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Is KDP Select Worth it?
I think it depends on the author and how many works they have / what kind of works they have. I've been toying with it for about a year and am finding ways to help make my profits grow. The things I do would not necessarily work for everyone. I have a lot of short stories to play with. Someone with one or two novels wouldn't be able to offer things free from time to time to help gain some attention, as an example.
So, that's the unhelpful answer - it can work for some, but probably won't work for everyone.
So, that's the unhelpful answer - it can work for some, but probably won't work for everyone.

My experience:
Over the past 3 years, I opted out of Select twice, for 6 months and 4 months at a time, to try other platforms. During those times, I sold very few copies--all other platforms combined produced less revenue in 6 months than I currently receive from 1 week of borrows in Select.
Besides, my Amazon sales dropped when I was out of Select (in addition to losing all my revenue from borrows). I am now back in Select and will stay there for a while.
I think if you already have a following, it pays to go with other platforms even though you may lose some revenue in the short term. For unknowns like myself, nothing beats the discoverability tools that Amazon offers, and it's worth paying the price of exclusivity.

This question has come up a few times and as Dwayne says, it's one that depends on many factors. Exclusivity is not for everyone, but for some it can be beneficial.
For me, it has more to do with research that I did initially on publishing. There are some companies that I will not deal with due to my own personal ethics. Others did not have a very good relationship with indie authors and required some kind of third party distributor to even get a book onto their site. I happen to also find some of these distributors to be predatory. Only Amazon had a model that I felt was both fair and very simple for any and everyone to use.
Now, everything above was based on my own personal research and ethical beliefs, but I will say that as someone who previously published through a more traditional means, chosing to stay exclusive to Amazon for my ebook distribution was a wise economical choice for me as well.
But again, that is just me. You may find that your core audience doesn't use the kindle. The only thing you can do is try each model. KDP Select exclusivity is just ninety days. If you don't see a benefit, you can always change your mind. You'll see this posted a lot on marketing questions, but it hold true: your milage may vary.
I find the promotion tools to be EXTREMELY effective at spreading my work and building a base. I tried other platforms and they were not getting me nearly as much as I could with using Amazon's promotional tools. And the market-share is just so much bigger with Amazon. If the other competitors had something to woo me over, I would, but right now, Amazon is the big player in town and their benefits are very useful.


My paperback, however, I will distribute widely through CreateSpace.



My experience:
Over the past 3 years, I opted out of Select twice, for 6 months and 4 months at a time, to try other platfo..."
Great answer, thank you Ken. I wondered the same thing. Unknowns may benefit from letting Amazon boost their books in the massive marketplace they already have, whereas people with a following don't need to rely as much on one bookseller for everything.

question for you, and the group: How many of you get sales via Smashwords?


I've been with Smashwords 1 year with two books and the sales are very low. I am thinking of returning to KDP exclusive.


When you return to KDP Select, don't you have to remove your books from the other retailers first. You become exclusive to KDP select again. What's the best way to remove your other books from SW, KOBO, B&N etc.?

Keep in mind you can still list your paperbacks on those other sites. My understanding is that paperback exclusivity is not required for KDP Select - that only applies to e-books.

Yes, you do have to remove the book from other sites. For me it was easy. I was on other sites only through SW so I started by opting out of the distribution first. I waited and checked regularly to see if the book was still posted on B&N, Kobo and ITunes. (B&N was the slowest to remove it.) Once they were all out, I unpublished on SW.
I know I could have gone directly with the unpublished but I had heard people saying it took time, up to three months sometimes. I figured it wouldn't hurt to keep it on SW until I was ready. Worked well for me. It only took about a week or so.


For KU, I think a lot has to do with the readers who enroll in the program and which genres are represented. As genres in the KU grow, some of us may see better results from being in Kindle Select later. I am hopeful.


It's actually five days per 90 day period. You don't have to use them all at once, though Countdowns do work that way.
And yes, a free book is a verified purchase.




Thanks!
Nancy

Nancy wrote: "Wow! That's crazy. Thanks for letting me know. More on this would be helpful."
I haven't had near the number Christina has. I'm fortunate to see even fifty go out when I have it free. But, I'm still happy with the results. Why? Because almost every time I offer something for free, I see a short burst in sales for a couple of days.
It seems to work differently for everyone. Some people are happy with their results, some are not.
I haven't had near the number Christina has. I'm fortunate to see even fifty go out when I have it free. But, I'm still happy with the results. Why? Because almost every time I offer something for free, I see a short burst in sales for a couple of days.
It seems to work differently for everyone. Some people are happy with their results, some are not.

I'm in Dwayne's camp - about 50 per day and each day yields different results. My experience is weekends are the worse days starting with Friday.



I hate iTunes for looking up books. I tried when I first listed books there and was unable to find anything interesting (let alone my own works) other than what they were pushing as top sellers.
It's one of the worst online shopping systems I've seen. Apple's supposed to be so awesome when it comes to user interface, but in this case, they're one enormous FAIL.

And I don't see any correlation between offering free books and direct sales (or page reads).
I don't get many sales at the other retailers either, but right now it seems better for me to have books available in as many places as possible than to go exclusive.
I'm not sure at this point if I'll put my new works on Select.






As long as you're not enrolled in Flipkart, you should be okay. They can take months; the other major SW distribution channels are usually done in a few days. However, some have sub-distributors that can take longer.
If you're not sure, just contact KDP Support and ask them to verify that your book is not available elsewhere. They're generally very helpful, especially if you're going back into Select.

Sam wrote: "Anthony wrote: "I sold very few books through non-amazon distributers"...
question for you, and the group: How many of you get sales via Smashwords? "
I took 3 months out and published on Smashwords, I sold 2 ebooks! Yes, only two, through Smashwords.
"When you return to KDP Select, don't you have to remove your books from the other retailers first. You become exclusive to KDP select again. What's the best way to remove your other books from SW, KOBO, B&N etc.?"
I simply unpublished them, and once the were no longer available, I signed up for select.
I don't like the Amazon only exclusivity, but it pays better and sells better.


Ana, you can't tell if someone read the whole book or not. We only see how many pages were read. We don't see how many people downloaded the book and started reading. For example, if you see 100 pages read, you don't know if one person read 100 pages, or four people read 25 pages, or ten people read 10 pages, or one person read 99 pages and one person read 1 page, etc... We don't see that level of detail, although I do wish we could see how many books were downloaded via KU.

http://www.thecreativepenn.com/2015/0...
As Indie authors know, KDP select offers some avenues for selling that many outlets don't. For instance, they have KOLL which no one else has. For entry in KDP select, they require that you give your ebook exclusively to them. In doing that, you must ignore Smashwords, Kobo, B&N and several others. What experiences have other authors had. Is it worth it to forego KDP select, just have your ebook in the regular KDP store and have access to all the other outlets? Thoughts, please?