Authors Lounge discussion
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Poll: Amazon's new Author Select program?

Thank you for laying that out.



http://www.amazon.com/Rains-February-...
Don't miss out and HAPPY holidays everyone!
Leila x



Okay, what may be obvious to some, wasn't obvious to me when I went to upload my 2 e-books to be scheduled. I assumed, incorrectly, that if I clicked on both books, the counter at the upper right hand corner would allow for 10 days total. Not so.
You have to click on ONE book at a time, fill in your scheduled dates, then close that edit and then click on the next book and schedule it, then it tallies up to 5 days per book.
I sent an e-mail to KDP telling them that this entry form may be a bit confusing for this click-happy author.


Merry Christmas to all!


On a long term strategic level, since I also have a career in traditional publishing, I want Barnes & Noble to have a shot at making money off me, since if Barnes & Noble ever stopped stocking my books, the print aspect of my career would effectively be dead.
Finally, while I frequently take part in giveaways of a limited number of copies of both my print and ebooks, I'm not sure about the long term effects of making so much fiction available for free. I already know too many people who've gotten used to the idea of not having to pay for music. I worry that the presense of too many free books might, in the long run, drag down paid sales of all books.
That said, if I was an author just starting out who didn't already have at least some existing fan base, this program would be pretty hard to turn down.




I don't think that giveaways are a good way of promoting books, when we give our work away we devalue it. I am worried that indies are vulnerable. We are squeezed by Amazon and the big traditional publishers, and we damage ourselves when we spam, hold giveways if we are desperate, or publish sub standard, badly edited material.
If we indies want to establish ourselves as long term players in the market I think we need to get our act together. That might mean more formal collaboration within a trade body, or our own highly visible marketing activities, or something else. If you've read this far and think there might be something in what I am saying please take a look at the blog I wrote on this subject and let me have your views.


The KDP Select program is supposed to be exclusive, so it's against the rules to have your book avaliable at any other online source during the 90 days (minimum) of enrollment in KDP Select. For my first freebie, I posted numerous reminders on FB and received some excellent forum plugs, which netted me around 850 downloads. For my second freebie (the Christmas Day one) I let all my FB contacts know ahead of time, but didn't feel right about pushing it to them in a Christmas-Day post.
I suppose I'm overdue to start tweeting, but the prospect just sounds dreadful to me! As I get more books up and running in the new year, I'll put them out on Smashwords and all the other outlets.

I was very hesitant and read everything and everybody on the subject before deciding, but ultimately my feeling is "it can't hurt." I write YA books that really can't be fit into any genre (realistic fiction about social issues--with a big dash of humor!) and in addition to that they're wildly different from each other--not part of a series. So I am NEVER going to have a "fan" (cough, cough) base. I was getting very little traction on Smashwords, which distributes them to all the other places like B&N, iTunes, etc. I had nothing to lose and everything to gain, like lots of newbie, low-profile authors.
For me, it's exposure, hopefully a few positive reviews, and sales of my other two YA books, which I have kept out of the Select program so far.
It's really all a giant experiment, but I'm so far ahead of where I was a year ago...I'm having a blast. If you know any kids with new ereaders from Santa, here's another freebie for them:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B005NWF9SI
ISBN: 978-1-4658-1251-3
What can a 14-year-old girl do to protect animals? Valerie forms the Ahimsa Club, whose Pledge to Veg and Save the Strays campaigns stir conflict. Help comes from an unlikely source--ex Beatle Paul McCartney.

I tend to agree with you and would like to read your other comments on this subject, but the link you gave isn't working for me.
It must have been nice, in the old days of publishing, for authors to be protected from the marketing hoopla by the firewalls of agents, editors, and the marketing departments of their publishers.

It must have been nice, in the old days of publishing, for..."
The 'old days' of publishing? :-) The 'old days' are still around for anybody with the patience and tenacity to go after them.

I did reviews for IGMS for a couple of years, and would get a couple of dozen free books a month, of which I had the column space to review two. A lot of the small press books I reviewed were a result of authors handing me their books at cons. As wonderful as all the internet tools now available are, there's still something to be gained by engaging in face to face networking.

James, you're obviously right that for the past few decades most authors below the top tier have had to do the lion's share of their own promotion. The bigshots' pr folks have always pulled strings to get them in the NYTBR, buy ads, etc., and the rest have had to learn how to be pr people. One of my author friends wore herself out playing guest of honor at book clubs all over the Midwest to sell her book--talk about a hard slog.
And some of us stake our hopes on Amazon's free days!
Happy New Year!

So it may be true that publishers only manage the author-reader meetups for the big names, but they do have a vested interest in doing what they can on the back end to make sure the books they've invested money in sell.
In the REALLY old days, I suspect the self-promotion angle was handled by living in New York City, going to a lot of parties and writing articles and columns for popular magazines.

I have no desire to give away my book for free. My ebook is priced at $9.99. Over the Thanksgiving weekend, I ran a sale at $4.99. (Which means I earn exactly half the commission I do at full price, so I needed to double the books sold to make it worth my time.) I did sell more books, but didn't double.
What it did for me though was cause book sales to go down once I took the book off sale.
I had been running about #1500 in kindle rankings. I moved up to about #800 when it was half price, then once it went back to regular price, it dropped to about #3000. Since then it has worked it's way back up, finally to about #1500 again.
So I guess I learned that if someone wants to read my book, the lower price really doesn't matter. People spend $10 at the movies or for a fast food meal, so I don't think it's unreasonable.
I also want to make a living at this, so I just don't see the value in giving it away for free.
I'm also excited to be a part of this group!! It's great to read all your experiences, so I can make more informed choices!!

