Your reviews are great. The endorsements are fantastic.
I’ve sold over 250,000 self-published books on Amazon and as many traditionally published. However I’ve never paid more than $1,000 to promote a book.
Buying ads is a way to bring readers to a book that is getting ignored, but in my experience it’s not going to drive sales. Every book is different. I’ve serialized them in podcasts, spent day-after-day livestreaming and done everything else I could think of.
If I had to guess why it hasn’t been getting traction it might partially be the page count. 138 pages for an ebook feels steep to me. I’d also keep playing with the description. That is extremely key. I had one novel go from well-reviewed but modest-selling to a 100,000 in sales (and getting me in an Amazon press release as one of the top 10 selling indie authors that year) after I changed my cover and description to better represent the book.
Side note: The title sounds a lot like Guy Kawasaki’s Art of the Start and may confuse people. I’d hate for what sounds like a wonderful book to get looked over.
Thanks for reading and for the thoughts, Andrew! For sure I have overlooked opportunities to market the book without ads. Unfortunately, I don't know which ones. Maybe I'll try a spending freeze at some point so I can isolate what works.
Have you written about your own marketing tactics? I'd love to read them.
And thanks for the input on the title and description. Someone else on the thread had feedback on the subtitle, which I may experiment with. I didn't know myself what this book was when I put it out there, and now that my readers have helped by describing what the book is, it's time to reflect and revisit.
When you see a number that looks unreasonable based on your assumptions (how many books would he publish a day if that were accurate? What percentage of books on Amazon would he have published?), it is often useful to challenge your assumptions and ask if there is another way to frame the statement that makes more sense.
If English is not your native language, this can be subtle and catch you off-guard. I know that.
However, to "sell over 250,000 [...] books", would idiomatically be considered a number of copies, not a number of distinct titles.
Your response comes across - completely unintentionally, I presume - as a little obtuse in the "being slow to understand" sense, and if this is something you find others commenting on you might personally benefit from doing some work on it.
The author starts with 'David Kadavy is bestselling author of The Heart to Start'. I find this odd, because he only managed to sell 11,000 copies. Don't get me wrong, 11k is nothing to be ashamed and 11k more than me, but surely that does not constitute bestselling, does it?
Then I read on and 'Selling more than 11,000 copies in the first year is great (okay, 8,000 if you don’t count the 3,000 I gave away)'. Wow, so actually you sold 8,000 and not 11,000. Apart from this one line the author repeats over and over again about selling 11,000. But he didn't be sold 8,000 but constantly misrepresents that number everywhere.
I don't know if his books are great or not but the hyped headline, inflated numbers and spammy feel of the blog post make me unwilling to try it.
Thanks for reading. I'm pretty open about the fact that "bestseller" is relatively meaningless, but that I use it anyway.
Some people will say that you only have a "real" bestseller if NYT or WSJ say so. And, as described in the article, you could sell 3,000 99¢-cent ebooks in a week and be a WSJ bestseller. Well short of 11k or 8k for that matter. No guarantee you'd sell another book after that timeframe. Authors manipulate these lists all of the time. Especially NYT, which is curated.
Just about anybody can get a "bestseller" tag on Amazon. Is that somehow not a bestseller? It's an argument in semantics.
The steep marketing spend ("more than $15,000") may have something to do with the title/subtitle. Specifically, it doesn't say anything to me at least:
The Heart to Start: Win the Inner War & Let Your Art Shine
This is a book for procrastinators then? For people who doubt themselves? For the timid? Artists only? Start what?
Assuming the book is for me, it's not clear how actionable the advice it contains will be given the lack of specificity.
I would consider re-titling the book with a clear message for a specific group of people. I think it's even possible to A/B test this on Amazon, but I'm not sure.
What process did the author use to choose the title? Control-f on "title" gives no hits.
Compare this with the author's previous book, Design for Hackers. Are you a hacker? Do you need help with design? This book is for you. Sold!
Thanks for the input! I may experiment with the subtitle. I had other strategies in mind with the current one – but that was a whole year ago, and I know much more now.
In the article he basically describes how his profits were swallowed up by marketing expenses. I wish he had broken down in more detail the $50,000 in royalties from his other traditionally-published book since it was such a drastically different deal for him
"After selling more than 11,000 copies in its first year, The Heart to Start has earned a little more than $3,000 profit. That’s a barely twenty-nine cents per book.
By comparison, I’ve sold about 16,000 copies of my traditionally-published book, Design for Hackers. That has earned nearly $50,000 in royalties (plus at least twice that in related course sales)."
later:
"Here’s the basic breakdown of my earnings and expenses for the first year of The Heart to Start:
Copies sold: 11,374 (3,099 were free)
Total Royalties: $19,173.31
Fixed Production Costs: $431
Advertising: $15,422.60
Total Profit: $3,319.74
Thanks for reading and commenting. As for breaking down the $50,000, what did you have in mind? It was simply selling 16,000 copies.
I suppose I could break down every foreign rights deal and what was ebooks vs paperback, but given the reporting of my publisher, that would be like reading tea leaves. Would that be helpful in some way?
I think I’ve found your problem.
Your reviews are great. The endorsements are fantastic.
I’ve sold over 250,000 self-published books on Amazon and as many traditionally published. However I’ve never paid more than $1,000 to promote a book.
Buying ads is a way to bring readers to a book that is getting ignored, but in my experience it’s not going to drive sales. Every book is different. I’ve serialized them in podcasts, spent day-after-day livestreaming and done everything else I could think of.
If I had to guess why it hasn’t been getting traction it might partially be the page count. 138 pages for an ebook feels steep to me. I’d also keep playing with the description. That is extremely key. I had one novel go from well-reviewed but modest-selling to a 100,000 in sales (and getting me in an Amazon press release as one of the top 10 selling indie authors that year) after I changed my cover and description to better represent the book.
Side note: The title sounds a lot like Guy Kawasaki’s Art of the Start and may confuse people. I’d hate for what sounds like a wonderful book to get looked over.