Thursday, February 13, 2014

How I became a USA Today bestselling author




The Scoop: How I became a USA Today Bestselling Author

(Please note: On July 7, 2016, August 17, 2017, and November 16, 2017, I hit the USA Today list again. I've added the what's/how's at the end of this post)

Part 1—Idea: On October 25, 2013, author Heather Horrocks (picture on the left) and I met for lunch to discuss our experiences we’ve had while self-publishing. Both Horrocks and I are hybrid authors, which means we self-publish and also traditionally publish. (I’m going to refer to her as Horrocks since we are both Heathers… to avoid some confusion.) Self-publishing projects that didn’t fit our traditional publishers' niches was giving us a lot of flexibility, especially in promotional opportunities. I’d been impressed with Horrocks’ writing as well as her marketing savvy. I had even gone so far as to invite her to contribute to my anthology series A Timeless Romance Anthology. During our conversation, Horrocks told me of a friend who had hit the USA Today bestsellers list by bundling three of her novels and selling the box set for 99 cents. I looked at Horrocks, a bit wide-eyed and said, “Let’s be USA Today bestsellers.” She smiled and said, “All right.”

Part 2—Research: Through a series of emails following our October lunch, Horrocks and I discussed what type of box set to put together. All of my novels but one was tied up with traditional publisher contracts. One of the problems was that Horrocks indie novels are contemporary cozy mysteries with a dash of romance. My indie novel was a gothic historical romance (with a ghost!). So we debated whether or not we should write new books—then team up with another author to do the same. What if we tried for a Christmas set? Horrocks had a Christmas-themed book as well as Diane Darcy—one of Horrocks writing group partners. We discussed if it should be three of us or maybe more authors involved. Researching showed that the box sets that were hitting the lists had 6 or 7, or even 10 authors. I kept coming across a box set that was on pre-order called The Scandalous Brides series. I had read one of the novels already—The Salt Bride by Lucinda Brant. I wondered if Amazon would let us do preorder, but from all that I’d heard, the KDP program didn’t allow it. I emailed Amazon anyway, and emailed them again, asking question after question. I even went so far as to apply for Amazon affiliate status, but that didn’t seem to be effective for what our goals were because we wanted to release in ebook only. I emailed several other box set authors, and the ones who replied said that BookBub had been their tipping factor (I was soon to find out that BookBub would not promote multi-author box sets, they’d only promote single-author box sets).

Part 3—Selecting the Authors: Horrocks was in, and she said that Diane Darcy would be happy to join us. With Diane on board, that would give us the possibility of 2 historical novels in the set, which would eventually lead to the title Romance through the Ages. We’d decided on 7 authors, and so I started going through names, looking for authors who had been indie publishing for a while, produced professional products (cover, design, editing), had multiple romance novels out, and were savvy marketers with tons of 4 & 5 star reviews on their novels. I had worked with Rachael Anderson on an anthology earlier in the year and she’d also done some cover work and typeset layouts for me. She had two indie novels out that were doing well, and I was impressed with her writing and her marketing. Once I talked to her about it, she had a lot of great ideas to throw into the pot. Rachael was good friends with Karey White—who I had my eye on already—and so we invited Karey. I was glad Karey was willing since only one of her books was indie published, and so that’s what we’d have to use. Next, I asked Janette Rallison, crossing my fingers. Janette is very well published, mostly in the YA market, and one of her claims to fame is having sold over 1 million books. She agreed, and the project suddenly moved up a few levels. When we invited the next author (who will remain unnamed…) she was very hesitant. Her book was selling well and the idea of putting it into our box set and cutting into her sales (we were keeping the individual novels on sale simultaneously), and splitting $0.35 royalty seven ways, wasn’t too appealing. And she didn’t know any of us personally, so how could she really know how awesome we all were. LOL. Her rejection led to landing another amazing author though. Karey White suggested Amy Harmon. I feel embarrassed I had no idea who she was, hadn’t heard of her or read any of her books. I discovered that Amy had a stellar 2013 year and hit the NY Times with her indie published novel A Different Blue (she has now hit the NY Times with Making Faces). Amy agreed! And she would put in her novel Running Barefoot. I promptly read it and fell in love with Amy’s writing. So now we had our fabulous seven with a combined total of over 800 4-5 star reviews on Amazon. I knew this set would be rock-solid.

