I am lazy and not sure I want the hassle of setting that all up for different formats and watching another sales report.

I have had a play with setting up my account on it this afternoon and have "liked" a couple of things, but tbh I haven't a clue what I'm doing. I can't find any friends and have no idea how to tell people what my profile page is.
I might just stick to FB and my website.

I'm not convinced that a good book sells itself - I've a fear that any book good/bad can languish unseen for decades without throwing loads of money at publicizing it (or a very lucky break).
I've tried the giving away free copies in exchange for reviews thing, but no-one ever got back to me (OMG - maybe the book is that bad people are too kind to comment?).
So you're not alone. But hope springs eternal..

I've tried to promote mine by engaging with people on social media and forums and the like - trouble is, I get distracted and often forget that I'm supposed to be plugging the book. My Twitter followers have almost no idea that I've published one...

There is usually a long wait time, a few months most, but you have to be patient in this business and be grateful to accept any review opportunity which comes your way. If it takes years to build up a fan base than so be it.
When searching bloggers, I tend to choose them not by the number of Google friends they have but the number of comments that they usually have on their posts. I had a review/interview with a blogger who had over a 1000 friends of GFC but zero comments when it came to her posts. While another, with less friends, had consistently up to a dozen or more comments. I could then interact with the people commenting and gain more exposure.
good luck!

Do NOT spam your book, but maybe ask for one or two beta readers for honest criticism



And Anthony, when you say go for forums for your genre, do you mean forums here on Goodreads and/or Amazon, or elsewhere? And sorry for being dense but can't think at the moment, but What does "accept post signatures" mean? Cheers to all! :)


Another thing I've tried recently that I think has been very helpful is participating in monthly blog hops with up to 200 other authors and bloggers. We band together and offer three grand prizes (usually an Amazon or Barnes & Noble gift card around $100, a Kindle Fire or B&N Tablet, and a swag pack of print books and such that the various participants have donated) and we each offer a prize on our own blog. The most successful blog hops I've been on are offered by Carrie Ann Ryan. Many of them are romance oriented, but not all. You can sign up for them here:
http://carrieannbloghops.blogspot.com/
Also, another tip for making the blog hops successful is to use RaffleCopter (http://www.Rafflecopter.com) to run your giveaway. You can give people various tasks to get more entries for your prize (such as joining your mailing list, following your blog, following you on Twitter, or liking you on Facebook), and that helps you keep in touch with them afterward. I've found after doing several of these hops that as people are exposed to my book (through various venues) several times, more of them are buying it. That rule that people need to see something three or more times before they'll investigate/buy it is true.
Oh and one more thing: I'm trying to be increasingly conscious of the various markets around the world. The UK is my second largest source of sales after the US, so I'm trying to remind myself to post UK-specific retailer links alongside my US ones whenever possible. If I recall correctly, the US has the highest concentration of ereaders right now, so you might want to remember to post the US and UK links when you promote. I see lots and lots of interesting books from folks in the UK, but I often have to do an extra search on Amazon US to find the book because all I have is a UK link. Not everyone will bother, or will realize that a book on Amazon UK is most likely also on Amazon US.
Another thing I'm going to experiment with (once the prequel novella to my series is finished) is to try a blog tour and also try to have more of a range of prices. I'm planning to price the novella at .99 permanently (and I might try KDP Select as well) to attract folks willing to try at that price and then have the rest of the novels in the series at prices ranging from 2.99 to 4.99.
I hope some of this helps, and thanks for sharing your tips. I'll have to spend more time on KindleBoards (and actually get my signature working!).




Having just checked. I've sold about 10 copies. Better than nothing, I guess.



Not that any of our lovely authors would ever do that.

Andrew, we give away ebooks to get known. This is our first time, and I'm not sure we'll do it again. But it did result is almost daily sales and borrows, and our other books are linked in the back. Also opened up some international traffic. :-)




I'm not conv..."
The only person who took a free print book off me never reviewed it. I've made it a policy never to send print books to reviewers from there on. I gave her a gentle reminder after about 3 months and she wrote me a lovely and very apologetic message saying that it would be the next book she read to review.
Nothing happened.
I asked politely one last time and when I didn't hear back I chalked it up to experience.
Like you, I fear she loathed it! ;-)

I firmly believe that word of mouth is the best seller and finding somewhere on the web that will expose your books to people who are not other authors. Take E L James - she got a huge following on a fanfiction site, so when she launched her books a whole bunch of people wanted to buy them, which they did, in a short space of time, which catapulted her up the rankings... I suspect that's what you have to do. Get your writing exposed somewhere that's not about writing, per se. Like a fan fiction site. So people get to like your writing and buy your books incidentally. Then the personal recommendations start and you're set.
Cheers
MTM


Well, I use a pseudonym as I have published my own personal diary. I have not told my friends or family about it. Consequently, I cannot promote my book's page via my main Facebook account or get people I know to 'like' it.
I have such a lowly number of 'likes' that I'm too ashamed to disclose it here. You'll have to click and find out ;-)


If you've published anything via Amazon KDP, I'd recommend www.kindleboards.com.


I write with a pseudonym as well and my private facebook page has no connection with my writing one. Some of my personal friends have 'liked' me but I have very little followers there and I think it's a bit of a waste of time. Don't know what to put there to make it interesting.
I will take a look at Kindleboards, thanks for the tip!
Mary, I have that problem on Twitter. I want to connect with READERS and now only WRITERS follow me. It's really nice, but I would like to conncet with readers, and readers that read what I write.
Oh well, I'll have to re-think this facebook page thing again.


Lance- some of the facebook sites are UK - UK fantasy and such. I am not sure if they review but they do let you promo your book in some and they are useful for contacts.
I want to know if anyone has any advice or experience in marketing e-books and if so would you be willing to share your fountain of knowledge with the group? Any info, experience or advice welcome...