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Archives for April 2020

7 Insights for Book Authors to Sell More Books

April 16, 2020 by Arun Leave a Comment

Nothing is more pathetic than working hard on your book and publishing it only to find out that no one is interested in it.

In this article, we will see 7 important mindset shifts to help you sell more and earn better from your writing.

1 Research Before You Write

If you want to sell books, then we need to understand from the very beginning that sales is directly proportional to the number of people who will be interested in whatever it is that you want to write.

Studying the market even before you write, and doing some research on keywords, surveying what people in your field really want – will all go a long way when you finish writing and start selling. In fact, these could pave the way to sell your books even before you start writing. KDP also has ‘pre-order’ sales options available to its authors.

This way we can distinctly divide the entire process into three parts:

1. research , 2. write, 3. promote

All these three steps are important and goes hand-in-hand to ensure your book sells more.

Tools such as Publisher Rocket helps in finding approximately how many people have bought similar titles in your genre, what is the typical downloads count per a given period, and more such useful metrics for you to decide.

Another treasure trove is the book reviews, ratings, and comments section for similar titles that others have written – you can easily find what your potential audience have loved and hated from their comments and then use that intel to enhance your writing exponentially.

If you are interested to learn more tactics, I highly recommend reading Pat Flynn’s ‘Will it fly‘ book – I will provide the link below so you can give it a shot.

Download a mind map version of this article for free.

2 Importance of platform awareness

Having different versions of the books you’ve written is great but if you are just starting out, focus only on your Kindle version.

More books are sold on Kindle than in print!

This way you can first focus on establishing a place for yourself in the world of writing. After you see some traction in your ebook sales, you can move on to publishing them in print editions.

Not just that, there are more avenues in the eBook world and Kindle is not the end – we have leanpub, Kobo, Google Play Books, Smashwords, iBooks and so on so you can cater to different types of people.

They are all people reading ebooks but the devices they carry in their hands are different and you are losing out on lot of money if you don’t tap into that diversity.

That’s why it’s all the more important to be platform aware and start focusing on the eBook market in your first month of selling eBooks before you exhaust all the options and then step into the print versions.

3 Understanding the technical side of ebooks

A simple shift in the mindset regarding the technologies we use to self-publish takes you really far in making the work you do to stand out from your competition.

An eBook is really just a web page, written in HTML. Learning some basics of HTML and CSS can really help in formatting the ebooks the way you want. If not nothing, consider using the services offered by professionals who charge very less in platforms like upwork or fiverr. They are experts in using HTML, CSS who can format your ebook the way you want with all the designs and formatting specifics.

4 Expect Less

Your first published book is no-doubt a bestseller in your family circles, but it is not going to be a super-hit out in the world from day one onwards.

There are exceptions and I will consider myself lucky if it happens to me. If you are just beginning to write and sell books as an author, then try writing something short but valuable for your target audience and learn all the technicalities involved in self-publishing your first book.

Publish more often applying the knowledge you’ve gained from the first book. Unlike olden days where people used typewriters to type their manuscript, and publishers who used big printing press machines, writing books need not take years with hand-held gadgets, cloud based apps, and self-publishing resources available for free these days.

Learn this business, forget the expectations, gain the experience and eventually you will ride on easily with increased revenue because this is all just science and the process works the same way for everyone.

5 Connecting with readers

Some authors just share their ideas in their books and leave it at that. The book stands in isolation without any action items for the readers, so they just move on after reading and you have lost a potential fan because there is no way to connect with you for them.

As an author, connecting to your readers is an important opportunity to ensure they also read your next book. CTAs or Call to action inside your books are vital to building a following for your works.

Turning that into a loyal following group depends on your consistency in engaging the audience with what they ask for. Here are some ideas that could bring your readers to know you better and get closer to you.

1. Introduction page – where you can tell more about yourself,

2. Contact page – Creating and linking to your website and other social media channels.

3. Offering a supplement to your current book and letting them sign up for your Newsletters or other free accompanying downloads called as Lead Magnets.

4. Creating a Facebook community and making it an exclusive access to your followers.

5. Doing an AMA or “Ask Me Anything” chat sessions on Twitter, Reddit, or Gitter (https://gitter.im)

6 Delivery Costs

Size of the eBook increases delivery costs from Amazon, thus leading to lesser royalties.

This is something that all of the authors who are self-publishing using Amazon to be aware of.

I created a dedicated video to address this issue and how you can resolve it. The main culprit is the images you use in the eBook and in this other video you’ll learn how to compress them effectively without losing the quality. Links are provided in the description below.

7 Content Seeding

The core principle here is repurposing the content you’ve already written. Almost every book you write can take another birth of its own in the form of a podcast, blog article, video, a slideshow, a course, a checklist (for non-fiction works), an infographic, or any other mini PDF that can be created out of the original work you wrote first.

No book should be left in isolation and must be reborn in one or many of these forms.

There are multiple benefits when this is done – these act as seeds of growth for your book, they increase the outreach for your brand, different kinds of people can take note of different varieties of value that you offer, grow your email list, provide further ideas and comments from the readers on these various platforms which can help in producing even another book on the same or related subject, and as we saw earlier, it can tremendously improve and increase the revenue sources for you based on the platforms you use to republish the content seeds.

Bonus tip:

For all those of you who are still reading, I have a bonus tip. Well it’s actually a no-brainer but not EVERYONE realizes it. So, I thought I will share it anyway.

8 Hyperlinked – Table of contents:

In case your books don’t have this, it’s time you edit and re upload your eBooks after creating table of contents – and if you already have the TOC in your eBooks then pat yourself on your back. This is because TOC section provides a great reader’s experience in eBooks. Some don’t use it and some misuse it by placing it at the end of their eBooks – this not only is a poor reading experience but also makes Amazon think that you are cheating its algorithm by letting the system think that the reader has fully read your book by reaching the end of the eBook. This is usually manipulated to tap into the KENP page read count related royalties. So, use the TOC within the starting sections only and use it to link to your main chapter and sub-chapter headings. Again, I have another video which talks about creating Table of Contents.

So, those were some of the pointers you might want to keep in mind in your writing journey. I hope this was useful and do let me know if you have any problems or questions on Amazon KDP below.

Cheers and good luck!

Filed Under: Blog Posts

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