The Writing Gym Retreat

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Are you having trouble finishing (or starting) your next book? If yes, I have the answer.

Hey guys, Annalisa Parent is hosting a fantastic retreat in Devon, England on May 5- 10th. There is one spot left and she is offering it to one of my authors. If you want to be that author, check out

www.datewiththemuse.com/england

You’ll write every morning in a group guided salon, lead by seasoned writing coach Annalisa Parent.

Spend 5 days and nights getting inspiration from the luxury country Manor House on the edge of Exmoor, a national park famous for its beautiful coastline and spectacular views. while enjoying home-cooked meals made from local ingredients.

Annalisa is very picky about who she works with and lets into these retreats. So it would be best if you apply from that page. She will schedule an interview with you to speak ASAP.

This is a great program and I would love to see one of you take advantage of this amazing opportunity.

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How to Transfer Your Expanded Distribution Book to Ingram Spark From CreateSpace/KindleDirectPublishing

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You went to CreateSpace or KDP and uploaded your self-published published book to them, and they offered you a free ISBN. You took them up on their offer and proceeded to upload your book so that you could be on Amazon. Okay!

But now you are thinking about bookstores and libraries and want to start getting your books in there. No problem, right? After all, you saw on Create Space (now KDP) that they could get you into bookstores and libraries all you have to do is click the “extended distribution for bookstores and libraries” button.

Not so fast! Unfortunately, when Create Space/KDP offers you bookstore and library distribution, they’re doing it by using a third-party Print on Demand company called IngramSpark. IngramSpark is the second largest POD company after KDP. They’re owned by the Ingram family in Lavergne, Tennessee (they also own Ingram Distribution and Ingram Wholesalers.) While all three of these companies are owned by the same family, they are three separate companies that do different things.

To get into bookstores and libraries (Barnes and Noble and Books-A-Million), you need to be in a wholesaler. Ingram Wholesaler is the largest book wholesaler in the US and the best one to be in. They have the furthest reach, and more bookstores and libraries use them first than any other wholesaler.

The fastest and easiest ways to get into Ingram Wholesaler is to sign your book and your publishing up with Ingram Spark. (You CAN apply to Ingram Wholesaler as a non-POD publisher, but they have VERY high standards, and most small publishers are not accepted.)

It is not only acceptable, but it is also IDEAL to have your book files up on KDP AND up at IngramSpark at the same time. I have an article explaining why here.

WHY YOU NEED BOTH INGRAMSPARK AND KDP

Ideally, you will want your book up on Amazon through KDP, but you want your book up for bookstores and libraries through IngramSpark.  To get in the Ingram wholesaler there are a number of steps you need to take.

This will allow you to get the best profit from Amazon from KDP and the best distribution options to retailers through Ingram. If you have your own Ingram Spark account, YOU set the discount, and returnability factor and YOU own your distribution decisions… not KDP.  

Ready? Here are the steps you need to take:

FIRST – You have to confirm that the ISBN you have on your book belongs to YOU. If you took an ISBN from Create Space or KDP, then you don’t own it, and you cannot take that book anywhere. (If you already have an ISBN and that you bought from Bowker or your own governmental agency you’re ahead of the game – you can skip this part…) But if you got an ISBN from Create Space or KDP, that means that they own your ISBN, and THEY own the distribution rights to that edition of your book. This is not good. I’ve written an article explaining why here:

Why You Need Your Own ISBN From Bowker

Buy your own ISBN from the proper entity. If you’re in the US, go to www.myidentifiers.com

SECOND – Sign up for an Ingram Spark account at WWW.INGRAMSPARK.COM. There’s an actual instructional videos on their site you will find helpful  Here is one here:

Once you’re all signed up for Ingram spark and they have all of your tax ID and bank information, you’re ready.

Sign into IngramSpark, give them your book information and upload the new file with the new ISBN.

THIRD (A) – FOR THOSE OF YOU WHO HAD TO PURCHASE NEW ISBNs AND ARE UPLOADING NEW EDITIONS.

Once you have your new ISBNs and you’ve registered the new edition of your book (yes, if you put a new ISBN on the book it’s a new edition) it is time to upload the new files (interior and cover) both to KDP AND to IngramSpark.

THIRD (B) – FOR THOSE OF YOU WHO GAVE CREATE SPACE or KDP EXTENDED DISTRIBUTION:

Your ISBN is in KDPs IngramSpark account and needs to be released from them before you can proceed to claim the book at IngramSpark.

