MY BOOKBUB EXPERIMENT by John A. A. Logan
By
April, the $1300 I’d made from a Christmas promo of The Survival of Thomas Ford
had come in from Amazon.
I
was faced again with the decision of whether to risk/invest some of that money
back into advertising for Thomas Ford…or, on the other hand, whether to “take
this money and run…”
I’d
heard some interesting things about Bookbub:
In
particular, the great results Ingrid Ricks had had with a Bookbub promo for her
memoir, FOCUS, made me feel this would be worth a try:
I knew categorization might present problems.
The
Survival of Thomas Ford has always been received by some readers as a
mystery/thriller, and others as literary fiction, and then by some others as a
“literary thriller” (this hybrid interpretation of Ford goes right back to 2010
when it was represented by MBA Literary Agents in London and it would be sent out on submission as a commercial thriller sometimes, as literary fiction at other times, and eventually as a literary or psychological thriller).
On
Bookbub this initially presented a dilemma.
In
April, the cost for an ad for a Kindle Select free ebook promo to be sent out to Bookbub’s
Mystery/thriller list of subscribed readers was a hefty $230, or £156.
On
the other hand, a literary fiction ad cost only $110.
There
were twice as many subscribers to the Mystery/thriller list, though, so I thought it
over and decided this might well be a worthwhile investment (I should point out
here that, since I took out my ad, Bookbub has separated mysteries and
thrillers into two separate categories with different prices).
I
paid the $230 (out of my $1300 income from Ford in April), and booked my 27
April to 1 May ad for The Survival of Thomas Ford, to coincide with the Kindle
Select free promo I would do on those dates.
On
26 April, I made a note of The Survival of Thomas Ford’s vital statistics, all
told, from the ebook’s 17 months of online publication:
Downloads
all-told, from December 2011 to 26 April 2013: 32000
Amazon
US reviews: 41
Amazon
UK reviews: 61
A
month later, on 31 May, I checked the stats again for The Survival of Thomas
Ford, post-Bookbub:
Downloads
all-told at 31 May: 82000
Amazon
US reviews: 85
Amazon
UK reviews: 64
During
the 5-day promotion at end of April, The Survival of Thomas Ford had gone to
Number 2 out of all free Kindle books on Amazon USA, after 47000 free downloads
in the US (with only 1500 free downloads in UK, for comparison, which
emphasizes Bookbub’s USA-centric compass, but also emphasizes what an excellent
method it can be for Highland Scottish authors to reach readers in the USA).
Of
course, the acid test, with an outlay of $230 for the ad, is whether the 5-day
free promo and giving away of 49000 free ebooks, led to any paid sales in May.
It
did, 1007 in fact, split between paid sales at $2.99 and borrows (which each bring
in more than a sale does currently), and mostly in the USA
(though with 112 paid UK sales also, plus 5 Canadian, and 1 French).
Total
income from this for May then, as a result of the Bookbub ad at end of April, will
come to $2030, or £1317 approx.
Minus
the cost of the Bookbub ad, at $230, this still leaves profit of $1800 (though
of course, this money won’t arrive for 2 or 3 months, and when it does the
dilemma will arrive with it again, whether to take the cash and run…or reinvest
the money in the business of finding readers).
There
is, of course, the intangible profit of having reached 50000 new readers with
The Survival of Thomas Ford in May.
I’d
like to dedicate this post to the memory of my Mum, Agnes, who passed away
suddenly on 1st May.
I’d
been looking after my Mum, who was disabled, for the last 9 years, since she
had survived a nearly life-taking collapse in 2004.
We
had always been close but we became even closer in these last 9 years.
She
was the greatest supporter of my writing, and was always very excited to hear
new reviews, or the progress of the latest ebook promotion, including this one
described here…I was telling her day by day of the increasing download
figure…with neither of us knowing the terrible thing that was to come on May 1st.
For
most of May I couldn’t write or read a word, some sort of panic attack would
take over when I tried, until on the 27th I wrote a short message to
my good friends in Authors Electric.
Then
on 5 June I found myself writing this dry, technical blog post about a book
promotion, but I feel I must publish it, as some superstitious area of my brain
is making me suspect that my Mum is somehow behind these 50000 new downloads in
May.
(My
Mum was a wee bit superstitious herself).
I
should also mention publicly, I feel, that though my Mum was disabled
physically, she was generally very cheerful, and far more intelligent and
stronger in her mind than myself.
She
could do the Countdown conundrum on TV nearly every day, when the contestants
often couldn’t, and was rightly very proud of this. She loved films from all
around the world, which she watched on her TV, Chinese, Iranian, Japanese,
French, British, American, Italian…anything with a good story.
Indian
films were her favourite though, soulful and often telling the stories of the
poorest, most vulnerable people, from family tragedies, to sagas of degradation
and redemption.
My
Mum came from a small crofting community at Achriesgill, Kinlochbervie, in the far
north west of Scotland. Born in 1937, she was caught on camera for a few
seconds herself once, walking to school in a black coat, in the film from 1944,
Crofters, which documented the traditional way of life of her people and
village, where there was no electricity or running water.
The
film is online here at this link below, only 22 minutes long, and can be
played/watched, that’s her walking to school from 4.43-5.00, she’s the shortest/youngest
one with black coat and short black hair, grey socks, third from left at the
beginning, seen from side later, then from behind (apparently
scratching/rubbing her nose while walking along):
http://ssa.nls.uk/film.cfm?fid=0120&search_term=john&search_join_type=AND&search_fuzzy=yes
At 4.52 she turns and looks right into the camera as she passes it.
http://ssa.nls.uk/film.cfm?fid=0120&search_term=john&search_join_type=AND&search_fuzzy=yes
At 4.52 she turns and looks right into the camera as she passes it.
Crofters
is a fine, energetic film in its own right, capturing well, and artfully, a
time, place and spirit now past.
My
Mum believed in the Lord, and that what happens in this world is the Lord’s
will, so I will try to honour that belief myself now too.
We
loved her very much, her family and her friends.
She
was my best friend, and the best person I ever knew.
Comments
And many congratulations on the successful Bookbub promotion. I've just finished my own blog on a 99c sale promoted via Bookbub for my 22nd June post. It looks at it from a slightly different angle, so I think I will still run it...
And some stats. Very interesting. Now maths isn't my strong point but it looks to me like you've started a whole new BOGOF trend. The Bookbub experiment suggests give 50 away free get one sale! Interesting conversion rates but since the 'product' is virtual and the profit is just that at least it offers us a real insight into what you have to put out to get back - and if you get a living wage back then as you say, 50,000 new readers and a steady income - why not? Speculate to accumulate and all that eh?
Most of all, in tribute to your mum, you need to keep the faith and keep on writing!
Thanks so much for the info on Bookbub - I've been thinking about it, but haven't wanted to risk the money. Maybe now I will!
Stu
I am sorry to hear of your dear Mum's passing. It is a terrible loss for you, but at least you have wonderful memories and you can console yourself with the fact that you were a devoted, caring son.
Very interesting stats about BookBub. Sounds like you did very well.
Regards
Margaret
Your mom was lucky to have you for her son.
And much like the others, I too am sorry to hear about your loss. She sounds like a great human being. I hope when you're ready, you will consider writing a book about her. You write so beautifully about her. I loved seeing her in Crofters. I too believe that she was behind the 50,000 downloads! (That's an incredible run, my friend.)
I wondered where you were these last few months. So glad to see you're writing again.
I think it's wonderful you had someone in your life who supported your work. She had an eye for talent, my friend.
Here's to much more success for Thomas Ford and your next projects!
Take care and talk soon!
Hunter