Part 4—Cover: Researching box set covers in depth quickly told me that the box sets that were hitting the USA Today and New York Times lists were steamy romances or erotic romances. With 7 “sweet” romance novels (ie PG to PG-13), we had a monumental task ahead of us. I began to doubt, and wondered, “Are the box sets hitting the lists because they are steamy romances, or are they hitting the lists because they are 99 cent box sets?” Well, we were already moving forward and it felt too late to put on the brakes. Plus, Amy Harmon was part of the set—if all else failed, that was just cool to think about in and of itself. Rachael Anderson designed the 3-D box set image:

Pretty, huh? Obviously not steamy or erotic. So we were hoping that we’d still have a chance, that maybe the auto-buys were for the “romance” and “box set” and “99 cents”.
 

Part 5--Pre-order status: [8/14/14 update: Amazon now allows any author to put their book on pre-order status up to 90 days in advance. Details here.]After many failed stints of trying to talk Amazon into doing a pre-order status (don’t get me wrong, Amazon is great to work with, but they have policies in place), we finally caught a break. Because one of the authors in our box set was a New York Times status, Amazon was willing to give us pre-order. I was elated. And even though other box set authors I'd talked to who were also granted that status said they didn’t care for it, I still felt like it was a major step forward. About the same time BookBub turned us down. It would take a few emails to discover the “real” reason. (And don’t get me wrong here either, BookBub is fabulous and I’ve done two other successful promos with them. But again, they have their policies. I recommend BookBub hands’ down—but know that they are a paid promo service to the tune of several hundred dollars.) It was a few days before Christmas now, and we set the release date to Saturday, February 1st (which would turn out to be a mistake later on). We asked reviewers who had read at least one of the books to post on Amazon the review of that specific book, and when we had about 20 reviews posted, our ranking increased.



Part 6—Lining up Promotions: As you can imagine, trying to find and select promotions is always any authors or publishers toughest job, especially if advertising dollars are at stake. We weren’t opposed to investing money, but we wanted an ROI, of course! Read any marketing book and you’ll quickly realize it’s a bit like throwing stuff at a wall—what will stick? I knew by experience that BookBub was the real deal. But it seemed that door had been shut firmly in our faces. Was there anything that was comparable to BookBub? [Update 12/26/14. I recently saw a multi-author anthology promoted on BookBub, so I've emailed them to ask them if they've had a policy change]. After email several bestselling authors who had hit various lists, I started to gather websites that offered email blasts to readers who were interested in the romance category. We also hit a few deadends, and some that seemed to do nothing—yet perhaps they helped us maintain rankings. Our focus was the two weeks leading up to release date (because we had pre-order status) and the week of release (which would be your primary focus if you don’t have pre-order status). The list I’m going to give you is what worked for our box set and I believe gave us a decent ROI, but please remember our results may not be your results. NOTE: I only tracked Amazon ranks.

ReadCheaply.com, Amazon rank jumped from #1036 to #585, FREE (They say on their website that their advertising is currently free, although you need to tweet/Facebook. Full disclosure—I hadn’t seen this much success with two other books I posted through ReadCheaply as I did the box set. I was pleasantly surprised. And it tells me that the product can make a difference, and results can widely vary. But you can’t beat free.)

eReaderNewsToday.com, Amazon rank jumped from #1521 to #161, bills 25% of “sales” according to their formula (yes, this sounds a bit vague, but you can read more on their website. I was very pleased with the results!) [August 2014 update on eReaderNewsToday, they now charge a straight fee, around $40.00]

eBookBargainUK.wordpress.com, Yes this is a UK promotion, but exposure is exposure and we did sell several hundred copies on the Amazon foreign markets. I did the week long promo where we were featured in their daily email blasts. By the time it ran, we were already ranked at #124 on Amazon. Only $25.

