This is a blog post I wrote for Gary Ponzo's blog http://www.strongscenecontest.com
I thought I would share it with my readers also.
When I first started writing my books, I had an illusion that I would be the next
Robert B. Parker, with a series of novels about my private eye, Jim Richards. I
finished that first book "Classmate Murders", and then started book two, before
I really had any idea of ever being published. Mainly because I didn't know how
to go about getting published. My brother is a professional photographer and he
had a coffee table book of his photos that he sold at art fairs and such. He
finally got on Amazon to sell his books also and he introduced me to selling my
books there.
I checked around online to see how much it would cost to print my books and found
that for the number of pages and size, the cheapest would be about $5.00 per book
to print in quantities over 100. (I did check local print shops and they wanted
over $14. per book!) I had originally figured on selling my books for about $7.99,
which was average for paperbacks in stores by famous authors. I could only aspire
to put myself in their category, but I had to set a price. I figured out how much
Amazon would take out for their booty on each sale, I realized I was going to make
about .75 cents for each book sold after printing costs. Not a healthy profit, so
selling my books in paperback wasn't much of an option.
Then my brother introduced me to Twitter and Facebook. I joined and started to
meet people who were putting their books online as ebooks. The word I was reading
was that getting an agent or a publisher is about as much fun as a tooth extraction,
but self-publishing was not such a bad way to go.
I looked into this and having a background in computers, I set up my first book
and put it on Amazon. I tweeted and Facebooked my ebook on Amazon and after a while
I sold a couple of them. I also found that the price I was asking was a little high
for an ebook, so I lowered my prices as I put more of my books up for sale. My
first royalty payment from Amazon came and it was for $13.65 (a whole four books)
and I was happy, I was now a paid published author. Each month after that my sales
were going up, nothing tremendous but enough to keep me in beer and chips.
I was also reading about how everyone praises Amazon as though it were the only
venue to sell books, but I discovered a place called Smashwords.com and how they
sell books for authors. The nice thing about Smashwords is that they are a
distribution channel to other ebook retailers like Apple for iPad, Kobo, Diesel,
Sony for Nook, Barnes & Noble and even Amazon for the Kindle. This was a way to
get a wider coverage for my books so I put them on Smashwords and waited to see
what would happen. I was surprised.
I had to promote to start the ball rolling, but now the the thing has taken on
a life of it's own. Every month was showing an increase in sales and I'm hoping
they continue. My last royalty payment from Smashwords (covering most of the
retailers) was almost $500. while Amazon came in a modest $200. but I took it.
I'm not going to get rich, maybe, but using more than one avenue to sell my books
compounds the sales nicely.
What I'm boring you to death about is that you shouldn't put all your ebooks in
one basket. I hear authors I've met online talking about the thousands of books
they are selling on Amazon, I'm happy for them, but none mention about any sales
on Smashwords or their retailer partners. Amazon sells only for Kindle, I know
people who have other tablets and ereaders but not Kindle, so they can't read the
Amazon DRM locked books on their readers, but with Smashwords the options and
formats are wide open.
To end this and summing up, I'm just saying if you have a book worthy of selling
to the masses, don't just use Amazon, go for the other retailers, you can only
improve your sales as I have.
Bob Moats
Website: http://murdernovels.com - Blog: http://bobmoats.com/