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Rollin' in the Digital Dough: Make the Most of Your Ebook

July 5, 2011

 

Now that you’ve successfully converted your manuscript into an ebook, it’s time to start selling your hard work. Making money from your ebook all starts with a good blog. Ideally, you’ll have been blogging like a madman for the past year or longer, gradually gathering a strong base of readers who share your interests and interact with you on a daily basis. Sound about right? (If not, check out these links on ProBlogger and ViperChill on developing a popular blog.)

 

Once you have a group of people following your free content, you have a built-in audience for your words with a price tag.

 

Pre-pub hype

Begin by doing one of the things you do best as a blogger: talk about yourself. Create hype on your blog by posting about your ebook in advance of its publication. Ask your readers to contribute ideas and feedback; if your audience feels like they had a say in what went into your book, they’ll be more likely to pay for it when it comes out. Continue mentioning it before its publication to create a sense of anticipation. Your excitement will be contagious and your readers will feel like they’re a part of the process.

 

Landing page

While readying your ebook for its launch, pay special attention to the creation of your landing page. Give your ebook its own exclusive URL; this adds credibility and authority to your ebook. Write great copy for the page once you have it set up. A catchy slogan at the top will be effective, as will a well-written description and “About the Author” page. Try to avoid sounding too pushy or salesman-like in these areas.

 

The design of your landing page should complement your ebook; be sure that you have a great cover and promotional images. Just because your book may not make it into the physical world doesn’t mean you should skimp on design.

 

Any extras you can fit onto the page will make the site more dynamic. Sarah Mae, author of How to Market and Sell Your eBook, recommends a video of you talking about your ebook—but try to keep it under two minutes!

 

Don’t forget to include some testimonials from well-known bloggers and experts, and be sure that the all-important “Buy” link is easy to find.

 

Online interaction

Now is the time to harness your online community. The key to selling a lot of ebooks is getting high-traffic sites to link to your blog. Start by identifying your target audience; after all, you don’t want to bother commenting on a juggling blog if your book is about real estate. Write down who you imagine your audience to be and research those communities online.

 

Once you find the relevant online forums and blogs that will help you develop your platform, participate in them. Offer suggestions, advice, and comments; remember to make your username the same as your blog name so that people know how to identify you. Keep in mind, though, that no one likes a spammer. Readers should trust you and know you as someone in their loop. Start mentioning other bloggers’ sites on your blog and they will eventually mention yours as well.

 

Volunteer to be a guest on a podcast. Write articles for free. Start contributing to sites like AllExperts and eHow. If readers know you as an expert, they will not only want to read your blog; they will want to buy your book.

 

Keep it cheap

All of us consumers know what it’s like to bypass an ebook simply because of its $11.99 price tag, even when you’re dying to read it. People just aren’t willing to pay a lot for digital content. Use this to your advantage.

 

Start by giving away sample chapters, both before your publication date on your blog and post-publication on your landing page. This will not only prove to readers that what you have to say is worth paying for; it will also create a buzz around your launch. You should consider coordinating a giveaway with your publication date. To celebrate, give away gift certificates, prizes, and your book. For example, if you are an attorney, you could give away a free hour-long legal advice session in addition to your ebook.

 

Check out Carolyn McCray’s “Anatomy of a Successful Ebook Giveaway” article, in which she breaks down the measurable impact of giving away your book. For instance: If you are planning on giving away a hundred free ebooks on six different blogs, you can expect in return ten backlist sales; seventy-five email addresses you can add to your newsletter; five reviews of your book; and three long-term contacts. Not too shabby, right?

 

McCray also advises taking some time to develop your “you’ve won” email. Include a coupon for a major discount on another one of your titles to get readers buying. Also ask them to sign up for your newsletter, offering the chance to win a gift card to the first hundred to do so.

 

Pricing your ebook strategically will ultimately bring in more money than demanding a hefty price will. Keep your asking price under $9.99; $5 is even better.

 

Stay involved

Finally, don’t relegate ebook marketing to the bottom of your to-do list after the initial few months. Make sure you remain engaged in relevant online communities and be sure to keep up with your posting. Readers should be able to depend on you to be a regular poster, regardless of whether you’re prepping to release your book or not. Maintaining a regular readership will help to continuously sell your ebook and will also open up the opportunity for future publications—two things we’re comfortable assuming you want.

