The backstory (I know, info dumps, eh? I’ll keep it short…)
Inish Carraig is my second book, and it’s self published (my first, Abendau’s
Heir, is part of a three book deal).
Inish has been around a few blocks and back again – that
whole story is in this blog list in lots of places – but it came out in August
2015 and did… okay. Not as well as my first book in the equivalent time and, to
be honest, I had it pegged as a build-my-name-a-bit title.
One thing, though, was that it was getting good reviews –
great reviews in fact. I decided to consider it my critically-acclaimed-bomb of
a book and told myself every starving author in a garret has one of those.
The book is listed in Kindle select which means it’s
exclusive to Amazon online, although I have it in a couple of bricks-and-mortar
stores, too (and any device can read it with a quick conversion).
Kindle select allows, once every 90 days, to list a book at
a reduced price and retain 70% of the selling price. It’s a nice boost to sales,
it normally gets a book up the kindle charts for a day or two, it’s a useful
thing to do.
My first 99p week had done okay, but this time I decided I’d
focus on a promotional week. (This was one of my principal reasons for going
self-published, to learn how to do all this.)
One of the things I explored were promotional websites. It
quickly became clear that, whilst there were many to choose from, one reigned
supreme and that was Bookbub. Like every author, I wanted to be in their single
daily email but there are two catches:
They are hard to get listed on – I tried on my last 99p
promo – and they’re expensive. Very expensive. Like a couple of hundred quid
expensive. A month before Christmas for a writer who’s not making much money
from the gig yet.
I mused and weighed up and researched, and I discovered I
could do a Bookbub for the UK only for a lot less – about £50 for science
fiction. Since my book is set in the UK (Belfast to be exact), I wondered about
going for the UK only.
I also looked at how other writers had got their book
selected, and how the business model worked (um, did I mention in another life
I’m a management theorist nerd type person? I try to not to keep my anorak on in
public.)
And here’s what I sort of figured out (do take with a grain
of sand, however.)
Bookbub works by not having its emails treated as spam. To
do that, it looks to offer a quality product. (And, hey, I specialise in
Quality Management. Music to my ears!) To offer a quality product a company
needs to offer the consumer what matches their needs – in this case bargain
books, tailored to the readers’ interest, and assured of a certain standard.
Bookbub rejects (or so the story goes, and it’s borne out by what little I know
of it) 4 out of 5 submissions.
Now, the first rule of write-club is that reviews rock. Big
time. They are the only thing you have to tell others about your book. I can
jump up and down and tell everyone I’ve written a great book, and it means
nothing. A million other writers are doing the same. But someone else saying it
– that has kudos.
My reviews on Inish Carraig are good. In the US I’m on 4.7
stars, same on that notoriously choosy platform Goodreads. That’s a good
average. But on Amazon UK I was on 5 stars. And they were good reviews, not
just a few words but some detailed ones that said lovely things that made me
catch my breath and pinch myself and wonder if they were about my book. All of
which made my mind up – I’d hit the UK only.
I subbed, mentioning my reviews and linking to two external
reviews, one on Sffchronicles, one on sfbook, and mentioned I’d been longlisted
in Ellen Datlow’s 2015 recommendations. Then, I waited. The rejection didn’t
come like it had before, a day later, so I waited another day and the
acceptance came.
I also really wanted to get listed on Book Barbarian. Like
Bookbub they send out a daily email, but they only do genre books. I needed 10
US reviews and I only had 8. All seemed doomed. Except, at the last minute, 2
new reviews came in and I sneaked the last date available in my range.
All right, then. Promo in place. I got some great guidance
from the very generous Tim C Taylor, author of the Human Legion series of
books, and tidied up what I could in advance of the promotion starting. And I
hoped, hoped, hoped a one star review wouldn’t land over the run-in.
Overall, I reckoned I needed to sell 90 books to cover my
costs. In reality, I hoped for maybe 30-40 sales and the spike from that – I
understand this is a slow game and I need to invest in the future.
Monday of the promotion went okay – a cluster of sales that
put me up the UK chart a little.
Tuesday came, the day of the Bookbub, and… nothing. Having
invested in a couple of promo sites that didn’t give back I nodded sagely and
decided the gamble hadn’t worked, that it was too good to be true. Then I
remembered America is 6 hours behind the UK and the email gets sent from
America. That was at 4.30. By 5 o’clock I had 6 sales, all in the Uk.
The sales kept coming all Tuesday night. My kids were
tracking it, cheering each time it went up. By 8 I’d passed 50 sales; by the
time my eldest went to bed I’d broken the 100 and was staring stupidly at the
screen. It continued to climb and I went to bed thinking my sales would peak
during the night, and I’d probably never know how high I’d gotten up the
charts, but not expecting too much – the categories I’m in are hard ones to
break the top 100.
Anyway, sad me – when one of the kids woke me at half four,
I went online, took a screen shot of where I was – about 1000 in the UK Kindle
store and well into 2 top 100s, and went back to bed thinking I’d facebook it
in the morning. A little bit of posterity, my highest ranking ever.
By the time 9am rolled in I was up to #400-odd in the entire
UK kindle chart, #10 on the Science fiction chart and #2 in two categories
after the awesome Nick Webb’s second book. I did some postings and went to
work, a meeting that needed my concentration, with a warm feeling in my stomach
of having done so much more than I hoped to, and that was that.
Except that I got home to a facebook message from Gary
Compton, who publishes my trilogy, saying ‘do you know you’re number one in
three charts?’ I didn’t. I had no idea it was even possible. (Because, you
know, who ever believes in these things happening?)
Book Barbarian hit on the evening of the Thursday, and they
picked Inish Carraig as one of their top picks, and another flurry of sales
came in, this time across both the UK and the US. It’s now Friday and the book
has been selling steadily all day, and people are recommending it in all sorts
of places. I think staggering the promotions really worked as it gave several
hits of promo and each one bounced off the last ranking increase.
All in all, I spent $90 on the promotions – which works out
about £65.00. I’ve doubled that already, and then a little more. But, perhaps
more importantly, my book is being read by people who would not run across me
otherwise. Hopefully there will be some reviews from it (remember the first
rule of write-club) and, if so, hopefully some will be good. If I’m really
lucky people will recommend it to other readers.
Either way, I’m a bit stunned. After the deal ends on
Monday, I expect a lull. (Another rule of write-club is that after a promo
things usually die for a while). But I don’t care. I’m an Amazon Bestselling
Author. I even have a sticker for it.
Here’s the book link. I’m sure you should buy fifty of it:
Comments
Post-alien invasion Belfast. Earth has been defeated. Pity the locals aren't listening.
Belfast teenager John Dray will do what he must to survive. When he's offered desperately needed food in exchange for dispersing a mysterious compound over the city, he takes the job. The compound turns out to be a virus lethal to the city's invaders, and John is charged with xenocide.
He's sent to Inish Carraig, a forbidding prison, where he uncovers the secret behind the virus - a secret that threatens Earth and everyone he loves. He needs to unveil the conspiracy.
He just has to get out of prison first
What more would have made it define the story? Or is it that this is too hard to find? Blurbs are so hard when I'm close to the story, I'd appreciate any feedback. Jo
On a follow up, in the UK, Inish is now well up the Amazon search vehicles and can actually be found by browsers and is still selling more each day than I hoped to do in the whole week. So, for me, it worked.
And too early? Not a bit of it! Have a great Christmas. :)