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The Fibonacci Murders
Shout It Out! Self- Promotions
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Fibonacci Promo
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I sold some. And it’s a different genre. Good luck.

I've just gone against my 'don't give my hard work away free' principle and put the first of my trilogy on Amazon for 3 days free, finishing on 2nd July. There were nearly 3,000 downloads and some buyers also bought #2 and #3 in the series. Also the Kindle Unlimited reads have increased from about 200 a day to 1,000 - so look out for that as well.
Having said all this, I haven't had any sales in the last 3 days but the KU reads are still higher than usual.
Think visibility and other phrases like slowly, slowly catchee monkey. It's a tough market both for Indies and the trads and I hope your promotion goes well.


I can only suggest alerting folks on Goodreads on the first day of your promotion. I have seen some authors' suggestion of then reminding people the day before the promotion ends.
I don't do social media, but if you do, you could tweet and post - though most say this is a waste of good time. Others might disagree.
But you probably knew all of the above! Sorry not got any bright ideas.
Brit usually spends the day tweeting and posting on social media. We sell between 40 and 60 e books on those days of the featured book.


I can only suggest alerting folks on Goodreads on the first day of your promotion. I have seen some authors' suggestion of then rem..."
Thanks, Anna. I'll definitely do that, especially since the promo price runs through the end of the month.

Thanks, I'll do what I can. I don't usually have a whole day to do things like that, but I can spread it across several days, I'm sure.

I posted about the promo on FB and sent out a long overdue newsletter that mentioned it. I don't know how much activity I got from each of these components, but I'm happy with the results!


I didn't expect to, so it's a pleasant surprise!

Yeah, price makes a difference. I normally sell my ebooks at $4.99 USD, so I put it on sale for $3.99 USD. At a 70% royalty, that gets me $2.79 USD/book, so I needed 20 sales to break even. At a lower price, I wouldn't have done it.

Gee, that's an interesting comment... I'm staring at this screen real hard while I absorb that.

Pricing is a bit of a puzzle. In doing occasional research to find out what the "hot" price points are, I've found it's a bit of a moving target. The last time I looked, $0.00 - $0.99 garnered a lot of sales, as did $2.99 - $4.99, but the range from $1.00 - $1.99 was a dead zone.
I suspect the lower range works well for occasional promos, but possibly not so much for a regular price. There is a theory out there that customers who see a regular price that low will think the book isn't worth spending money on.
It probably depends somewhat on other marketing factors, such as the cover, the blurb, etc.

I've had that conversation with readers who aren't authors. Some of them see books at a low price as not worth trying. What's wrong with the book that it's free? Is it so bad even the author doesn't value their work? Free works if you then back it up with other books with a price tag. Then I've also had the conversation where readers point blank refuse to pay for ebooks and only download them when they are free.
I hope I get to the stage where I manage to sell books at a full price rather than only selling them when I've done a promo for 99c. I've got to shift a lot of books at 99c to make the cost of my cover back (let alone the cost of the promos I've spent money on.)

Gee, that's an interesting..."
I guess I should qualify that. I spent $55 on the promo (they charge more for mystery and other highly popular genres). $55/$2.79 = 19.7, which is the number of sales required to "break even" at that price point ($3.99, which gives me $2.79 income).
If I had sold the same number of books at a lower price, I wouldn't have broken even. For example, at $0.99 sale price my income would be $0.69, and the break even point would then be $55/$0.69 = 79.7 books. So by lowering the price to $0.99, I would have had to sell 60 more books than I did in order to break even. I think it highly unlikely I would have hit that target, although it's always possible.
I seem to recall having heard people say they managed about 20 sales on a Bargain Booksy promo, so I priced my book to make that my break-even point. It's possible I could have dropped the price a tad and garnered more sales, but every price drop raises the break-even point, so it can't be done indiscriminately or I'd make it too hard to hit the target.
I hope that's not befuddling anyone. Too many numbers make some people's eyes glaze over. I know because I'm married to one of those people. ;-)


Oh I don't know. It's a complete mystery to me.

Oh, good. I don't want to confuse anyone. ;-) However, I set the price at $3.99. The $2.79 was what I make, because the Kindle "royalty" (which isn't actually a royalty, but that's another matter) is 70% of the sale price, or $2.79.

That's true. The mystery category is the largest by list size. The romance categories are slightly smaller but command a higher price ($70 for most of them).

The price for the book has been dropped to $3.99 USD on both Amazon and B&N. I think I already have it on sale at the publisher site, Serpent Cliff, but that's experiencing problems right now. Once tech support gets it fixed, I'll check on that. The sale runs through July 31. I hope to follow this up with promotions on True Death in August and Ice on the Bay in September.
If any of you more experienced folks have suggestions for additional activities around these promos, please let me know. I've rather new and inept at this . . .