This is how to get KDP to release your title and allow you to claim it at IngramSpark:

Sign into your KDP account and go to the distribution tab. Uncheck extended distribution to bookstores and libraries. You need to uncheck that button telling KDP that you no longer give them permission to offer your book through their IngramSpark account.

Next, send KDP an email through the customer service contact portal telling them that you have unchecked permission and asking them to release your book from their IngramSpark account.

Next, fill out the form found on THIS page: 

http://help.ingramspark.com/hc/en-us/articles/211155403-Title-Transfers 

Then email the form and the ISBNs and titles of your books to: ingramsparksupport@ingramcontent.com 

Wait for 5 to 7 business days to hear back from KDP and IngramSpark that KDP has released your ISBN from their Ingram Spark account and hear from Ingram Spark that they have accepted your title transfer.

Once you have completed the third steps (A or B), you will confirmation emails letting you know that you are all set.  Log into IngramSpark, and you should see your title in your dashboard.

For those that are worried about losing existing Amazon reviews on their KDP listing…  once your new edition is up on Amazon, you CAN get your reviews from the old edition up on your new edition.  You have to go through your Author Central account and call the author central customer service group.  (yes, they still have a phone number!) Just ask them to duplicate the reviews onto your new ISBN edition.

Hope that helps!

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Has Amazon Gone Too Far?

Amazon Published Books Are Taking Over Amazon Marketing

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By Keri Rae Barnum

For years Amazon has been known for their self-publishing platforms, Create Space and Kindle Direct Publishing. When Create Space first broke into the publishing scene, indie authors were elated, and Amazon was celebrated as the friend of indie authors everywhere. However, times have changed, and we are no longer sure we can trust Amazon as an unbiased platform for authors.

In 2000 Amazon created their first self-publishing platform, Create Space from the seeds of Book Surge. Under this name they grew and practically became synonymous with the words “Indie Publishing.” Authors that once had to fight agents and publishing houses for a voice in the book industry suddenly had the ability to publish their own titles on a platform that catered to indie authors, publishers, and small press.

Amazon knew a good thing when they saw it and cultivated this arm of their business. As eBooks expanded, so did Amazon’s publishing platform and in November 2007, KDP (Kindle Direct Publishing) was launched. While Amazon has since merged Create Space and KDP into one company, KDP was originally a platform that catered specifically to eBooks. Requiring the use of specifically formatted files and pairing with their own (Kindle) devices, Amazon aggressively went after the eBook market, carving out a nice chunk for themselves. Always looking to go bigger, Amazon Publishing began in 2009 and, in the last ten years, has grown to include 16 publishing imprints specializing in everything from children’s and teen books (Two Lions and Skyscape) to romance (Montlake Romance).

Today, Amazon Publishing is listed as one of the top publishers in the United States, and we can all guess where they have garnered the majority of their sales. This begs the question: has Amazon crossed the ethics barrier by not only publishing books, but also boosting the success of their own titles with insider information and biased marketing practices on Amazon.com?

It may sound like a crazy theory, but we aren’t the only ones asking. In a recently published article, “The Wall Street Journal” addresses this very issue. Taking our cue from them, we decided to investigate our theory a bit more.

A search of the Amazon bestsellers pages revealed a list laden with books from Amazon’s own imprints. In fact, a gander at Amazon’s Romance Best Seller list showed no less than half of the top 8 books were published by one of Amazon’s imprints.

Take a look at the picture below taken on March 7, 2019. Note the titles circled in red as those published by one of Amazon’s imprints.

On the same day, we visited the Mystery, Thriller and Suspense Best Seller list. Again, four of the top 8 books were published by an Amazon imprint.

Seeing that at least half of the books on the Best Seller lists in the above categories were comprised of Amazon imprint books, we began to wonder. Are these books really that good? Or, is Amazon using insider knowledge to push their own books above the thousands of authors who trust and invest in Amazon’s self-publishing platforms and marketing tools?

As arguably one of the largest sales outlets in the world, Amazon has reams of data on buyer trends, as well as what marketing keywords and ads results in clicks and sales. Amazon says its marketing and retail programs don’t give its books an unfair advantage. However, we at New Shelves are questioning the honesty of that statement.

Have a look at the sponsored products listed on the sales page for #1 Best Seller Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owen.

Three of the titles that won ad space from Amazon Marketing are Amazon imprint books. By pitting their own titles against those not published by Amazon in sponsored (paid) Amazon ads, Amazon is effectively inflating the cost of advertising for those without insider knowledge. This system also works to push Amazon imprint books to the top of the proverbial pile.

