Wednesday, October 31

Amazon's book recommendations increasingly plagued by brain farts

I'm a big fan of Amazon's book recommendations. I buy at least a couple of new books every month based on an Amazon recommendation. And I know darned well that Amazon's recommendations sell a ton of the books I've authored on book marketing and bookselling.

In the past six months, though, I've been getting some truly bizarre recommendations for books from authors I've never heard of and topics I never buy.

It's not just me. Here's a forwarded e-mail I just received from an Amazon customer who bought one of my bookselling books. If Amazon continues sending out junk like this ...
We've noticed that customers who have purchased or rated books by Steve Weber have also purchased Stand Up for Alabama: Governor George C. Wallace (Modern South) by Jeffrey Frederick. For this reason, you might like to know that Stand Up for Alabama: Governor George C. Wallace (Modern South) will be released on November 11, 2007. You can pre-order yours by following the link below.

Stand Up for Alabama: Governor George C. Wallace (Modern South)
Jeffrey Frederick
Price:$47.50

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Monday, October 29

Sell more books on Amazon.com

By Cathy Stucker

Why Should Your Book Be on Amazon.com?

Credibility. If your book is important, it should be available at the world’s biggest book store.

Visibility. People (including members of the media) will find your book and learn about you through your appearance on Amazon. (That’s how I got into Woman’s Day magazine.)

Money. You will sell books you wouldn’t have sold otherwise. Many buyers won’t buy from your Web site or other sources, but will buy at Amazon. And, Amazon pays like clockwork.

Get Your Book Listed on Amazon.com
Your publisher or distributor will handle getting your book into the Amazon catalog. If you are self-published and don’t have a distributor, join Amazon Advantage at http://www.Amazon.com/advantage

To participate in Advantage, you must have distribution rights, and your book must have a scannable barcode of the ISBN.

Amazon Marketplace
Once your book is listed, you can also sell it directly to consumers through Amazon Marketplace. You will find more information about this on the Advantage information page listed above.

Amazon Associates
Once your book is listed on Amazon, join the Associates program http://www.Amazon.com/associates

As an Associate, you get a commission on book sales referred from your Web site. Why send people to Amazon from your Web site? Some people won’t buy from you. They don’t know you and they don’t trust you. But they do trust Amazon. Or, maybe they want to qualify for free shipping.

Enhance Your Book’s Detail Page
Add cover art, book description, editorial reviews, table of contents, excerpts, author information and more. Make your book’s listing just as complete and impressive as the latest from Stephen King, John Grisham and other major authors. For more information, see Bookseller Services at http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/catalog-guide/guide/-/372286/ or log in to your Advantage account. Amazon will generally not allow URLs in your content, so don't try to slip your Web site in.

Search Inside the Book
This is controversial, but many publishers say they sell more books as a result of SITB. My sales seemed to go up after my book was in. You send Amazon a copy of your book, they scan it and make the entire book searchable. It increases the chances your book will come up during searches on the Amazon.com web site. You’ll find information on the Advantage page.

Use the tools Amazon.com provides to bring book buyers to your page and sell more books.

Copyright Cathy Stucker. As the IdeaLady, Cathy Stucker helps authors, entrepreneurs and professionals attract customers and make themselves famous. To learn more about publishing and get free marketing tips, visit Cathy at http://www.IdeaLady.com/

Cathy Stucker - EzineArticles Expert Author
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Wednesday, October 17

Q&A: Should I print Advance Review Copies of my book?

QUESTION: I want to submit Advance Review Copies (ARCs) of an upcoming book to the review journals such as Publishers Weekly and Library Journal. Soon I'll have copies of the finished book, but I don't have any copies marked "ARC."

I've gotten quotes for printing ARCs, and the cost seems astronomical. Is this really necessary? One self-published author told me you can submit finished copies of the book with a cover sticker indicating it's an ARC.

Is a sticker good enough? I really need the big reviewers to mention this book, and I can't take a chance that they will refuse the book because of the sticker.


ANSWER: A sticker might work, and it might not. Just consider the way things works at the review journals: Envelopes containing review copies are opened by low-level employees, perhaps unpaid interns. They're inundated with books, most of them unacceptable. So they're looking for any reason to reject as many books as possible, as quickly as possible. They've probably all been told contradictory or arbitrary things. If it's not from a "trade" publisher, it goes in the trash ... if it's not four months before publication, it goes in the trash. These young people don't have the time to consider the books on their merits. And besides, most of them wouldn't know a great book if it fell on their head.