Awesomegang.com, This one actually didn’t help our ranks, per se. We started at #499 and dropped to #711 that day. But I really can’t complain because it was only $10.00 and it’s hard to judge if a promo might just be helping maintain your numbers. Yes, dropping 200 spaces is a drop, but we were still in the top 1000 for the day and more than a week out to release date. Only $10.

Peoplereads.com, The first day this promo ran we went from #1650 to #1424. Not a huge jump, but measurable. We did the “special feature” deal which means Peoplereads tweets the deal for two weeks. They only have 2,000 followers, but there were dozens of retweets by some who had tens of thousands of followers. Worth it? I say yes. $19.99.

eBookBooster.com, This promo acts as a broker, and they send to 50 other sites. A great way to save yourself submitting to a bunch of other places. I really can’t give you a yes or no on this, but I think it’s something to consider. $40.00 [Aug 2014 update: I recently ran this promo for another book, and eBookBooster automatically submitted to AwesomeGang and Pixel of Ink, so to submit separately to those is not needed if you use this promo.]

Bookgorilla.com, This promo had a single focused date and our ranks went from #1661 to #595. Definitely a success in my mind especially since it was about 3 days before release and we really wanted to get our ranking moving up. $50.00 [Aug 2014 update on Bookgorilla price, if you sign up for a KindleNationDaily promo for $99 or higher, then you will get a free Bookgorilla slide-over spot. A savings of $50!]

KindleNationDaily.com, Okay, this was for me the “big expectation.” This was going to replace BookBub, and the price was way up there. But it had been recommended to me by several bestselling authors and it’s one of the vehicles used by the Big Deal promos on Amazon (that are only offered by invitation only). So, biting the bullet, I emailed KND and asked for their recommendations. We put together a “power package” which has several levels of promotions built in. Results? Awesome. Ranks went from #440 to #161. You might think, well, you have those kinds of jumps with cheaper promos. You have to understand, once you are hitting the higher ranks, the differences between #400 and #150 is a lot bigger than between #1200 and #1000, if that makes sense. Cost: $349.00

BookBlast.co, [now: booksends.com] This promo ran the same day as KND, so some of the rank jumps cited above are crossovers from both promos on the same day. This was also more expensive because we selected the “bestseller list package.” As you can see, in the days leading up to the release of the box set, I was pretty much willing to take a few risks. Did this one pan out? It would only be accurate to say that I’d have to run KND and BookBlast on separate days to give you a better estimation. But for the purposes of my goals for this box set, this was the right decision. Cost: $250.00

InDTale.com, I love this website and I’ve been advertising on it for about 14 months, swapping out various books. So they were one of my go-to promo. We did a website side-bar ad (about $30.00) that stayed up for the entire month of January and then we did the “book bargain newsletter” ($25.00). Was it effective? For the price and the reputation of InD’Tale, I’d say yes. The newsletter was blasted on Feb 4, so right in the middle of many of our larger promos, so I can’t gage exact results, but I believe there were sales. Cost: $55.00 total.

Goodreads Ad, This promo also came highly recommended. I knew nothing about it, and it seems there is quite the method to it. I set our limit to $250, with $0.50 per click-through. In other words, I only get charged if there is a click-through. And I could modify any time. After creating a campaign that only had 25 views in 2 days, I emailed Goodreads “help!” They gave me instructions about how to power-up my advertising (maybe I’d just neglected to do the research) and I created 5 ad campaigns with different descriptions and reaching different markets. The most successful were the “no targeting” campaigns. By the end of the 10 days, we had 156,000 views. Not a lot of click-throughs, but the exposure was there. Total cost: $23.50.