Our friends over at ALLi (Alliance of Independent Authors) noted the rising cost of Amazon Ads last September. Now authors and publishers are lamenting that not only have marketing cost risen but impressions are way down. For those of you that don’t know, an impression is when your ad is on the screen (computer, tablet, phone, etc.) of an Amazon customer. This comes at the same time as reports of Amazon making deals with big publishers for ad space.

If a savvy marketer cannot even get their book seen by using Amazon Marketing with a healthy budget, how can they possibly hope to sell books?

We fear that Amazon’s greed has gotten the best of them and indie authors are slowly losing purchase on a once celebrated platform.

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Make Your Book Easier to Find Online

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They Can’t Buy Your Book If They Can’t FIND Your Book….

Setting up your book’s listing on Amazon and your Author Central page is kind of like getting your house ready for a Christmas party.  First, you have to make sure that your house is in good shape.  You have to make sure that everything is clean, and put away, and everything is set up.  Now, once your page is set up perfectly, the way you want it to be, then it’s time to start reaching out and driving more people to that page.  That happens by making your book easier to find.

The fact of the matter is that Amazon.com is the second largest, and second most-powerful, search engine in the world, after Google.  So, Google.com is the largest and most powerful search engine in the world.  Most of us already know that, but many people don’t realize Amazon.com’s search engine takes second place.  If you treat Amazon the same way that you treat Google when it comes to search engine optimization (SEO), and ranking, and searchability, you will not be sorry.  There are a lot of benefits to that.

So, how does ranking work?  Ranking works in a number of ways.  It starts by being a reflection of how your book is doing.  A number of my clients and students have come to me, and they’ve asked for tips and tricks on how to improve their ranking.  I say to them, “Who cares?”  Your ranking isn’t something that affects sales.  Your book’s ranking is simply a reflection of how the tools you are using to increase your sales are doing.  However, your ranking will improve when more people are looking at your book, more people are clicking on your book, and more people are putting it in their shopping cart.

Your ranking will also go up as more people purchase your book, and even if more people just mention your book, either in the reviews or on Amazon’s discussion forums.  There are a lot of different ways that your book’s ranking could be affected.  Let’s say that your mother, your sister, and your best friend all buy your book.  Of course, they would all need to have different last names than your own.  If your reviews come from people with the same last name as you, Amazon isn’t going to pay much attention. 

Alternatively, if I get people with three different last names, who aren’t so obviously connected to me, and they all three write a review for me on the same day, my book’s ranking is going to go through the roof.  Don’t get too tied into the rankings.  They don’t always mean that your sales are increasing.  What a good ranking will do is help you to gauge how your marketing efforts on Amazon are going.  That’s why a book’s ranking, in my opinion, is so important.  It’s nothing that you want to lean your shoulder against, though.

The secret to better ranking and showing up at the top of the search results used to be getting preorders.  Let’s say that you have a new book coming out in March, and by mid-January, you have your book up on Amazon, and you even have your eBook up as well as your print version.  You are going through your preorders, and you’ve got hundreds of people to preorder the book.  That way, on March 3rd, when your book goes live, your book shoots to the top of the search engine results, and it becomes #1 in its category.  That’s how it worked for quite a while.

Amazon doesn’t play into that so much anymore.  There are new algorithms and rules in place.  Nowadays, if you want to be #1 in your category, and you want to show up at the top of the search engine rankings for your category, you need to be a little subtler.  What you need to have, now, is constant and consistent sales over a 30-day period.

So, let’s say your book is coming out on March 3rd, like in the previous example.  What I’d recommend is that from March 3rd to April 5th, you begin promoting your book and getting organic sales.  You can get people, such as clients, friends, and family members to buy your book and leave you an honest review during this period of time, which will help drive your rankings and your sales further, but you can also promote through your blog, or website, or through other strategies.  The point is to have consistent and constant sales over a 30-day period of time, and then this must be followed by a strong surge of sales.

If you really want to drive your rankings, the easiest and best ways to do it in the past was through preorders.  Those days are over.  Now the best thing to do is to hold off and ask people to order your book on a particular day or within a 48-hour period a month or two after your book is launched.  The reason is that now Amazon.com factors rankings by taking all of the sales made over the last 30 days, spread them out, and divide by 30.  So, if you had no sales for 29 days, and then you sold 200 copies on the 30th day, you will only get the same ranking as someone who sold about 7 books a day over the last 30 days.  That’s how it works now.

