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Unlocking Secret Amazon Categories!
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Sep 26, 2016 11:43AM
OMG this thread is amazing!! *scurries over to KDP to futz with keywords* You guys are awesome.
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Justin wrote: "I'm not sure if I mentioned this already but after Christina told me how to use keywords since horror doesn't have a category listed I found that if you type your genre in search and then look to t..."
Thanks for the tip! I'll try this with romance too since the ones listed don't really encompass my... particular... romantic... er... idiom. haha
Thanks for the tip! I'll try this with romance too since the ones listed don't really encompass my... particular... romantic... er... idiom. haha
This is awesome! I'm redoing the keywords for my published book and the one I'm writing now....

Not specifically, no. There's no option to enter different keyword or..."
I get what you mean. It's like looking at categories on the left hand side. Some might be useful and in this case different categories are used in different territories. Thanks K.B!

So Thomas, how do you change category keywords? I couldn't seem to find the way to do that. It's been a while since I listed a book on Amazon. Short term memory has failed me.

Anything outside of the categories they offer you is gotten into by using keywords. You have to search through the list to find what will get you where you want to go.



Its different and a bit random.
I have 5 books with the same keyword and not all of them are in that unlocked category.
I also have 2 books with identical keywords and they are not in the same places in all countries.
But... it cant hurt to try!
I have 5 books with the same keyword and not all of them are in that unlocked category.
I also have 2 books with identical keywords and they are not in the same places in all countries.
But... it cant hurt to try!

Do I need to contact ..."
I have a book in the short reads and it seems to have been popped in there automatically. You may be in there already, but it wouldn't hurt to emai amazon.

If it's not appearing after adding the keywords, contact Amazon. They will add you to a more specific category. The automatic update will only work for two additional subgenres.





Erica;-)

Thanks for the advice!

Kindle Store > Kindle eBooks > Teen & Young Adult > Science Fiction & Fantasy > Fantasy > Paranormal & Urban

New to the site, so hopefully this is right. interesting reading. So much I don't know


I think I should target poetry ans use keywords related to that but it's hard. Any thoughts?

Rohvannyn wrote: "This thread has been amazing so far. I apologize if this is a really obvious question, too. How is everyone seeing their ranking? I found the categories on the book page, but not the ranking within..."
I find mine in author central. Go in there, and look at the sales dashboard. It goes up to two years back, and shows your highest ranking on any given day. You can also find it on the book page, underneath the publisher details.
Justin wrote: "I need help finding keywords to use for my book Like A Box of Chocolates. As I said before it's listed under "Mashups" which is the most random and odd keywords I've seen yet. The book is a book of..."
I myself would just stick with poetry related themes, and forget the other genres. But that's just me.
I find mine in author central. Go in there, and look at the sales dashboard. It goes up to two years back, and shows your highest ranking on any given day. You can also find it on the book page, underneath the publisher details.
Justin wrote: "I need help finding keywords to use for my book Like A Box of Chocolates. As I said before it's listed under "Mashups" which is the most random and odd keywords I've seen yet. The book is a book of..."
I myself would just stick with poetry related themes, and forget the other genres. But that's just me.


Trying this but I have two questions. Is it okay to use an author/poet's name as a keyword as a way to show your writing is like there's? I'm guessing it's not a good idea but I thought I'd ask. Also I'm looking to stick to keywords for poetry and Amazon even says not to use the same words because it covers a wide genre(for example Crime, Thriller would not be needed if I already have Crime Thriller) but seeing that there's certain words I have to put in front of poetry to show that it's poetry don't I need to keep using poetry? What I mean is, say I want to use "Speculative" I'd have to put poetry after it I can't simply put speculative but who knows what would come up.
Justin,
I found this on Amazon for you.
Do NOT include the following in keywords
- Information covered elsewhere in your book's metadata—title, contributor(s)
- Subjective claims about quality (e.g. "best")
- Statements that are only temporarily true ("new," "on sale," "available now")
- Information common to most items in the category ("book")
- Common misspellings
- Variants of spacing, punctuation, capitalization, and pluralization (both "80GB" and "80 GB", "computer" and "computers", etc.). The only exception is for words translated in more than one way, like "Mao Zedong" and "Mao Tse-tung," or "Hanukkah" and "Chanukah."
- Anything misrepresentative, such as the name of an author that is not associated with your book. This type of information can create a confusing customer experience and Kindle Direct Publishing has a zero tolerance policy for metadata that is meant to advertise, promote, or mislead.
- Quotation marks in search terms: Single words work better than phrases—and specific words work better than general words. If you enter "complex suspenseful whodunit," only people who type all of those words will find your book. You'll get better results if you enter this: complex suspenseful whodunit. Customers can search on any of those words and find your book.
- Amazon program names, such as "Kindle Unlimited" or "KDP Select"
Note: This list is not exhaustive and all keywords must comply with our Terms and Conditions.
I found this on Amazon for you.
Do NOT include the following in keywords
- Information covered elsewhere in your book's metadata—title, contributor(s)
- Subjective claims about quality (e.g. "best")
- Statements that are only temporarily true ("new," "on sale," "available now")
- Information common to most items in the category ("book")
- Common misspellings
- Variants of spacing, punctuation, capitalization, and pluralization (both "80GB" and "80 GB", "computer" and "computers", etc.). The only exception is for words translated in more than one way, like "Mao Zedong" and "Mao Tse-tung," or "Hanukkah" and "Chanukah."
- Anything misrepresentative, such as the name of an author that is not associated with your book. This type of information can create a confusing customer experience and Kindle Direct Publishing has a zero tolerance policy for metadata that is meant to advertise, promote, or mislead.
- Quotation marks in search terms: Single words work better than phrases—and specific words work better than general words. If you enter "complex suspenseful whodunit," only people who type all of those words will find your book. You'll get better results if you enter this: complex suspenseful whodunit. Customers can search on any of those words and find your book.
- Amazon program names, such as "Kindle Unlimited" or "KDP Select"
Note: This list is not exhaustive and all keywords must comply with our Terms and Conditions.

— Amazon places “Short Reads” automatically. If you’re under 100 pages (by their count), you’ll have one category path pointing there.
— Your keyword character max is 400 (with spaces). I did 394, and it went through fine.
— I did not use commas, just a single string of relevant words, no repeats.
— And my first keyword was the “secret” one C.B. alerted us to.
Thanks for the topic, C.B.!

Also consider adding your books genre to the title and subtitle. It helps when people search for books and helps yours come up.

I found this on Amazon for you.
Do NOT include the following in keywords
- Information covered elsewhere in your book's metadata—title, contributor(s)
- Subjective claims about quality (e..."
Do you think the word 'debut' shouldn't be used? I am publishing my first book soon.


I agree. I just "debuted," but I certainly would not have put "debut" as one of my keywords. Has a negative connotation (to me).
BTW, here's the monster (literally) KBoards thread on keywords for Amazon (27 pages of comments!):
http://www.kboards.com/index.php/topi...

Yeah, it took me over a week to read through it. But see the very end because Amazon is rolling out new input boxes for keywords. They've gone from a single box (400 characters max) to 7 boxes of 50 chrctrs max. Changes the strategy a bit in terms of "keyword stuffing," as some call it.


Hi Pam. Yeah, "stuffing" has a negative connotation, but it's really just a way to think carefully about your keywords. Mine have worked well.
Thank you! This is exactly what I've been looking for and is a huge help!