Smaller promos:
The Fussy Librarian ($7.00)
pixelofink.com (free)
indiebookoftheday.com
addictedtoebooks.com ($15.00)
indiehousebooks.com ($15.00)
storyfinds “smashup Saturday” promo ($50.00)
Facebook ad (was paid by one of the authors, not sure on the $)
You can find a list that’s a good starting point on Anne Rallen's blog: http://annerallen.blogspot.com/2013/11/writers-toolkit-4-how-to-sell-your.html?spref=fb 
Kindle Book Review also has a comprehensive promo list to start your research: https://www.thekindlebookreview.net/author-resources/

Organic promos:
This is what I’m calling promos done by the authors through their own networks. Like I mentioned earlier, the box set contains authors who have very strong platforms. So they have their own decent reach and marketing abilities. Some of what was done by each of us individual included: Newsletter blasts (I have 800 on my newsletter list and I’m sure the other authors have at least that or more), Facebook events, Facebook shout-outs (calling in all favors!), our own blogs and other blog shout-outs (calling in more favors!), “swapping” shout-outs with other authors on Twitter/ Facebook etc, and the authors would send me tidbits of things they were doing that I didn’t write down. It all culminated into the “big release week”. As you can see, the success of this box set wasn’t just an idea thrown together and authors grabbed and a cover put up. Each author and even each book had a viable track record, a strong readership, and a solid platform. The combination of the promos and events surrounding this box set could never be exactly duplicated again. But this will give you a good idea of the work involved and the time dedicated to one purpose.

Part 7—The Numbers: Just tell us the numbers! Remember when I said Feb 1 release date was a mistake? We found out that the New York Times counts their sales week starting on Sunday. Feb 1 was a Saturday… the absolute worse day we could release on. Thankfully, we caught it in time, and Amazon changed our pre-order date to Sunday, Feb 2. Later we read that the USA Today starts their count on a Monday, but others have blogged about it as a Sunday. So that’s very murky! If you are considering doing something crazy like me, then research this—and release on a Monday!

Pre-orders: This was incredible to watch on KDP. The pre-orders started to dump in about 500 at a time, reaching just over 3500 on release date [Update: with Amazon allowing pre-orders, you can now watch your pre-order sales. This wasn't the case when we published this box set. We could only watch the rankings]. And then we had our two big promos running that day, KND and BookBlast. Also, the Barnes & Noble rankings started rising and on this first day, we sold about 126 on Nook—this was definitely due to KND and BookBlast. And as fate has a way of knocking you down a peg, my internet service was completely out, so I was checking rankings and sales on my phone and emailing them to myself. 

Monday: You must know that when you do larger promos, the benefits are also seen on day 2, and carry over for another day or so after that. By 5:00 pm Monday we’d sold 199 on B&N and 5381 on Amazon. Ranked #130 Amazon, #109 B&N.

Tuesday-Friday: This is where the amazing happened. Remember all of our favors for shout-outs and postings were happening in these days. And consider the ripple effect factor and once your break into higher rankings, your exposure and metadata become a giant rotating circle of regenerating algorithms. The evening of February 5 we hit the peak: #31 Amazon, #18 B&N. We had sold 839 on B&N and 7473 on Amazon. Fantastic, yes! We were also listed on Kobo, but those sales were in the 10’s. From conversations and questions of other bestselling authors, we’d heard that if we got in the range of 8k-9k, we had a chance for the USA Today list. The New York Times was a bit more touchy, but we knew authors who had hit that list with much less sales. There were so many factors and one of them was how much other books were selling. 

End result: By Sunday night (which may or may not have counted on one of the lists, not sure), we had 1595 sales on B&N, and about 9200 on Amazon. On Thursday, February 13, we found out that we'd made #127 on the USA Today list. I discovered this about 2:30 a.m. and well, didn't sleep after that.