Now, if you are looking to get preorders just to get people excited about your book, that’s great.  But, if you are using this as a strategy to grow your ranking or become a bestseller on Amazon, I want you to be aware that the new algorithms that are in place will thwart you, unless you understand how to play.  Another aspect of this that I want to mention is that the growing number of reviews you get from month to month will do more to increase and hold your ranking than anything else.

Amazon cares about organic, honest reviews, and if you have a bestseller ranking (BSR) of 16,000 for your category, and you don’t get any new reviews for two months, your ranking will sink.  It doesn’t matter how many tricks you pulled.  If you can get a constant flow of reviews, even just one or two a week, or at least, you don’t let too much time pass between reviews being posted, your book’s ranking will improve week by week.

Keywords!

One of the places you might use keywords is within your author biography.  There are other places you’ll want to use them, which I will touch upon in a moment.  For now, I’m going to tell you about my three favorite websites that I use to find keywords.  You see, I might think that “book expert” is the best keyword out there, but the truth is that I found out differently when I went to Kendlepreneur.com, Yasiv.com, and used the Google AdWords tool.

All three of these tools are very powerful.  They all gave me keywords that I thought would be crazy to use.  Guess what the #1 and #2 most purchased keyword that worked for me were.  They were “books on books” and “bird on bird”.  I never would have chosen those.  I advise that you use all three of these sites.  They are each going to give you a very long list of authors, titles, and phrases that you can use in your keyword work. 

Once you’ve found your best keywords, get them into your bio and your book description.  My book description contains the questions, “Have you written a book,” “Are you thinking about writing a book,” and, “Have you heard that it’s easy to self-publish?”  Do you think that these questions just came out of thin air?  No, those were generated from the keywords that I found using the keyword tools that I’m recommending to you today.

There are other places that you can use keywords, other than just your book description and your bio.  You can also seed them in your Author Central page and in your blog names.  Let’s say that one of the suggested keywords that I have found is “book sales funnel” or “book expert”.  Can you guess what my next blog is going to be called?  It’s going to be called “Book Sales Funnel” because that blog name is going to show up on my Author Central page.

If I use these keyword generators, and I find out that my biggest competitors and comp-title authors are Joel Friedlander, Jane Friedman, and Frances Caballo.  You can bet that I’m going to put those books and those authors in a Wishlist so that my book and their books are intimately linked in Amazon’s algorithm.  There’s one last thing that I advise you do, concerning keywords.  If you have friends, loved one, and cohorts that are going to write a book for you anyway, you can actually seed reviewers and reviews with certain keywords.

Let’s say that a student of yours has decided to write a review for your book. You can ask them to mention somewhere in your review that you are a book expert.  Ask them to use the specific phrase “book expert,” if they feel comfortable doing so and if they feel that the term really does fit you.  Of course, “book expert” is just an example.  You’d want to ask them to include a keyword that you feel fit you, and be sure that they know to use it only if they feel it fits you too, but if they could do this for you, then that’s yet another place that you can add a keyword that would help your listing thrive.

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How To Get the Best Amazon Page You Can

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When I teach classes on “Amazon Rules, Tips & Sales Success!,” the subtitle of this presentation is, “Yes, it is Possible and Yes, You Can Do This…”  I love this subtitle because it’s absolutely true.  I know that it can be confusing to try to sell your books on Amazon, and the hardest part is that everything about the retailer and its sites is constantly changing.  So, once you feel like you’ve almost got it down, suddenly there’s more to learn.

Your Book’s Page on Amazon

One of the first things that people ask me when they put their books up on Amazon is about the “Look Inside” feature.  People want to know if they can choose the pages that are shown or if they have to take whatever they can get.  Unfortunately, you can’t designate this.  Their computer chooses what’s shown.  There’s no human being who flips through your book to decide which 11 pages are best to show.  It’s a computer bot that makes that call, and you may notice that they switch it up.  Every couple of months, it’s a different set of pages that are shown inside.

While the “Look Inside” feature isn’t something that you can choose, it’s incredibly important.  The reason why this feature is so crucial to you and your marketing is because people have learned to browse books online.  They have been trained to do so, essentially.  If you had asked me if that was possible prior to Amazon’s existence, I would have bet money that there was no way that such a huge chunk of the American population would be trained to browse online for new books and new authors.  I would have insisted that they needed to visit bookstores and libraries, but that’s just not the case anymore.

The “Look Inside,” feature gives all of those Millennials, and others who are fine browsing books online, a chance to flip through and sneak a peak to help ensure that what they are browsing is really what they want to buy.  

