E-book Pricing and Channels? It's All a Matter of ... Timing by Ruby Barnes
One of the advantages of being an independent author or micro-publisher is you get to choose and control your sales channels. One of the disadvantages of being an independent author or micro-publisher is you get to choose and control your sales channels.
If you have an e-book to sell then the obvious place to go and tout your wares is Amazon. Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing has an easy upload platform, good opportunities for testing the product before finally clicking Publish, global storefronts and facilities for tweaking the book page via Amazon Author Central. Happy days. Amazon even offers a couple of promotional schemes if you give them 90 days exclusivity and join KDP Select. Up to 5 days of Free Book Promotion (would you want to do that? Debate is never-ending on the subject) or the Kindle Countdown which gives a time-based promotional discount for your title. Why does Amazon offer these benefits in return for exclusivity? Because other channels do sell e-books.
If you decide to go the Free Book Promotion route with a title then KDP Select is the most controllable way of doing it. The benefits are assumed to include (1) creation of a broader readership (a properly promoted free run can garner a few tens of thousands of downloads), (2) a rush of verified purchaser reader reviews on Amazon (always a risk that some people won't love your baby like you do - freebie collectors may not all be your target reader demographic) and (3) a rush of paid sales when you end the free period and Amazon's algorithms push your title up the genre popularity charts. Current online discussions suggest that (1) needs paid advertising to achieve meaningful volume (paying to give away for free?!), (2) there be monsters but also some very positive reviews, pot luck, and (3) them auld algorithms ain't what they used to be.
So, other channels do sell e-books? Indeed. Anyone who has run an extensive e-book giveaway (e.g. LibraryThing Early Reviewers / Member Giveaways) knows that up to 50% of reviewers will ask for an e-book format other than Kindle. My experience across ten titles is around 50% Kindle, 35% e-pub and 15% pdf.
People are not all reading Kindle, so let's go offer our masterpiece to them. What channels should we use? Of course, everyone knows about Barnes & Noble Nook, Apple iTunes, Kobo, Sony (R.I.P.), Google Play (allegedly) et al.
How do we reach those channels? Some provide direct access. NookPress is the B&N entry point (until last week only available to USA authors), iBooks / iTunes requires an Apple Mac with iTunes Producer software, WritingLife is the Kobo platform and Google play has an updated interface. All a bit complicated. Aggregators such as SmashWords, Draft2Digital and eBookPartnership have been providing free or paid access to these and more for some time. That seems like an easy solution to what is looking like too much complexity. So go choose a distribution hub you like and let them do the work. Your e-book gets placed on all channels. Happy days again.
But wait. As an independent author or micro-publisher you
might decide to update your book content. Perhaps you have back-matter links to
include to a new release, mail list etc (no, of course you didn’t find some text
edits that had been missed!) Is that book cover getting a bit dusty? Does your
blurb no longer do it for you / new readers? Another double-edged sword is the
flexibility with cover, blurb and content. It’s all too easy to blame flagging
sales on one of these product components and so things get refreshed from time
to time. Try feeding in a new cover, new blurb or new content into your channel
distribution hub, then you will find that different channels change content at
different speeds. Sometimes the cover or blurb on the product page will never
change, and with many channels you have no way of checking the content unless
it’s in the free sample, otherwise you have to buy it from that channel to
check it (and that’s not always possible if you live outside the served market).
And think again. If you want to run a price promotion across
different channels you need fast and accurate price control. Should the mighty BookBub deign to accept your request
for a $400+ advertisement, sending your title out at 99c offer price to up to
1,000,000+ readers, then your ducks need to be well and truly aligned. Amazon,
B&N, Apple and Google play sales links need to be included in the offer or
you may miss up to 50% of potential sales volume from that BookBub mailout. The
price needs to switch to and from the offer price on command, like a row of
soldiers. If not then two things might happen: (1) you will miss full price after-sales
and be stuck at 99c and / or (2) Amazon might price-match to a lower price
elsewhere and your title could stay at that low level for a while. Stress and
loss of earnings.
So what’s the prescription? Trust me, I’m a doctor. Go direct to channels wherever you can and
only include those direct fast-reacting
channels in your price promotions.
Amazon – KDP price
changes have to be made manually (we’re not talking about the KDP Select
options here, just normal KDP) and normally take effect within a couple of
hours.
Barnes & Noble – as I’m in Ireland
it’s too early to judge NookPress (they
don’t yet make payments to Ireland)
but I imagine their response time to price (and content) changes is rapid. Draft2Digital is the hub I use for
B&N and price / content control via D2D is within an hour or so.
Apple – if you don’t have a Mac then find a friend who does
and get iTunes
Producer downloaded to their machine. Then upload your content (cover,
ebook as epub, blurb) via their Mac – it’s very intuitive. Once the content is
uploaded you can then manage pricing, blurb and metadata via iTunesConnect on a PC.
iTunesConnect allows scheduling of price changes, which is very useful.
Google play - https://play.google.com/books/publish/
will take you to the Google play upload platform. It’s much easier to upload
content (cover, epub, blurb) than the previous version and allows scheduling of
price changes. Note - you might want to make your regular Google Play price $1 higher than other channels as they have a habit of price-cutting.
Kobo – Writing
Life is easy enough to use but the speed of changes isn’t good and has
caused Amazon price match problems in the past. At the moment I wouldn’t
recommend using this channel in price promotions.
Proof of the pudding? I recently managed to get a BookBub
99c promotion for my crime novel Peril.
Family events played havoc with my marketing plan and forcing me to travel out
of the country for several days that coincided with the promotion. I had already
scheduled price reductions on Google Play and iTunes for those days. KDP and
D2D were easy enough to adjust during my travels using mobile internet access.
The result, in addition to the expected flurry of Amazon sales, was around 500
paid sales across B&N, Apple and Google play, plus sales for other titles
including the sequel Getting Out of Dodge.
This compared very favourably with a promotion last year for The Baptist which generated good sales
but left that title stuck in an Amazon low price match when other channels
didn’t change as expected (see How to Throw Money Down the Toilet).
One last point. If you want to remove an e-book title from
channels for some reason - e.g. to re-enter KDP Select, to switch rights to
another publisher, to withdraw from the market – then be aware that
distribution hubs have long tendrils. The paid hubs use global distributors
such as Overdrive
and, while these give excellent market coverage, it can take a very long time (months)
to withdraw a title.
I’d like to finish this post by inviting all readers to join my
publisher’s draw for a Kindle Fire HD. This is an international
competition and closes end of April 2014.
Comments
I've been reluctant to grapple with Apple (heheh, unintentional rhyme) because they are apparently super strict about their formatting, and I don't have a Mac to use, only an iPad (a pain for publishing, I suspect). But maybe it would be worth it to borrow a Mac as you suggest.
The thing is, I really don't like to spend too much time on this stuff. I'm at an age where energy is limited and priorities really matter, so I need to reserve most of my efforts for writing. It's obviously different for other writers, and that's fine, but the minuscule sums I'd actually earn from wider distribution wouldn't make a whole lot of difference in my life.