Part 8—Would we do it again? Looking back, I see so many times of uncertainty, ups and downs, and realize it really was the perfect storm coming together. So, yes, I’d possibly do it again. But I know the work that will be involved and how crucial finding the right combination of authors/books would be.

July 7, 2016 update:
As the owner of Mirror Press, I've been indie publishing the Timeless Romance Anthology line for 3 1/2 years. In 2015, BookBub started to allow anthologies & collections to be promoted through them. This was not the case in 2014 when I was part of Romance Through the Ages box set. So... you better believe, I was submitting like crazy to BookBub. In December 2015, they accepted our Silver Bells Collection. It sold well, but nothing close to reach a national bestseller list.

Then in June 2016, BookBub accepted our Mail Order Bride Collection 99 cent promotion. Mail Order Bride had come out earlier in the year. I added a couple more promos like eReaderNewsToday, Robin Reads, ReadCheaply, BargainBooksy, and MyBookCave to the sale week, hoping the anthology would do well. But we were blown away. By the end of the first day of the BookBub promo (June 27), Mail Order Bride reached #19 on Amazon and #10 on Barnes & Noble. These numbers were higher than my previous box set that hit the list. But I also know that there are a lot of factors that play into the lists, and much will depend on the sales of other books during the same week. I thought, if we could maintain the Top 50 for another day, and the Top 100 for 2 more days, we might have a shot. Promising news was when the Nook sales were also very strong.

Approximate sales for the week of June 26-July 3, 2016: 
Amazon 4800
Barnes & Noble 1400
Kobo 200
iTunes 18

So I'm excited to announce that Mail Order Bride Collection hit the USA Today list at #101 on July 7, 2016!




August 17, 2017 Update: 

On August 17, 2017, the Shattered Worlds boxed set hit the USA Today list at #107. This boxed set included 22 authors, and my book Mistress Grim, written under my pen name Jane Redd. We had this boxed set on sale for three months, and our final numbers were:

Amazon US: 6942
Nook: 253
iBooks: 600

Due to the month (August) we hit the list higher than we probably would have it if were a busier book release month. So keep in mind that it might be easier to hit a list in July or August when your competition isn't as stiff! Announcement made on this blog post. Marketing, you ask? With 22 authors on board and all committed to getting sales, we had to work together to coordinate. Some of the marketing things we did include:
Newsletter swaps with other authors
Facebook author takeover book launch event (3 months)
Scheduled every promo we could think of
Amazon ads
BookBub ads
Instagram Challenge
YouTube author night
Posted to social media each week
Weekly accountability thread where we had to post what efforts we were making
Twitter chat with authors
Boosting Facebook posts
etc.





November 16, 2017 UPDATE:



I'm excited that the Murder & Mayhem boxed set hit #22 on the USA Today Bestseller List on November 16, 2017. My full-length thriller Poetic Justice was published in this boxed set (and is now available as a standalone). The Murder & Mayhem boxed set sold over 36,000 copies, placing above five other books in adult fiction that week that were included on the New York Times list. Because the NY Times list is editorially culled, publications such as boxed sets are typically left off. I think the most recent boxed set to be included on the NY Times list was in January 2017.

The USA Today list has two main requirements: 1. sales numbers, 2. wide distribution. The format of the book (or boxed set) can be e-book only, or a combination of e-book, paperback, and or hardcover. The books have to be "widely distributed"--in other words, selling good numbers on both Kindle, Nook, iBooks, Kobo, and GooglePlay.

If you go to Amazon on any given day (or any given hour, for that matter), and pull up the Top 100 selling books, then look up the publishers. What do you see? In my research, I've found that about 20% of the Top 100 titles on Amazon are Apub titles. (Apub = Amazon imprints that operate as traditional publishing imprints. An author typically needs an agent to submit. Advances are offered. Contracts include foreign rights sales, audio production, print production, and e-book production--exclusive to the Kindle Unlimited program). These Apub titles include the imprints of Thomas & Mercer, 47 North, Montlake, Lake Union, Skyscape, etc. Full list here.