Amazon Prime and Pricing

Another critical aspect of your book’s page is that it shows whether or not your book is available through Amazon Prime.  I always make sure that my book shows to be a part of that program because Prime members can get the book within two days without having to pay for shipping, and if they want it delivered in just one day, it only costs $3.99 for that quick delivery.

Amazon Prime has become a very important program in the Amazon marketplace, and there’s even an option on some of the pages that people can click if they only want to see books that qualify for Prime.  I can’t think of any reason why you shouldn’t make your book available through Amazon Prime, so I’m going to say that you should always make sure it is available as part of that program.  Your book’s page should always include the “Look Inside” feature as well.

One more aspect of your book’s page that I want to point out is that Amazon allows you to show your book as discounted.  On one of my pages, for instance, it shows that the retail price of my book is $16, but this price is struck through on the page, and the discounted price shows to be $12.49.  When Amazon decides to discount a book, it’s usually because the book is doing so well that they are trying to draw more sales. 

So, if my book, The Write Way, were doing very well one particular week, like it was selling a couple of copies an hour, Amazon would dramatically discount the book.  That’s because they would want to encourage shoppers, or potential purchasers, to buy from them.  They don’t want people buying the book from Barnes & Noble, or IndieBound, or any other book retailer. They want people to buy from them.  This is another feature that’s taken care of by a computer bot.  There’s no human being sitting there, with his finger on his cheek, going, “Hmm… Amy’s book is doing really well.”

Another reason why books will sometimes get discounted is when a relevant topic is doing well.  Let’s say, for example, that Dateline NBC ran a story on Wikipedia, and suddenly there was a slew of books being purchased on that topic.  Well, if you had written a book on that topic, your book would probably be discounted by Amazon while this craze was occurring.  Rest assured that the discount isn’t coming out of your cut.

If you sell your book through KDP, through IngramSpark, or directly through an Advantage or Seller Central program, the amount of money that Amazon has contracted to give you does not change.  It doesn’t matter how deep the discount is.  So, if they discounted my book $3.51, that amount comes from their cut.  They’ve decided that they are going to take that cut out.  I would still get paid the same amount of money for each sale that’s made from my book.  Hopefully, that makes sense.

About Author Central

Having your page fully flushed-out with a great description and a good bio is important.  You may be asking, “How can I get the best bio and the best look?”  That brings me to my next suggestion for Amazon.  Do you currently have an Author Central page?  I hope that the answer is “yes”.  If not, you should go to Author Central (http://authorcentral.amazon.com) and build your page.  I have set up my bio, complete with a picture of myself and a list of the books that I have published.  My bio is also full of search engine terms and keywords that people might be using in their searches.

I use keyword terms like, “book expert,” “book sales,” and “book marketing,” in my bio.  I try to use as many keywords as I can that people may be using in their searches on Amazon because I want them to find my Author Central page and my books.  Aside from my bio, my books, and my picture, I have included a link to my blog posts on my Author Central page.  Every time I add a new blog post, it shows up on my Author Central page.

I recommend that after you’ve taken a hard look at your Amazon book’s page, you then go to your Author Central page and make sure that you have taken advantage of all of the different elements that Amazon offers.  This includes Twitter feeds, blog feeds, your biography, your bibliography, and video.  All of this can be added.

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What You Need to Know About Amazon Ads

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Here at New Shelves we spent November and December running over 300 Amazon ads for authors and their books.

We learned SO MUCH!

Here are some of the things we learned:

  • Authors who advertise 1-2 titles with keywords get A LOT more sales than authors that promote more than 3 titles at a time.
  • Amazon reports that the average click rate vs. impressions for all ads is 33%. But the click vs. impressions for BOOKS is just over 6%.
  • Our non-fiction authors achieved a 24% click rate on average
  • Our fiction authors achieved a 9% click rate on average
  • We learned that the more specific a book topic was, the higher the sales
  • Fiction titles that were general fiction (or women’s fiction) did not sell ANYWHERE NEAR as many copies as the titles that were in a specific genre such as thriller, mystery, etc…)
  • Non-fiction titles that were general inspiration or general in topic did not sell anywhere near as many copies as the titles that were more specific in focus (divorce, parenting, diet)
  • It is VITAL to run several ads for the same titles at the same time to optimize your ad dollars and get a higher rate of sales.
  • The exception to this revelation was ROMANCE. Romance titles had a lower than average click to impressions rate (5%) and a MUCH lower sales rate than ANY other genre we advertised. (We are theorizing that there are SO many free and low-cost romance titles that romance shoppers are harder to convince to purchase regularly priced books)

So there are the things we learned. We are going to run another set of ads with these facts and knowledge for another set of authors and titles. We will let you know how it goes!