Absolutely. But, if you've cracked 1000 in the Kindle rankings, I'd consider you a bestseller. And, yeah, I doubt that a free promotion would make that much sense in your case.

I've had to take back my initial reservations about the KDP program after my initial two day test with a one e-book promotion gave me a 300% spike in sales for that e-book. Which means that it's a good deal after all.
Interesting, Jillian, that Hunger Games is avail. on KDP program but is ALSO available on B&N. I guess that does mean that the best sellers are getting this program...perhaps they're not getting any of that 500k split? Or wishful thinking on my part?
If anyone knows anything more, let us know.


So other books like Hunger Games can be offered, but they don't receive any of the 500k split?

Yes, that is correct. For books from major publishers, Amazon is actually purchasing the book from the publisher every time somebody borrows it, at whatever the standard price is. I think for minor publishers they're offering a lump sum; in any case, both kinds of non-self-published books are making money from the lending program in a different fashion.
My wife just published a detailed, researched article of performance results for DKPS. Check it out:
"KDP Select Program: an Overview of Indie Authors Results"
http://www.epubworldblog.com/?p=533
"KDP Select Program: an Overview of Indie Authors Results"
http://www.epubworldblog.com/?p=533

http://www.randyattwood.blogspot.com/
Nothing new to add, but one odd observation. I added a "Jewish" tag because a critical part of the plot does involve the Holocaust and in that subcategory reached No. 2 ranking. Sometimes my head spins when I think of the million or so new Kindles out there each week and how those folks find books.

Thanks for the link to your wife's post. I encourage everyone who is interested in this program to read it as she did a pretty comprehensive job of information-gathering and summarizing her results.
For indie authors without large platforms or who don't write in any distinctive and popular genres, it is so far mostly a positive.





The purchases were really high the first few days after the freebie, but are slowing down now. Don't know what caused the spike in purchases. (It sells for $1.99)
I'm wondering where you get the stats on your ranking? I'd like to check mine.


I e-mailed them immediately and got a response today which is still very confusing. They confirmed that yes, I sold 3202 e-books of A DEAD RED CADILLAC in December, and with 6 returns Net units sold is 3196. Units borrowed were 21 and not part of the sales.
OK then, why I asked, are they showing 791 for my sales report and 2,4015 for "Free Book"(borrows?).... were they "mixing" my sales into the borrows?
Then a light bulb went on over my head! If you will remember, they have this little caveat: Amazon will not pay royalties on books sold during the promo days. YES... no payment to us for books sold when we put up our promos. (I was right the first time on this). It's in your KDP FAQ and scroll down to almost the bottom.
This may be what's happening and I've asked them to confirm. And if so, that they should make up another column for sales to be deducted during the damn %$!#! promo days so that I don't dream of sales that aren't going to be paid.
I also told them I wouldn't be doing the rest of my promos as I thought it a rip-off for charging the authors for a FREE 5 days worth of promotion when they are GIVING away our e-books the other 85 days and they charge the Select members $79.00 a year for the privelage. I also unmarked the little box in the KDP program next to my books that says I want to automatically be renewed.
So, friends, there appears to be a glitch in the machine. I will report back to you when I confirm that this indeed is what's happening. AND, be sure to look at your own reports for December and compare to what Amazon says you're "selling."
Dad-nab-it!
Jillian wrote: "I just wanted to thank you all for your comments. I am self published. Doing about 97% of my sales through Amazon. I was pretty skeptical of the KDP program just because of the exclusivity portion ..."
Thanks for sharing that :0)
Thanks for sharing that :0)
Best wishes to everyone. Just decide what feels best for you. Enjoy the Journey :O)

I e-mailed them immediately ..."
I'm confused. If on promo days, your book was free, then how could any be sold? What am I missing here?

Also, I don't understand
' rip-off for charging the authors for a FREE 5 days worth of promotion when they are GIVING away our e-books the other 85 days and they charge the Select members $79.00 a year for the privelage.'
Are you confusing Amazon Prime and Kindle Direct Publishing Select? KDP costs nothing (or rather, a percentage of your sales), and KDP Select costs 'exclusivity', but not money.
Amazon Prime costs $79, and includes many, many different features for the subscribers.
A fraction of that Amazon Prime money is passed on to you via the KDP Select payment pool. Presumably you got somewhere in the vicinity (I think I read) of a dollar for each of the official borrows?
So I don't think there's any way to say they're 'charging' you for a free 5 days, unless you want to stretch to include the exclusivity contract for the entire program.
Basically: the FREE GIVEAWAY days are an optional bonus you don't have to take advantage of, and if you do, every Amazon customer can get your book for FREE and you get your royalty, which is a percentage of FREE, aka $0. The Amazon Select borrows are exclusive to Prime customers. You do get paid for the borrows from Amazon Prime members.

Let me get this straight. You are saying that on the days that your KDP select books are available for free, not only do you not earn royalties on your KDP select book that is free, but you don't earn royalties on ALL YOUR OTHER BOOKS? Even books not a part of KDP select?
Doc
Books mentioned in this topic
Sacred Sin (other topics)Lawman (other topics)
Two things stuck out:
1) You may not sell the books you chose to apply to this program for the duration of your contract which is 90 days. That means, not anywhere online.
2) They will send participating authors an e-mail before the 90 days are up. If you don't advise them of your wish to end the program you'll be automatically re-enrolled for another 90 days.
3) During your 90 day contract you are allowed to have 5 days of "free" advertising. You set that up through KDP dashboard under your pull down menu for your book.
I'm participating with my two in the Lalla Bains Series and A Dangerous Harbor.