Since Apub publishes their e-books to Kindle Unlimited (meaning Kindle only), it's very rare to see an Apub book on the USA Today list, and even more rare on the New York Times list. Most of the Apub book sales are e-book/Kindle sales. So an author would really have to be hitting it out of the park to garner a high number of print sales as well on other distribution sites such as Barnes & Noble. This is why you won't see these 20/100 bestsellers on Amazon on the national bestseller charts . . . except for the Wall Street Journal. They take the best of all worlds. Distribution isn't dictated. Purely sales. This also means that Wall Street Journal bestsellers are selling an incredible amount.

Remember how the Murder & Mayhem sold over 36,000 copies in a single week? This number wasn't even high enough to get onto the Wall Street Journal list. (I believe we were very close, maybe 1,000 or 2,000 off.) 

It's staggering to think about.

Recently, Amazon (I believe in answer to the editorially culled list of New York Times and the distribution restrictions of USA Today), has created their own elite bestseller list called Amazon Charts. There are two categories: Best in sales, and Most Read. That's it. Check out Amazon Charts here. It's fun to see which books are hitting all lists, and which books are selling like crazy, yet are ignored by the other national bestseller lists. I'm sure the authors can take solace in their royalty checks, growing amount of readers, and movie deals ;-)

I'd also like to address some questions that authors might have. Yes, the Murder & Mayhem boxed set had 20 authors in it, and yes, we priced it at $0.99 for the first week of release, then the boxed set went up to retail price. This was done as a promotional effort in order to cross-promote readership, bring new readers to our thriller stories with very low risk ($0.99 cent risk), and some of the authors were hoping to get a "USA Today bestseller status" on their writing resume. 

Some might consider this "gaming the system," when in fact, all publishers and authors are looking for ways to increase exposure, increase readership, increase sales. Publishers will offer free Advance Reader Copies to reviewers. Publishers will pay for Publisher's Weekly, Book Life, and Kirkus Review ads. Publishers will pay for reviews (that are to be unbiased, or course). Publishers will buy advertising on Facebook, Instagram, and hire publicists to run social media campaigns. 

Discounting a title is simply a marketing strategy. 

More than you probably wanted to know, but information is education, and education promotes success.

33 comments:

Heather Horrocks said...

I'm still smiling. : )

Melanie said...

Thanks for sharing what happened behind the scenes. I love it and am looking forward to reading more!

Melanie said...

Okay, I wrote that comment on a previous post and have now read the "rest of the story." What an interesting process. Congrats on becoming a USA Today bestselling author! Purchasing this boxed set was a no-brainer deal for me as a reader and I hope you'll do more in the future!

Heather Moore said...

Thanks Melanie! :-)

Kimberley Griffiths Little said...

This is fascinating, Heather. Thank you so much for sharing and the generosity! Can't wait to talk more at Storymakers with you.

Heather Moore said...

Can't wait to see you, Kimberley!

Cami Checketts said...

Congratulations! I'm just thrilled for you hitting the USA Today bestseller list.
Thanks for sharing your journey.
Hugs,
Cami

Angela said...

What a promotion pro, Heather! Amazing! Congratulations--you deserve it after all that work. And thank you for giving so much advice and help to the writing community!

Anonymous said...

What an amazing story! Thanks so much for sharing!

Have you heard of any similar websites to promote films?

Heather Moore said...

I'm not familiar with film promotion, but I'm sure there are things out there... I see a lot of movie trailers being tweeted.

Kristy Woodson Harvey said...

Heather, What an incredibly helpful post! I'm saving all of these book promotion sites for my release next spring. Have a great weekend!

Heather Moore said...