 

 

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Kiara Loehr

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Lola Gayle

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Book Technology: The Best of 2007

January 4, 2008

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2007 was fun, wasn't it? Between Judith Regan, O.J. Simpson, Amazon's Kindle, the AMS bankruptcy, and James Frey vs. Oprah redux, there was plenty of shock, titillation, and Schadenfreude to go around. (We're pointedly excluding a certain boy wizard. Months later, we're still fatigued.) But bigger than any one of these stories was the industry's continued march into the brave new world of technology.

And yeah, yeah, years in review are so rampant come January, but 2007 wasn't just any year. It saw the digital world and the book world become slightly less uncomfortable bedfellows. Shelfari, LibraryThing, and GoodReads brought social networking to book lovers, e-books continued their long and arduous journey to popular consumption, and publishing in general proved itself more savvy online. That's not to say the more disturbing trends didn't continue---independent bookstores dropped like flies (although MySpace came to the rescue in a few instances) and the battle to keep book review sections in newspapers raged on as literary bloggers multiplied. Before moving into exciting, uncharted 2008 (ready for 979 ISBN prefixes?), the Big Bad Book Blog presents a brief overview of some of the more interesting developments of 2007.

Winter

  • Wowio.com, an ad-supported site that offers free e-books, officially launches when it strikes a deal for one hundred of Oxford University Press's titles.
  • The Last Messages, an epistolary novel for the 21st century, is published in Helsinki. It consists entirely of text messages.
  • Amazon invests in Shelfari, giving the online bookshelf social site a huge boost.
  • HarperCollins and Random House launch competing widgets, allowing readers to browse inside their titles from blogs and other sites. Random House now has over 600,000 widgets on 2,000 sites, according to Publishing Trends.
  • Microsoft differentiates Live Book Search, its online book search program, from Google Book Search. What's the difference? We respect copyrights, Microsoft says.

Spring

Summer

  • Roberto Bernocco releases Compagni di Viaggo, a 384-page novel the Italian author wrote on his cell phone.
  • First annual O'Reilly Tools of Change conference is held in San Jose, California.
  • Simon & Schuster launch bookvideos.tv, which features interviews of over 40 authors.
  • Richard Charkin, head of Macmillan in the UK, steals laptops from Google’s BEA booth, saying he’s just playing the same “trick” on them they play on authors with copyrighted work.
  • Microsoft adds copyrighted material to its Live Book Search; Google offers co-branded book search to member publishers of Google Book Search.
  • Penguin joins the e4book initiative, announcing plans to ask all business partners transact business completely electronically in 2008.

Fall

  • Pioneering a new university publishing model, Rice University releases Images of Memorable Cases, one of the first titles in its return to publishing after a ten-year hiatus. The book is formatted digitally by Connexions, and available in a hard copy from print-on-demand company QOOP.
  • Amazon finally releases the much buzzed-about Kindle, hoping to jump start the e-book market. EV-DO capable and reportedly quite functional, the device sells out in a matter of hours, although it received mixed reviews from some sources---primarily for its hefty $399 price tag. Many find it "ugly."
  • Conrad Black's myriad fans are delighted when he begins using the Margaret Atwood's LongPen, a device that allows him to sign books remotely by way of a touchpad connected to an "autopen" in the store. Black was unable to promote his Nixon biography as he was confined to his Chicago home before being sentenced to six and a half years in prison for fraud and obstruction of justice.

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E-Books: What's the Deal?

May 31, 2007

ebooks.jpgAt the turn of the century, many in the book industry excitedly anticipated the advent of the electronic book. With titles like "The Future of Cyberpublishing Is Now!", articles breathlessly told of the undiscovered world of e-book publishing and all its implications for authors, publishers, and the reading public. Paperless books would surely revolutionize the stodgy old book industry. So now, almost a decade later, why do most consumers react to the term "e-book" with a blank stare or casual head-scratch? Should the pronouncements of the e-book future seem as ridiculous to us now as the Y2K scare? [Unrelated fact: The author of doomsday classics The Y2K Personal Survival Guide and Millennium Bug seems to have overcome his embarrassment, becoming the president and CEO of Thomas Nelson, the nation's largest Christian publisher, in 2005.]

