Authors & Reviewers discussion
Amazon Features & More
>
To Keep on Amazon or Not To Keep...
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Alexa
(new)
Jul 11, 2016 06:33PM

reply
|
flag


Thanks for the advice!


But NONE of those people wrote a review and only one person rated the book (2 stars, yikes) and the rankings quickly tumbled making me doubt the value of giving it away.
The next quarter I ran a week long Kindle Countdown deal where I reduced the price (from $3.99) to 99 cents for 4 days and then $1.99 for 3 days. I got ZERO sales from that even though I promoted it with all the same websites that I used for the freebie announcement. The real irony is that I was just starting to get some good reviews (Reader's Favorite) and my full-price sales were picking up and the discount just stopped it dead in the water...
So, now that my KDP contract has expired, I've decided to put it on Smashwords and see if I can pick up a few sales on Apple, B&N, Kobo, etc.
I'll let you know how that goes...

In fact, Apple is starting to be a bigger payout than Amazon. It could happen this month for the first time.
The trick is that it takes a bit of time to get traction on the other marketplaces, but when you do, it works out well.
A benefit to the "other" marketplaces is that the competition there is much much lower than Amazon, so it's easier pickins. : )




Congratulations! And thank you for the comment! 🖐

Book 1: is in horror / dystopian categories and was priced at $4.99
Book 2: is in humour/satire and was priced at $1.99
The interesting thing was book 1 got no purchases but some KU reads. Book 2 got some purchases but no KU reads.
Either its about the genre with some genres having more KU subscribers because people tend to read a lot and the subscription pays off or its because KU readers are selecting books with higher list prices to read for free.
I think KU is a big problem in the launch period if you buy promotion or advertising for your book because the sales page for a KU book has a huge orange button selling KU subscriptions and a tiny text 'buy now' link for the book itself. If most of the people who see your external advertising don't have a KU subscription you are selling KU for Amazon rather than your book.

