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Running an ad on Goodreads
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K.
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Jul 23, 2015 06:17PM

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What were you looking at? I paused the ad with no targeting and put together a few other ads. Some targeted at genres, others targeted at authors.


What's interesting is that you do get Views w/o paying anything so to me there is no reason not to try an ad.





Pls keep us updated about your google campaign. If I were to choose where to advertise, I'd go with google probably. Hope it works much better for you than Gr ads. Which words do you use then?

Google keywords - stuff like cyber crime, identity theft, Target breach, data breach, information breach, data security, security breach, and a bunch of others like that.
"Cyber crime" has 1182 impressions and 9 clicks so far. "Identity theft" has 778 impressions and 8 clicks. The clicks all go to my ad landing page.
When I go to Google Analytics looking at the past week, 7/21 through today, 7/28, I see 17 page views for my ad landing page and 6 page views for my Buy page. Just because somebody clicked on that Buy page doesn't mean they actually bought the book - but at least they looked.
Not a runaway viral hit, but more than before.


Ya know.... I was going to put in some other Adwords ads targeted at the Tom Clancy and Vince Flynn audience. Now I don't remember if I ever did that - thanks for the reminder.



I was at a Lenovo Partner conference back in April and found out Robert Herjavec (Shark Tank TV show) was speaking. So I finagled a way to get a book in his hands. It worked - I was able to get a copy of the book to him - but it was a waste of time and a book. I'm not chasing any more celebrities like that.


Maybe you can explain the benefit of giveaway. I'm thinking aloud: Few hundred people enroll for a giveaway. They wait for the draw and don't buy a book in hope to win. Then there are draw results - bingo few people win a free book, read it, maybe even write a review. Now, what happens to few hundred that didn't win: do some of them actually buy the book or just wait to win some other free book on another g/a? And more general question: do TBRs translate to sales at any noticeable rate?
Thanks in advance,
Nik

The good thing about giveaways is that you get some exposure, on the first and last day. That may help in the long run.

I'm not opposed to give books for free and I do so with pleasure, but in the long run, I think all those giveaways probably ruin the market, as the readers get more and more accustomed to free books offered on too many occasions. 2-4 dollars for a book that many charge is almost a giveaway for all I know

You are right, the TBRs that accumulate thru the giveaway don't really mean that much. The book's name and author get some exposure, but does that translate into sales? There's no real way to tell what % of your sales come from a giveaway promotion, but my guess is not much. I was just saying that I think you get a better bang for your buck with giveaways than click through GR ads.
For me it's kind of the same thing with free downloads, it takes no commitment on the part of the reader to download a free book. So when someone says "I've had 2000 free downloads this week", I wonder how many of those readers would actually read the book over the next 3-6 months, less than 5%? Does it just sit there in the pile of other "free" books that maybe someday they'll get to? I see the biggest benefit of free downloads as pushing your book up the Amazon best seller charts in the Top 100 free for your genre(s) that might lead to some sales later on.
I have just posted a new blog to my web site on Sales, Marketing, and Promotion called "Dead Calm" that you may be interested in: http://www.mauricegmiller.com/#!blog/... . I will be posting same to my blog here on GR in the next few days.
Best of luck to everyone - Maurice

Great article. Best line: "It can be quite difficult for newly published authors,..."
You are right much better word. I will update that on the post as I have to make a few changes. I noticed some excruciatingly bad syntax. Haha!!
Thanks guys for checking it out.

First they ignore you.
Then they laugh at you.
Then they fight you.
Then you win.