UK Amazon Kindle Forum discussion
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Could it help sell more indies?
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Mind you, given that until this moment I'd never heard of them, I was left wondering how effective they were.
There again, they charge $20 per book submitted purely for admin and if the number of books with medallions is correct, and if they're right that 90% are rejected, they have so far taken $84,000 (Before advertising etc)


I think the high rejection rate is part of the appeal. It sorts the good from the not so good. If I'm in a supermarket looking for a bottle of wine, I might be tempted to buy one that has one an award over one that hasn't. Even if the wine awards business is a bit of a scam.
I dunno. I've entered one of my books into Indie BRAG to see what happens. It's a long process (the judging takes several months). I'll let you know how I get on.
Part of the problem in this business is getting noticed. You might have written the best book in the world with the best cover and the best blurb. But there are more than 32 million books on Amazon all competing for readers.

For those who do notice, everything lumped under one banner will be thought of as the same. Same quality in other words. One bad book will taint the rest in the reader's mind. The way round that is gatekeeping, which, because it means all submitted books must be read and approved, takes time and therefore costs money.
I hadn't heard of Indie BRAG either so how useful the whole idea is, I'm not sure.

Just stop and let that figure wash over you. Add to this the 160,000 books a month that Amazon releases.
And somewhere in that lot are the 'indies'
If every indie writer didn't publish for a year and instead concentrated on editing and polishing, I'm not sure the vast majority of readers would ever notice.
So obviously we have to do something to be noticed. What?
I don't suppose $20 is all that much but I'm both biased and cynical.
I'm biased because until you mentioned them, I'd never heard of them before and I'm cynical because I suspect whoever set it up will make money out of writing faster than the authors.
But I did look at some of the books, clicked through and looked at them on Amazon.com and .co.uk
Just the random selection I looked at had reasonable US rankings (between 200,000 and 600,000) but I suspect you really want to get your book onto the first page of your genre.
UK rankings were less sparkling, one hadn't apparently sold any books in the UK. My guess is that the site is better known in the US and I suppose it might be a way to break into the US market.
It's interesting. I suspect most of us have to accept that if we pay for advertising, what we're really paying for is a chance to have another go on the roulette wheel. You're almost certainly throwing the money away, but if you don't throw the money away you've not got that slim chance of winning

OK, $20 is worth the punt, it's not a fortune. But the it's likely better to reduce the cost of the book for a week, spend that $20 dollars on advertising (where readers do look) and hopefully gain some sales traction from word of mouth.


However, and I'm a little weary of discussing this openly, for obvious reasons, the traditional publishing industry holds sway over the market. It dictates trends and, in some respects, the popularity of a genre at any given time.
Obviously there is the financial aspect, i.e. the amount of revenue they can allocate for advertising and promotion etc, but if nobody cares who a book is published by, how can they hold such a sway on the market?

I don't know whether you need to be a registered company or anything to fill in the publisher box on the KDP doodah either.
In short, make your own publisher up.

I'm going to guess it is who they publish rather than the publisher's name - anyone who doesn't use an e-reader will probably only read traditional authors, as it's rare for an indie to get a paperback in shops like Waterstones. And even those of us who do use them have 'favourite' authors from pre e-reader days. You only have to read the Just Finished thread to see that there is still a lot of traditional authors being read - I'm on three forums that have a similar thread, and ours has the most indie books because of some of our members, one of the other forums has a lot of members who don't own an e-reader, so they only talk about paper/hard backs.

What I think happens is this ...
First a reader has to discover your book. That isn't going to happen if you are languishing at the plankton end of the Amazon food chain. Very few people wade down to the seventeenth page to find a book they want to read.
So your first job is to put your book in a reader's hand. That might be through word of mouth, free giveaways, advertising, competitions. They have to know that your book exists.
Then when they have your book in their hot sticky paws (or in front of their little beady eyes) you've got to persuade them to buy. That might be the cover, the blurb, the title, how many reviews it has, the first page, friend recommendations, whether they recognise the author, whether the book has won awards, the price.
All of these things help to tip the potential reader from "nah" into "okay then". I have heard marketing gurus say that most people don't buy something on the basis of a single piece of advertising. Instead it is about a constant drip feed of exposure.
That's why brands advertise on formula one cars. The advertising has nothing more than the brand name. It doesn't say anything about how good the product is. But that is not as important as increasing buyers' exposure to that brand and associating the brand with something aspirational and desirable.
So when we are pitching books, we need to have layer upon layer of brand recognition. A good cover. An enticing blurb. Good reviews. Awards. That all helps to build up an image of an author that you can trust.
It is very rare to find a single thing we can do to increase sales. Instead, I think it's about lots of little things, repeated and reinforced over time.
The name of the publisher may a long way down that list.

Old technology does have it's advantages :-)

It might be one fbthose questions I might never understand...

Let's assume you're a journalist got to provide stories to a local paper. You have 'local author' who might be a story.
Self Published on Kindle. Not a story. He could be good, he could be rubbish, but to find out he'd have to read it. He hasn't got time and even then could he tell if it was 'any good' and who cares whether he likes it anyway.
But local author with genuine publisher, different kettle of fish, someone has already checked them out, so you can run the story,secure in the fact you've not got an illiterate fruitcake on your hands.
Actually if they turn out to be an illiterate fruitcake you've still got a story, 'Local nutcase cons major publisher, read all about it' :-)
Just scale things up for national media and big six

The problem we have is that if you're not on the first couple of pages of the Amazon store, no one will bother to click through to find you.
With Big-5 publishers, it IS different, because they will get you into bookshops (somewhere that's nigh on impossible for indies). And that gives an immediate benefit because casual browsers will pass your book and see it on the shelf, even if they don't pick it up and buy it. That's a little piece of recognition that one day might pay off in "oh I've heard of this guy, I'll give it a try"
Of course, the trad publishers will only give you 6 weeks in the glorious sun of a back shelf spine out, before your books are unceremoniously yanked and pulped. But them's the breaks.

In fashion, people are more apt to purchase a product with a logo. I wonder if the same is true of publishing?