Some cite a general wariness with the format as the major reason the e-book fizzled so anticlimactically. Aren't most people who buy books the types who savor sipping coffee in a bookstore, smelling the fresh paper of a printed book? Don't avid readers enjoy coming home and curling up on the couch by the crackling hearth, a bound copy of their favorite novel nestled in their palm? And who wants to look at a fluorescent screen in their free time after they've done so at work for eight hours?

A more concrete answer for the sluggish e-book takeoff can be found in the mind-boggling abundance of formats in which e-books are available and the multiple platforms for accessing them. Pair that abundance with a scarcity of actual e-book content, and you have a situation in which the public won't show interest until there is more material available, but publishers won't put out more material until they see more consumer demand. So all we need for the e-book revolution to take place is, theoretically, an affordable, user-friendly reading device and a large enough pool of similarly formatted e-books to justify purchase of the device.

And the presence of e-books is increasing. HarperCollins, Random House, and (to a smaller extent) Penguin all offer a wide selection on their Web sites. Barnes & Noble entirely dropped e-books in 2003, but Amazon.com's Mobipocket site continues to build an electronic catalog that includes fiction, non-fiction, and reference books, mainly for use on handheld devices. They now have over 40,000 full texts available for purchase. Independent booksellers are jumping on the bandwagon, too. BookSense, a marketing consortium for independent bookstores, just launched a program that allows consumers to purchase e-books through independent booksellers' BookSense-templated sites. And although the American Association of Publishers estimated an overall .03% drop in book sales for 2006, e-books showed the largest gain of any sector, rising 24.1% to 54.4 million. An unimpressive number in sales, perhaps, and certainly not in line with the old dotcom projections, but the significant growth bodes well.

No matter how slowly they're taking hold, electronic books can still be useful to authors and publishers, and may yet play a significant role in the future of the industry. Let's take a look at the good things about e-books:

They sell books: It's widely believed that distribution of free e-books actually boosts traditional sales. Avant-Guide, publishers of a well known series of city guides, have adopted this strategy in hopes that they can increase brand awareness and reach potential customers. Confident that users will be impressed with quality content and head to the bookstore, they offer a selection of their most popular titles in digital form for free. Science fiction author Cory Doctorow is also known for his forward-thinking e-book practices; he's been giving away free copies online for years as a way to sell more in brick-and-mortar stores. In a 2006 article for Forbes, he writes:

Most people who download the book don't end up buying it, but they wouldn’t have bought it in any event, so I haven’t lost any sales, I’ve just won an audience. A tiny minority of downloaders treat the free e-book as a substitute for the printed book--those are the lost sales. But a much larger minority treat the e-book as an enticement to buy the printed book. They're gained sales. As long as gained sales outnumber lost sales, I'm ahead of the game. After all, distributing nearly a million copies of my book has cost me nothing.

In this scenario the argument that people are, in Doctorow's words, "pervy for paper" becomes an argument for e-book distribution: People will download the e-book (or sample chapters) and decide that they'd like to read the entire thing in print format. Of course, your book has to be good for that to happen. But your book is good, right?

They provide extra content: Many e-book editions offers special features, such as author interviews or excerpts from the author's other work, giving them an edge over their printed counterparts.

They have cool features: Advanced reading devices now have excellent resolution that mimics the printed page. In addition, users can highlight passages, make marginal notes (either through keypad entry or stylus), change font size, and read in the dark. E-books also provide a great level of portability, enabling readers to carry the equivalent of a shelf of books around in a device that's usually well under a pound. And you can read them all with one hand. Again, the success of the e-book is contingent on the development of an attractive, functional reader and a critical mass of available titles, and we're getting close.

They can earn you a bit of extra revenue: WOWIO is trying out a new model which consists of offering free e-books for download in exchange for viewing of a few ads. Full-page advertisements are inserted in the e-book documents. The ads can be quickly skipped over and are tailored to the reader's interests based on questions answered during initial registration. Publishers are paid a small amount per download, making the site a great way for publishers and authors to expose their work and make a little money. Visit www.wowio.com for more information.

So don't write off the e-book just yet. Stay tuned for more; in an upcoming article, we'll attempt to unboggle your mind to all those different e-book formats and let you know who's closest in the race for a viable e-book reader.

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