So follow the submission guidelines as closely as possible. Otherwise you're gambling unnecessarily. If the ARC sticker looks good, then the book might avoid the trash heap at three out of four places, but ultimately not selected for review by any of those three. And perhaps the one publication where the book was tossed was the one place where it might have been reviewed. You'd never know.

One option is to keep your costs down by using print on demand for your ARCs for trade publications like Booklist, Kirkus, Publishers Weekly and Library Journal. You could probably get by with the ARC stickers for postpublication reviews at newspapers, magazines, etc., where there the submission guidelines aren't set in stone. Also, in these situations, the package would likely be opened personally by the reviewer or columnist, who would make an informed decision on whether to review the book.

You're right, a prominent review can make all the difference. On the other hand, the chances of any book getting reviewed aren't too great, and increasingly, trade reviews have less and less bearing on which books really succeed in the marketplace.
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Tuesday, October 16

Q&A: How much will it cost to market my self-published book?

QUESTION: My self-published book will be available soon. How much should I plan to spend on marketing? Are there any free or low-cost ways to market my book?

ANSWER: Keep your marketing budget as close to zero as possible.

“Free” and very low-cost Internet publicity is much more effective than paid advertising when it comes to books and online marketing in particular. We're talking about publicity, not advertising.

When people discover your content organically (through search results, social networking, etc.) they tend to be much more involved with your content and more likely to buy your book. With my own books, I have tested the performance of many different banner advertisements and Google and Yahoo pay-per-click ads. They are not sufficiently cost-effective, and it's easy to spend $50 in ads to sell at $15 book. You’re paying $1 or $2 per visitor, and the people leave your site within a few seconds. By contrast, the people who befriend you on MySpace or discover your blog are much more likely to stay on your site longer, consume more content, and buy your book. So the “free” route results in real word of mouth and, of course, the price is unbeatable.

So, what specific techniques do I recommend?

1. Writing a blog or maintaining a Web site where you post updated material at least once a week. Often people need to be exposed to a book title five or six times before they decide to buy. Readers can get comfortable with you at your Web site.

2. Participating in social networks such as MySpace, Facebook or Gather.com. Connect with some like-minded friends and they will help spread the word about you. You can also start your own social network using a service like Ning.com.

3. Recruit book reviewers (professional and amateur) to review your book on Amazon.com. The share of books sold online is growing, and many consumers who buy in local bookstores make their purchasing decisions online – with the help of Amazon reviews.
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Monday, October 15

Online video seen as the future of book marketing

Here's an online video that does a pretty good job of selling a book. In this case, Tim Sykes is pitching his book An American Hedge Fund to Amazon shoppers.

At first glance, you might be skeptical of this book -- or any other book that promises a ton of money. But seeing a pitch directly from the author adds credibility. If I were shopping for a book like this and trying to choose between this one and a competing book, everything else being equal, I'd probably buy this one -- based on the strength of the video and the connection it provides to the author.

Sykes, who self-published the book, says Amazon charged him $2,500 to display the video on his book's detail page. (Of course that doesn't include the costs of producing the video.) But there's speculation Amazon will soon allow authors to post videos for free using its Connect author blogging tool. In a recent survey, Amazon asked Connect participants whether adding videos to the program would be a good idea. Videos are already permitted in Amazon book reviews.

The great thing about Sykes' video is it's obvious he's talking to you -- the person shopping on Amazon. It's intimate, unlike most book videos, which resemble anything from a bad movie preview to a C-SPAN clip. I don't expect most author videos will be this good. Many will be generic crud from PR departments of big publishers -- the exact opposite of this one.

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Tuesday, October 9

Shelfari offers 'power widget' for bloggers

Shelfari, the social-networking book site connected with Amazon, is providing an easy way for bloggers to display lists of favorite books. The "power widget" is customizable and compatible with Amazon wish lists and most blogging software.

Bloggers can add their Amazon Associates affiliate IDs to the widget to earn commissions. You can test-drive the Shelfari widget here, no account necessary.
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Home-made videos: The new tool for self-published authors

It's pretty clear that online video is booming. Here's the audience growth at YouTube:

That, my friends, is a trend.

Videos are starting to pop up on Amazon book detail pages -- in both reviews and descriptive content. Cameras have gotten so cheap and simple, there's no big financial or technological hurdles to producing promotional videos anymore. So some authors are taking advantage.

Here's how one creative author is promoting his book. Now playing on YouTube: HOW TO MAKE A KILLING IN THE BOOK WORLD



The author, Eric Meeks, used an old Canon camera that had sat idle for two years. This summer, when he got the inspiration for the video, he finally read the owner's manual and taught himself to use its editing software.

