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Well The 99 Cent Book Craze is Over!
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I'm glad the craze is over. I think it devalues books when people are practically giving them away. I don't expect to pay less than the price of a cup of coffee for good literature. I think the best way for a self-pubbed author to get noticed is to produce a good product in the first place. I think the "price it cheap to get noticed" model encouraged way too many inexperienced first-timers. The editing process can serve as something of a filter between the writers, and what I've come to refer to as the uploaders. I wish more self-pubs would go through professional publishing at least once, and not jump out there with their first book. There is much to be learned from going through the professional process at least one time.



Just this morning I read an email in the RWA selfpublishing forum where an author said her book became number one after she priced it at 99 cents and her backlist books started selling well as a result of the additional exposure. Sites that advertise low cost Kindle and Nook books have a waiting list of authors seeking to advertise their low cost books.
I've had good luck with 99 cents books that I've read, but I tend to be kind of picky because I only read a couple of books per month. Even at 99 cents, I'll only download books that have been recommended, I know the author or I'm familiar with their writing, or the reviews are stellar.
BTW, when I self-published The Temptation of a Good Man, I released it at 99 cents. Most authors will price their backlist books at 99 cents, but I wanted my regular readers who purchase my books to get the benefit of the low price instead of paying the regular price and then seeing it at a lower price later on. I think it helped to generate a little buzz around the book, too. After a couple of weeks, I bumped it up to the regular price of $2.99.
I'll probably do it again with another new release some time next year, but I may leave it at 99 cents even longer.

Either they will do the work to actually produce a BOOK, or they will stop uploading unedited crap. Either way, the reader benefits. As I've said before, it's the Wild Wild West out there. We've gone from having a very arduous filter in publishing to none at all. The only thing that will determine whether a writer sells is the market. And people will not buy unedited crap even if you give it away cheaply.

From writing groups I've been reading posts on, self-published authors themselves, blog posts, and articles, that's where I am seeing this. Maybe we're looking in different corners of the industry. Not sure but I've seen many blogs and articles about readers and authors turning against the 99 cent books.
Even on the Kindle boards the authors are talking about how they don't want to price their books so low anymore because it's given people the wrong impression. Also on various message boards, readers who once supported the 99 cent books have turned on them.
But there are tons of self-published authors who are also turning against the price. So no in my opinion it is definitely not the hot thing anymore.
If you are with a PUBLISHER and have a 99 cent book, that might be selling fine. But when it comes to SP books, a lot of readers have said they have been burned too many times. There are some SP authors who have released good, quality books at that price but unfortunately most people think they can just throw up anything and expect people to buy it.
Most self-published authors are now pricing their books at 2.99 and up these days. Many themselves don't wanna be associated with the stigma of the 99 cent ebook and it's the ones who threw things up there that are to blame and ruined readers against the other writers who worked hard.
I won't say it's not still working for SOME, but it's not working for the majority of SP authors anymore because they are complaining about it and pricing their books higher because it's no longer a guarantee that 99 cents will sell and that's what a lot of folks relied on.
Once again I am NOT speaking of folks with publishers, who have a fan base or who are doing backlists. I am speaking of brand new, never-been-published-before SP authors who are busting in NOW at this moment. It's not as easy to just put up a 99 cent ebook and get sales like it might have been at one time.

But I respect it if you don't care about covers. *shrugging* But covers are VERY important for any author or book. A bad one can make people not even give the book a chance.

But with the meteoric rise of self pubbing and the more and more noticeable lack of quality control in some areas, I believe that the perception of a .99 cent book has slowly become more negative than positive. Basically, the idea goes, you are getting a book that is worth .99 cent.
While some people philosophically won't care if they ultimately end up with something that is almost illegible or only 5,000 words, (after all it only cost less than a buck) those types of products can become indelibly identified with the .99 cent price point in some people's minds so that anything offered at the price becomes suspect and tainted by association. The only books immune to that would be traditionally pubbed back-list books that have been converted to e-book and are being offered at a special price.

This month I put everything on sale for holiday shopping. On January 1st, with the release of my new novel, they all go back to $2.99 with only my last release remaining at 99 cents.
Chicki Brown



I've gotten so burned on paying 2.99 or 3.99 for an e-book with 7,000 or 8,000 words that from now on, I won't buy an ebook unless a) the book has also been published in dead-tree format so I can see the pagination or b) I know the word count.
Consider, the average Harlequin Presents is @55,000 words and you can get them from anywhere from 2.70 to 3.50. A mass market pb is @ 70,000 words. I agree, I think Amazon should list at least a word count. AllRomanceebooks includes a word count on their site so that is nice.

That being the case I don't buy .99 books anymore, so yeah I can see why the trend might die or be dying. These are the early days yet, and presumably the uploaders will be left on the wayside, at least I hope so.


http://blog.nathanbransford.com/2011/...

I remember reading about an experiment once where they took a few identical designer dresses, took the name brand off and put them in a high-end dept. store. On one dress carrel they kept the regular retail price something like $400.00 and on an adjoining dress carrell they marked the dresses as $49.99.
Even though women looked at the identical dresses on each carrell, more often than not the women ended up picking the higher price dress. When asked they said it was of better quality, even though the dresses were identical is construction, fabric etc.


As for low overhead, I don't know about that, I guess it depends on what you choose to invest in. I agree that promo and such is free, but certainly editing and cover art is not, at least not for most of us. And if you're not investing in the quality of your product regardless of how many books you sell eventually it will turn around and bite you in the butt.
I agree that the old rules don't apply anymore, but the basics of good writing will never go away. People will initially be very excited about getting cheap books, but just like anything else the novelty will wear off and people will realize that ultimately you get what you pay for. I think it's unfortunate that what could've been a good gimmick to stir up interest has ultimately been ruined by those who choose to behave in such an unprofessional manner. Bottom line, I don't care what the price is, if I'm paying my money I expect a PROFESSIONAL product. Otherwise just give it away for free.

