UK Amazon Kindle Forum discussion
Agony Aunt
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oh I know, but what a thing to say when you depend on authors giving you money in the hope that Suzie will hand over money for their book! ;-)
I get a feeling they need a way of stopping authors reading the 'wrong' website :-)


The first fantasy title was Flame of Requiem: The Complete Trilogy by Daniel Arenson
So I checked on Amazon, it's the same price, 99p on Amazon
But it's at 1,723,847 in Books
That's not a fabulously successful promotion.
Admittedly better than my paperbacks are doing, but I'm nobody and I'm not spending a thousand dollars on a bookbub promotion
I suspect greed rather than stupefying success to be honest

'Top Quality Books: BookBub only features books that are bestsellers or written by bestselling authors and have received strong reviews from critics and readers.'
Are BookBub no longer featuring indies, or rising stars? Have the trad publishers elbowed the indies out?

I think the Trad publishers have made it harder to get accepted, Anna. And allowed for the cost to increase.

I suspect Bookbub may have followed the money. Trad publishers are as desperate as anybody to get sales, and they might have piled in on Bookbub if it worked
And the numbers they're talking, a thousand dollars isn't a big deal

I have been impressed by the fact that they actually do read the books they publish sufficiently well to suggest to me that I put my book in a different genre. And they're right. They have the expertise that I didn't have. I never know which genre suits my historical novels best. I could manage the Time Travel Romance - easy peasy. But the others are more difficult. That's my way of saying they'll have higher staff costs than most other enewsletter ads.

It's just that there's no way I can justify a thousand dollars

And why would anyone pay 600 dollars to have thousands of people be given a free book? I do understand the theory of 'first book free', but paying for that?

If I remember rightly, I paid only $30 to advertise just in the UK when they first started in the UK. They seem to have changed things now.
@Will - No way would I pay that sort of money for a free book to be advertised.
@Jim - Right again, Jim, as far as I can see.

Seriously, how many businesses are there that produce mailing lists to readers who've signed up for them? I'd guess scores.
How many of these emailed lists actually get looked at?
How many of them get looked through as opposed to having their first page glanced at?
We're back to selling shovels to prospectors as a business model again


Of course, if they said yes, I'd have to stump up the cash! ($120 in my case). Be interesting to see what the results are - couldn't be worse than what I manage on my own, lol.

But the cost of the promotion was such that I made about £400 profit from the deal, and a few short months later, I'm about where I was this time last year.
It's a powerful service, but it's not the game-changer it's sometimes billed to be.
Having said that, when you set up your author account, readers do have the option to "follow" you, and then they send out new release notifications to your followers. As these are presumably people who've already read one of your books, this feels like a list of warm leads to me.
So although my only Bookbub was a Casanova translation, a whopping 40 people will be getting an extra email about my zombie novella tomorrow... I hope one or two pick it up!
http://booktalk.bookbub.com/private/1...
The page signed off with “I now have more books than I can read in a lifetime,” said Suzie Miller of Auburn, WA. She said she has downloaded more than 350 free ebooks using the service.
Given they would want me as an author to spend serious money with them https://www.bookbub.com/partners/pricing
I'm afraid I'm not tempted