THE Group for Authors! discussion
Publishing and Promoting
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Goodreads Giveaways - how to connect with applicants?
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http://www.writehacked.com/writing/go...

http://www.writehacked.com/writing/go......"
Thanks, Avia, That's awesome information -and your response time was awesome too! I'd always wondered what the point was about Goodreads Giveaways, when authors patently got nothing out of them This idea gives me at least a chance to experiment...

My experience so far with give-aways have been pretty good. I linked my give away with a free download of my novel and then coupled that with the give away. I asked those who collected the download to post a review either here or on Amazon and in doing so would qualify for the give away. So far so good. Love here what plans you came up with.

T

http://www.writehacked.com/writing/go......"
Great information, Aviva. Thank you for posting it.


I see the point, Mark, and many thanks for your reply. But ten books - posted - must have cost you around $100. You'd have to sell around 50 ebooks, subject to your pricing, to recover that cost. Would one good review, by itself, shift 50 ebooks? Do reviews ever shift books, all by themselves? Hm... I suspect that a lot of authors don't do the math. But I'll give a Giveaway a try, with just one book plus a lot of (ethical) followup. In the unlikely event it sells five books I've broken even :)

That would suit me fine because the first page of that free book would contain a link to my site where people could join my list to get a further free story. (My sole purpose in putting four novels at Amazon is to build my list. If 100 people read page one, ten will click my link and one will join my list. That's where the money is, not in the book sales.) But how could Goodreads handle that freebie offer? Is there any way a Goodreads Giveaway can provide a download link to everyone who enters, whether they win or not?