Kristy, congrats on your upcoming book :-)

Betty said...

This is such an amazing post. Thank you for sharing all of this information and your results with these ebook promo sites! Congrats to all the authors on their promotion and setting this up.

Another great site similar to Bookgorilla and BookBub I recommend is IgniteYourBook.com. On this site you get a one-time listing on your day of discounted ebook promotion that will be blasted out to 30,000 readers hungry for new books! This blast will reach a broader audience, find more buyers, and build exposure for your book!

Authors can submit their ebook for feature here: http://igniteyourbook.com/promote-your-book/

Thanks again for sharing and keep up they great work!

Unknown said...

http://johnbowen.net/

Thanks for an amazing post. With the hot indie question being, 'who's the next best alternative to BookBub?' sharing info like this is invaluable. :)

Heather Moore said...

Thanks, John. Best of luck to you!

Cindy Fazzi said...

Hi Heather. I'm a newly published romance author. Your brother-in-law, Jason Clegg, who's my boss, told me many great things about you and your books and recommended your website. He's right! Thanks for this great blog post and for sharing this valuable information. Kudos and lots of luck!
All the best,
Cindy Fazzi aka Vina Arno

Unknown said...

This may have been written awhile ago, but it was definitely educational. I learned a lot. I will have to pick up this box set. Thank you, Heather

Joyble said...

Hi Heather,
Thank you for all that you shared :) Did all these sites accept to promote pre-orders or did they ask you to wait until the release day/week prior to promotion? I'm asking because I have no idea where to promote my pre-orders and I have a book release coming up in three months' time. I'd be grateful for anything you could share :) Thank you so much!

Heather Moore said...

I haven't tried to promote a pre-order this way. I'm not sure what the different sites policies would be. But these sites are promoting books that are being discounted for a short time, down from their regular price. You can promote your pre-order through Goodreads advertising, Facebook advertising, creating a Rafflecopter, and doing a Book Blast (blog tour hosts will schedule book blasts for a certain fee).

Joyble said...

Thank you, Heather :)! If I understand you correctly, your paid promotions (via BookGorilla, KND, etc) were all scheduled for the week of the boxed set's release and not before? Sorry for the questions, just trying to learn :) I'm in contact with a few of those sites now and would like to have an idea before I pick the promotion dates for my next book release. Thank you very much!

Heather Moore said...

Yes, if you are doing a temporary discounted price when your book is being released, then you can schedule a promotion in advance for release date/week, if that makes sense. They won't promote the book while it's on pre-order, but you can schedule a promotion in advance for when it's going to be released. But they ask that your book be discounted temporarily. So if your preorder price is $4.99, then you can schedule with one of the e-book sites for the release week, and tell them you are discounting at $1.99 or $0.99. They only promote "sales/discounts" not regular prices. At least this was how it was in 2014. We had our box set listed higher as a preorder, and release week we discounted for $0.99.

Joyble said...

Okay, yes, that makes perfect sense and certainly clears it up for me. I'll gear the promotions, and lower my price for the release week. Thank you SO much, Heather! Wishing you success with your future books.

Heather Moore said...

Thanks, Joyble! And good luck!

Kristin Holt said...

Thank you, Heather, for sharing your detailed history about how you made amazing things happen! I found your post informative, helpful, instructional, and grasp how much work you went through behind the scenes.
My warmest appreciation,
Kristin Holt

john smith said...
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Unknown said...

This article was very informative and included the details needed for authors who must rely on promoting their titles. Thanks so much for sharing!

Sandra and Daniel Biskind said...

Thanks for sharing this great article! That is very interesting I love reading and I am always searching for informative information like this.
international bestselling authors USA

Unknown said...
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Montrose co said...

Thank you so much for this post . This is really helpful,

qRanker said...
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qRanker said...
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qRanker said...
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Tanya strong said...

Thank you for sharing this information! So interesting how it all works!