If you want to sign up for our February ad campaigns, we are taking 25 authors for February. Click below to learn more:

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Jan 18-20 San Diego – Author Millionaire Weekend with Steve Harrison, Jack Canfield and Amy Collins

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I am so proud to be talking about libraries and bookstores and the publishing world in San Diego later this month. Greg Jacobson is hosting an event called 

“Author Millionaire Weekend Live”

You’re Just One Published Book Away…

DATE: January 18th-20th, 2019
Time:
Registration is January 18th at 6:00 p.m.
Doors are January 19th at 8:00 a.m.
At this non-fiction authors only marketing summit you will implement strategies to immediately boost book sales numbers to become a bestseller.
You can get strategies you can apply right away, gain valuable connections with other Author Millionaires, and even participate in intimate roundtable Q&As with some of the worlds greatest experts!
If you are in the San Diego area, I would love to see you there. Make sure you drop me a line and we can set up a time to connect while I am out there!
Looking forward to seeing YOU at “Author Millionaire Weekend Live”!

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2019 Book Fair List

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Here is a list of the biggest book fairs in the world and links to information for them for 2019.  Enjoy!

JANUARY 2019

New Delhi World Book Fair, India
6 – 14 January

International Kolkata Book Fair, India
30 January – 10 February

Jaipur Literature Festival, India
24 – 28 January

Festival International de la Bande Dessinée, Angoulême, France
24 – 27 January

Cairo Book Fair, Egypt
24 January – 5 February

FEBRUARY 2019

Lahore International Book Fair, Pakistan
1 – 5 February

Casablanca Book Fair, Morocco
7 – 17 February

Feria Internacional del Libro de La Habana, Cuba
8 – 15 February

Taipei International Book Exhibition, Taiwan
12 – 17 February

Perth International Arts Festival, Australia
8 February – 3 March

Brussels Book Fair, Belgium
14 – 17 February

Vilnius International Book Fair, Lithuania
21 – 24 February

 

MARCH 2019

Riga Book Fair, Latvia
1 – 3 March

Emirates Airline Festival of Literature, Dubai, UAE
1 – 9 March

Tempo di Libri, Milan, Italy
dates TBC

London Book Fair, UK
12 – 14 March

Paris Book Fair, France
15 – 18 March

Leipzig Book Fair, Germany
21 – 24 March

Alexandrina International Book Fair, Egypt
25 March – 7 April

Bangkok International Book Fair, Thailand
dates TBC

APRIL 2019

Bologna Children’s Book Fair, Italy
1 – 4 April

Quebec International Book Fair, Canada
10 – 14 April

Bogota International Book Fair, Colombia
23 April – 7 May

Budapest International Book Festival, Hungary
25 – 28 April

Santiago Book Fair, Chile
18 – 29 April

Sant Jordi Festival, Barcelona, Spain
23 April

Geneva Book and Press Fair, Switzerland
1 – 5 May

Buenos Aires Book Fair, Argentina
25 April – 13 May

Eurasian International Book Fair, Astana, Kazakhstan
dates TBC

Abu Dhabi International Book Fair, UAE
24 – 30 April

 

MAY 2019 

Thessaloniki Book Fair, Greece
TBC

Strokestown International Poetry Festival, Ireland
2 – 6 May

Teheran International Book Fair, Iran
TBC

Istanbul Tanpinar Literature Festival, Turkey
TBC

Prague International Book Fair, Czech Republic
9 – 12 May

Jerusalem International Book Fair, Israel
12 – 15 May

Turin International Book Fair, Italy
14 – 18 May

Warsaw International Book Fair, Poland
23 – 26 May

Hay Festival, Wales
23 May – 2 June

Madrid Book Fair, Spain
31 May – 16 June

Lisbon Book Fair, Portugal
TBC

BookExpo America, New York, USA
30 May – 1 June

New York Rights Fair, New York, USA
29 – 31 May

Bookfest, Bucharest, Romania
TBC

Tbilisi International Book Fair, Georgia
TBC

JUNE 2019

Seoul International Book Fair, Korea
19 – 23 June

Venezuela International Book Fair, Venezuela
TBC

Lit Link Festival, Croatia
TBC

JULY 2019

Hong Kong Book Fair, China
17 – 23 July

Comic-Con International, San Diego, USA
18 – 21 July

Paraty International Literary Festival (FLIP), Brazil
10 – 14 July

International Book Fair of Lima, Peru
TBC

 