And don't get me wrong, I'm sure there are plenty of people out there who don't care as long as they can get a book cheaply. Certainly I've read too many 5-star reviews of books that were DNF for me to believe otherwise. It might never balance out, but like I said there is definitely a growing backlash.


The original publisher price was $4.99 I priced it first $3.99 (in July when I self pubbed it)then dropped it over the months by a dollar then another but still not many sales. I made it 99 cents a couple weeks ago. Still not much than a handful.
I'm wishing I'd have either kept it in print or tried a different pub.




I definitely agree with the notion that if you price a book really low and grab the readers attention, pricing your following novels at more reasonable prices can be a good strategy. Eliminating that price point altogether seems kinda silly when certain authors have had extraordinary success with that marketing strategy.

Well I just noticed today, that on Kindle books AZ is now giving an approximate page count. So that is a great step forward and it leaves out some of the guesswork. They must've listened to one of my whiny emails. LOL.


We'll see what kind of results that brings.




That was one thing I was going to ask. I noticed that not many of the interracial books turn up free on Amazon Kindle. I totally get that you guys need to make money on sales, but it's a great way to increase your readership without compromising quality. I mean I see some really awesome books come up free, and I check almost every day now. Sucker for a book bargain that I am.
As for the 99 cent question, I have no expectations that a book is going to be crappy just because it's 99 cents. I have had some good luck with indie/newbie authors in the eformat, and I can't say that quality has been less just because some of them are cheaper. I've shelled out $10 bucks for a few IR books and definitely wanted my money back. I must also add that I get very hesitant to buy a new author who prices an ebook for more than $5.00. It's too much, IMO. I believe that for $10 or more I should have a real book in my hand. That's just my opinion as an avid book buyer of both ebooks and paper books.
So if you want to price your books for 99 cents, I don't judge you for it.
As for the 99 cent question, I have no expectations that a book is going to be crappy just because it's 99 cents. I have had some good luck with indie/newbie authors in the eformat, and I can't say that quality has been less just because some of them are cheaper. I've shelled out $10 bucks for a few IR books and definitely wanted my money back. I must also add that I get very hesitant to buy a new author who prices an ebook for more than $5.00. It's too much, IMO. I believe that for $10 or more I should have a real book in my hand. That's just my opinion as an avid book buyer of both ebooks and paper books.
So if you want to price your books for 99 cents, I don't judge you for it.


With that said, I think the price point should take length into consideration. My book is over 500 pages so it isn't going to be $0.99, let alone $2.99. I paid a lot for my cover and for editing. I put a lot of time and money into it, and have started investing in the next book. It will be more like $4.99, which I think is a fair price for a large novel and the print will be around $15, which is standard for 500+ page novel. However, because I'm self-published I'm not against offering sales and incentives to attract new readers. Say like a 99 cent day or something like that.
Chaeya

LD, I have one interracial title, but if I do offer a title for free, it won't be that one. I think those books have limited appeal, and I'm looking to increase my readership.
Chaeya, I used length to determine cost of my books as well, unless they're eBook versions of backlist titles, which I'll continue to price at $2.99. I've seen other authors ask for $4.99 and $5.99, but I don't have the clout they do.


To free or not to free? That is the question, LOL!

Bettye, my book is on KDP Select and honestly, other than its hopefully overall quality, I think that's why it's done way better than I expected it to so far. There are very few IR authors on KDP Select, since many of the bigger names are with e-pubs and don't have control of their work -- I'm just assuming this, I could be totally wrong as to why there's a dearth of IR in KDP Select. However, Prime users seem to be seeking them out, so it's been great exposure. I'm getting a lot of borrows this month, though, so I'm anxious to see what that pay out looks like in February/March.
I only have one book out, so I see no reason to offer OWNER for free. But I'm toying around with doing so when I release my next book in March. If people like OWNER hopefully they'll pay for the next book. So I guess I'm leaning toward "to free" :)

Since I have a new release, I decided to put an earlier book on KDP Select just to see what happened. I used one of my five free advertising days on Friday, and the results were unbelievable!
On Friday from 6 AM until Midnight, 10,300+ people downloaded my free book. I would never have been able to reach that many readers in one day. Since Saturday morning, I've had 115 paid sales of all my titles.
Once you put out a second book, it's worth trying.

I think even if the payout isn't great, the additional exposure may be worth it to use the program as a form of marketing.
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Least it looks like that everywhere I am looking. It seemed to fizzle quickly and a lot knew it would. Once millions start jumping on the bandwagon something is bound to lose its magic. The 99 cent price might have helped some authors get noticed but it's hindering authors now to the point where you can't hardly find an author who will price their book 99 cents these days. It's like the kiss of death and authors, like readers are pushing away from the price fast.
Looks like the new trend is 2.99 but I don't think it is gonna catch on like the 99 cent one did, especially where readers are concerned.
I find there are two kinds of people when it comes to this. People that flocked to 99 cent ebooks and people who ran from them. Some felt the price meant the book wasn't of quality. That wasn't always true but the bad apples spoiled the rest in the bunch.
So did you guys read 99 cent books? Did the price make you wanna give the author a chance or turn you off from trying the book?
I just wonder what will happen now since so many new authors relied on this price to get noticed. Do you think self-published authors especially will have a tough time competing with publishers now that they don't have the 99 cent angle?
I think it will hurt self-published authors because there are a lot of epublishers who release books for 2.99 so now SP authors will be competing with those books and not just other self-published titles.
What do you guys think? It's amazing to see how fast things in the industry change from day to day.
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