Video-making is key to Eric's marketing plan for the book. He has an appearance lined up at a local bookstore, and to generate publicity, he's promising that everyone who attends the signing will get to witness a "real live author murder."

"Somebody from the crowd will get to 'kill' me with a retractable blade knife," Eric says. "At least I hope the blade retracts. Otherwise I'll be doing only one signing."
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Tuesday, October 2

Q&A: Will article syndication hurt my site's search rankings?

QUESTION: I've heard of a "duplicate content penalty" if articles from my site appear elsewhere. Does this mean when I submit articles to www.ezinearticles.com that the sites downloading and displaying my articles are actually lowering my stats in search engines such as Google?

I want to promote my book's Web site more, but I certainly don't want to harm it by doing the wrong thing.

ANSWER: There's no one-size-fits-all answer here. It all depends on what you're trying to accomplish. And there are a lot of moving parts: Google and the other search engines are constantly changing their business practices.

Some search-engine optimization experts believe article syndication indeed results in a duplicate content penalty, while other experts insist that the "penalty" is a myth. Only you will be able to decide which applies in your case.

There's nothing inherently wrong with submitting articles to ezinarticles.com and the similar content sites (or blogs). Generally, online content syndication is a good form of free advertising. Remember, though, if the content you syndicate is substantially the same as something that appears on your site, Google may put your page into its "supplemental" index. And then, most searchers won't find that content on your site, they'll find it elsewhere.

So, what's the problem? Maybe nothing. But depending on your situation, here are a few potential pitfalls:
  • The reader won't be able to easily discover the other content that appears on your site. (Your syndicated article may have a link back to your domain, but there is no guarantee that the reader will follow it. They may be distracted by the advertising or other content on ezinearticles.com or elsewhere.)
  • Perhaps you have advertising or affiliate programs on your site that generate revenue. If your online readers are consuming your content elsewhere, they won't be exposed to the advertising and other marketing that you control.
  • A reader who comes to your site is much more likely to subscribe to your RSS feed or e-mail newsletter than someone who consumes your content elsewhere. For some publishers, capturing that repeat reader or registering the e-mail address may be crucial to their business. Having that regular readership enables you to continually introduce new books or advertising programs, and benefit more from the effort put into creating content for your site.
Now, on the other hand, certain publishers might not mind the duplicate content "penalty" at all. Here's one example I can imagine: Let's say next month "ABC Books Inc." releases a biography of a singing star popular with teens. ABC Books is the first to market with a product about the singer. The book will probably sell strongly for a year or two. After that, there will probably be more competing books or (more likely) the singer will have faded from public view. In this case, ABC Books would be smart to hype the book now in every possible way, including content syndication. Teens who were interested in the book would likely purchase it, regardless of how they learned about it. Whether they discover ABC Books' Web site is inconsequential.

So it's a balancing act: How likely is it that you can prompt the reader of your online content to take the desired action with the words in your article alone? Is capturing their attention for a few moments and mentioning your title sufficient? Then you can probably accomplish this with article syndication.

But let's imagine another case. "Author X" is an author and a business consultant. People pay good money to hear this author speak at conferences, and they're willing to buy the author's other products, like audiotapes and DVDs. Readers might even be interested in hiring the author for one-on-one consulting. This author really benefits from being able to initiate a relationship with new readers. That's hard to do with an article syndication site. Sure, your syndicated article will have a link back to your site. But how do you know the reader is going to follow the link? It's just as likely they'll be distracted by other competing content or advertising on that other site.

Personally, I take a middle-of-the-road approach. I recycle some of the articles I put on my blog at other places -- such as MySpace, Gather.com, and ezinearticles.com. And then (where possible) I have a signup procedure on my syndicated articles with this language "If you like my articles, sign up here to receive them via e-mail." So, with some of my content, I'm degrading the SEO for my site. But at the same time I'm adding regular readers who might not have discovered my site otherwise.

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Amazon offers same-day delivery for $5.99 to Prime members

I buy lots of books and videos, so I'm already a heavy user of Amazon Prime, which offers free two-day shipping and discounted overnight delivery for $80 a year. It just takes all the friction away from online buying when you can take shipping fees out of the equation.

Now Amazon is launching same-day delivery to Prime customers for $5.99. Apparently they're rolling it out now in the Northeast, and only certain items in the catalog are available. Here's the e-mail I just received (click to enlarge):














"Local Express Delivery" is what they're calling it. They started it in Seattle in August.

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