AUGUST 2019

Beijing International Book Fair, China
TBC

Melbourne Writers Festival, Australia
TBC

Ghana International Book Fair, Accra, Ghana
TBC

SEPTEMBER 2019

Moscow International Book Fair, Russia
4 – 8 September

South African Book Fair, Johannesburg, South Africa
TBC

Indonesia International Book Fair, Indonesia
TBC

Lviv International Book and Literature Festival, Ukraine
TBC

Bloody Scotland, Stirling, UK
20 – 22 September

Nairobi International Book Fair, Kenya
TBC

Amman International Book Fair, Amman, Jordan
TBC

Göteborg Book Fair, Sweden
26 – 29 September

Baku Book Fair, Azerbaijan
TBC

OCTOBER 2019

LIBER International Book Fair, Barcelona, Spain
TBC

Frankfurt Book Fair, Germany
16 – 20 October

International Belgrade Book Fair, Serbia
TBC

Krakow International Book Fair, Poland
TBC

Antwerp Book Fair, Belgium
TBC

Helsinki Book Fair, Finland
24 – 27 October

 

NOVEMBER 2019

Sharjah International Book Fair, UAE
TBC

Krasnoyarsk Book Culture Fair, Russia
TBC

Bibliotéka Bratislava, Slovakia
TBC

Vienna International Book Fair, Austria
6 – 10 November

Malta Book Festival, Valletta, Malta
TBC

Shanghai International Children’s Book Fair, China
TBC

International Children and Young Adults Book Fair (FILIJ), Mexico
TBC

Istanbul Book Fair, Turkey
TBC

Interliber, Zagreb, Croatia
TBC

Salon du livre de Montréal, Canada
TBC

Dublin Book Festival, Ireland
TBC

Gaudeamus Book Fair, Bucharest
dates TBC

Slovenian Book Fair, Ljubljana, Slovenia
TBC

FIL de Guadalajara, Mexico
TBC

Moscow Non/Fiction Book Fair, Russia
TBC

Pula Festival of Books and Authors, Croatia
TBC

 

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When Should You Pay For a Review?

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A lot of small press, Print-on-Demand, and self-published authors want to know where is the best place to get their books reviewed.  The answers range from the biggies (USA TODAY, PW, KIRKUS, FOREWORD, PEOPLE, and major newspapers such as NY TIMES) to the not so big (reader blogs, online retail sites such as Amazon, Midwest Book review, local papers).

 

My first question is: “Do reviews help sales?”

YES!  Yes they do.

My  next question is: “When should an author pay for a review?”

Never. Ever. Nope. Nada. Don’t. Just stop there.

If you truly want to be taken seriously by the major names in book reviews, then print some Advance Copies 4 months before the publication date of your book and send them out under your publisher name with a well-written cover letter, a press release, a marketing plan and a fully fleshed out list of sales and PR activities scheduled.  This will give you the bare minimum introduction to the reviewers and give you a CHANCE at a review from one of the biggies.

If you cannot see yourself giving the book the three to four month window that the major reviewers require, then you are choosing to forgo the chance of those reviews.  As a small press owner, be aware that getting reviewed by these folks is about as likely as winning the lottery.  If you choose to skip them, it is very similar to deciding not to buy that $400 Million Powerball ticket.

In the last year, I have had self-published, single-title authors reviewed by Publisher’s Weekly, the Wall-Street Journal and Fast Company.  These are HUGE names and the reviews drove sales.  (even the negative ones…)  But these author/publishers were in the teeeeeeeeny minority. They won the lottery.

Where does the money come in?  Foreword, Kirkus, and Publisher’s Weekly all offer small press/Print on Demand authors a chance to get a review by paying for a listing or review in their “small press” divisions.  These are valid and worthy divisions of good companies.

A reviewer’s time is valuable.  It is coin and worth a great deal.  I am not saying that they SHOULD NOT charge for their time… I am saying that you should not PAY for it.

If your book is worthy of a reviewer’s time, they will offer it.  If you follow a reviewer’s submission guidelines and respect their process, you will have a chance at getting some of their valuable time in the form of a review.

I can understand why some companies would charge for a review, but I am here to tell you that the bookstores, retail buyers and librarians who use reviews to make decisions KNOW WHICH REVIEWS WERE PAID FOR. (and they disregard those reviews almost entirely)

AND, none of these “pay for consideration” divisions offer a GOOD review for money, just a chance to be reviewed.

Kirkus gives straightforward reviews to both paid and non paid submissions.  (They are known for being honest to the point of brutal…)

Publisher’s Weekly does not guarantee a review for their small-press listing fee, they just offer a better chance at a review in their small press quarterly.

This business model is not like the “fast pass” on the highway or at an amusement park.  You are not paying to get bumped to the head of the line.  You are exchanging your money for a review you would not likely get otherwise.  Buyers and Librarians know this.

Get the review the proper way, or don’t bother.

As a former book buyer and as a current soldier on the front lines of the retail battlefield, I can tell you that numerous, positive, proper reviews from smaller venues help more than a paid for consideration from a bigger name.

Those that know the Kirkus name will know if you paid for the review and those that don’t know the Kirkus name won’t be impressed by the review. SO WHY pay for it?

If you are having trouble finding the submission guidelines for some of the top book reviewers in the publishing industry, HERE THEY ARE!  We went through each venue and found the right page to get you to the details for review submission so that you can avoid paying big buck for review services.

Publishers Weekly, Library Journal, NYT, The REAL Kirkus and Foreword Magazine….  we have them all.  Just download the document from the link below and you are all set.  It’s on us!

 

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Amazon Keywords. Automatic Targeting vs Choosing Your Own

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by Keri-Rae Barnum, New Shelves Marketing Manager

A few weeks ago I conducted an experiment. I set up two Amazon sponsored ads to run side by side. One ad I chose Automatic Targeting and trusted AMS to choose my keywords and audience for me. The second ad I set up using a list of keywords I had pulled myself. When I say I used a “list of keywords,” I do not mean 20 keywords or even 200. AMS allows us to enter in 1000 keywords per sponsored ad. And, knowing that every single one of those keywords is an opportunity for exposure, clicks and, ultimately sales, I always fill the keyword bank to the max. Aside from this small thing, both ads were identical. The same titles were selected to advertise, both ads ran for three days and started at the same time.

Keeping in mind that Amazon ad reports are not fully accurate for 14 days after the ad runs, I allowed some time to pass before checking in. I was absolutely blown away by the results.

Impressions: The ad Amazon targeted for me had 31,000 impressions. Sounds impressive, right? That is, it did sound impressive until I looked at the results for the ad using my own keywords which had over 412,000 impressions. That means the ad I targeted with my own list of keywords was seen on potential customer’s screens 13x as many times as the ad Amazon targeted for me. Guys, if readers don’t see your ad – and therefore your book- they certainly aren’t buying it!

Clicks: Amazon’s automatic targeting got me 26 clicks.  My ad got me 151 clicks.

ROI: Amazon’s automatic targeting cost me $7 and sold $23 worth of books. To simplify, I made $14 more than I spent. The ad I ran using my own list of 1,000 keywords cost $44 and sold $105 worth of books. I ended up with $61 more than I spent and got HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS of eyes on my book over the course of three days.

Lets recap: the sponsored ad using my own bank of 1,000 keywords ended with 13x the impressions, almost 6x the clicks and $82 more in sales than the AMS Automatically Targeted ad. I think it’s pretty clear that choosing manual targeting with your own bank of keywords is the clear winner here.

Since keywords are obviously key to the success of my sponsored ad, let’s talk about them. As I mentioned above, it is important to create each ad with a full bank of 1,000 keywords. Not just any ol’ keywords will do, though. You need a carefully curated list of keywords specifically pulled with your book in mind. In fact, I collect a minimum of 3,000 keywords before I begin running my ads. Starting with a large bank of keywords allows me to run multiple ads and pull the best performing keywords together for a final, optimized list of 1,000 that I can use over and over again to create profitable ad listings.

There are free places to find great keywords and comparative titles such as Yasiv.com; however, here at New Shelves, we also have a number of paid subscriptions to include KDP Rocket and TwinWords. These specialized programs allow us to pull keywords based on real-life Amazon searches and algorithms. When creating our keyword lists we search for three things: comparative authors, similar books and like-minded audiences.

“Like-minded audiences” seem to trip a lot of people up. “What in the heck does ‘like-minded audiences’ mean?” you may be asking yourself.  Let me explain. Fred Stuvek’s self-help book It Starts With You is vastly different than Rachel Hollis’ Girls Wash Your Face. However, readers who enjoyed Girl Wash Your Face because they were looking for straight talk and the motivation to dream big would probably also enjoy the motivation and goal setting skills Stuvek teaches in his book. Like-minded audiences are those who are interested in your overall themes rather than audiences already in your target market.

Sound overwhelming? Let us help you!

 

 

 

 

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