Tag: Amazon

  • How One Author Earns $450,000 a Year Self-Publishing on Amazon

    How One Author Earns $450,000 a Year Self-Publishing on Amazon

    Self-publishing success stories are all around us… but it’s not often we get a glimpse into how, exactly, these authors manage to sell so many books on Amazon.

    That’s why we love this piece from Forbes on how one author earns $450,000 a year self-publishing on Amazon.

    The UK-based author, Mark Dawson, writes thrillers and crime novels, and has sold 300,000 copies of his thriller series about a British assassin named John Milton. The Forbes piece says Dawson earned six figures last year, but never quite explains the math behind the $450,000 total it says Amazon has paid to the author.

    Of course, any measure of six figures is impressive when you’re just starting out in the Amazon self-publishing world, and the tactics Dawson shares in this piece offer a number of takeaways for up-and-coming authors.

    Here are some practical tips for succeeding as a self-published author based on what worked for Dawson:

    1. Give away your book for free

    It sounds counterintuitive, but many self-published authors who manage to gain traction on Amazon give their books away through Amazon’s KDP Select program.

    KDP Select allows you to offer the book for free for five days or discount it for up to seven days using what’s called a Countdown Deal. If you offer the book for free, it can rank on Amazon’s Top 100 Free list if it does well, while discounted books are included on the Top 100 Paid list. Once your book makes one of these lists, even within a subcategory, other readers are more likely to see and download it. And if your book does well on the free list, some of that clout will carry over into its sales rank once your book goes back to its regular price.

    Dawson tried this strategy when he released his first self-published book, The Black Mile, and readers grabbed 50,000 copies in one weekend. He also now gives away free books in return for signing up for his email list; you can’t miss this offer at the top of his website.

    Of course, giving your book away or selling it for cheap doesn’t put much money in your pocket. But this strategy can give a much-needed boost to a new release. And if you can capitalize on that success and use it to build your community so they’re excited about your next book launch, you will likely be able to sell more books the next time around.

    2. Learn how to promote your books

    For many writers, marketing is the most difficult part, either because they don’t have the skills to pull it off or simply don’t want to. But the truth is, if you want to make a living as a writer, you have to be more than a writer. Figuring out how to promote your books is the only way you’ll sell copies.

    Dawson follows many of the best practices for growing a loyal community online: he has grown an email list so he can communicate with readers about upcoming releases, engages with his community on Facebook and offers seminars to other writers who want to self-publish as well.

    His email list is 15,000 strong, Forbes reports, a figure that may sound huge to a newbie but is  relatively small compared to most successful online entrepreneurs. It goes to show you don’t need a massive list to earn a living; you simply need an engaged, loyal one.

    3. Use Facebook ads to spread the word

    Many successful entrepreneurs use Facebook ads to reach their target market, and it can be an effective tactic, so long as you learn how to do it effectively. The trick is to earn more than you spend, and once you do, don’t be afraid to pour money into the Facebook machine.

    How do you earn money through Facebook ads? Use the Facebook ads manager to select a target audience that’s a good fit for your book, then experiment with small spends (as low as $10 or $20 each) to see which of your messages and target audiences converts.

    If you spend $10 to run a campaign, and 30 people buy your book because of it, you’ve likely made money, depending on the price point of your book and how much you have to hand over to Amazon. Use the analytics in Facebook’s ad manager to track metrics closely, so you can make good decisions about how to spend.

    Dawson spends $370 a day on Facebook ads, according to Forbes, and earns double that in book buys.

    4. Make time for your writing

    Next to marketing, this tends to be one of the biggest challenges for writers, especially those who are trying to break into a career as a writer while holding down a day job or raising a family. How do you make time for writing during a busy day?

    Dawson, too, holds a day job; he works in the London film industry, according to his website. And he has a young family. His job requires something most of us would complain about: a two-hour commute to and from London each day. Guess how he uses those hours? He writes thousands of words each day, Forbes reports.

    5. Don’t give up

    Stories like Dawson’s seem like overnight success stories, but if you look a little closer, almost every author and entrepreneur failed before succeeding.

    Dawson released a book through a traditional publisher before transitioning to self-publishing… and it flopped. And you’ve probably heard of most of these famous authors whose work was rejected before it was published.

    The trick is to avoid comparing your beginning to someone else’s middle. Everyone’s a beginner at some point. Don’t be afraid of failure, for you need to push past it to do your best work.

    Want more details about Dawson’s story? Read the full story on Forbes.

  • Amazon Associates: How to Use Affiliate Links to Earn More Money From Your Book

    Amazon Associates: How to Use Affiliate Links to Earn More Money From Your Book

    As a writer, yesterday I earned a commission of $1.60 for an “ultra-high-density external battery pack.”

    Yes, that sentence does make sense — if you know how to use the Amazon Associates Program to boost the revenue from your books.

    Here’s what happened: A visitor to one of my websites clicked a link to the Amazon sales page for my book, 101 Weird Ways to Make Money.

    After adding a copy to his cart, he continued shopping.

    The link to the book’s sales page includes my Amazon affiliate code, so not only did I earn a royalty from my publisher, but Amazon paid me a commission for the book as well as anything else the visitor bought within 24 hours, which in this case included that battery pack.

    If you haven’t taken advantage of Amazon’s Associates Program to earn royalties from your links to your books — and other products — you’ll want to get started.

    How Amazon Associates Works

    When you sign up for Amazon Associates, you’re paid 4 to 10 percent commission for sales you refer to Amazon using your affiliate links (the URLs that include your unique tracking code). The exact percentage depends on the types of products sold and your sales volume for the month.

    Of course, you can earn commissions by linking to any product on Amazon (more on that in a moment), but as an author your first goal is to squeeze more profit from your book sales. Every time you promote your books on your website or blog, make sure to use your affiliate links.

    Here’s an example for traditionally published authors. Suppose the cover price of your book is $19.95, and Amazon is currently charging $14.95 (their price often changes and its generally below list price). When a visitor clicks the link on your blog and buys a copy from Amazon, you’ll get at least 59 cents (4 percent) as a commission — in addition to whatever the royalty is from your publisher.

    Self-published? If your ebook sells for $5.99 in the Kindle store, you’re probably already earning a royalty of $4.19 (Amazon pays up to 70 percent), which is great. But why not also get an extra 24 cents by linking to your book with your affiliate code to earn a 4 percent commission? And if you sell enough books, you can do even better.

    For example, if you sell more than six items through your referral links in a month, your commission goes up to 6 percent. Notice I said “items,” because the people who buy your books will also buy other things while shopping on Amazon, and you earn a commission on those sales as long as they occur within 24 hours (or longer if the visitor adds an item to her shopping cart and returns to pay later).

    Some items have set rates, while others’ rates fluctuate based on volume. Here are some examples of the set rates from Amazon’s Advertising Fee Schedule:

    • Grocery products: 4 percent
    • Instant video products: 6 percent
    • Headphone products: 6 percent
    • Jewelry products: 10 percent
    • Game downloads: 10 percent

    How much money can you earn from Amazon Associates?

    I receive a royalty of $1.50 from my publisher for each book I sell, so if I also get a 77-cent affiliate commission (6 percent when Amazon sells my book for $12.95), that’s a 51 percent boost in revenue per book.

    I don’t sell 100 copies weekly like I did back when the book first came out, and most sales now aren’t through my links, so that extra revenue has dropped to less than 10 dollars each month.

    On the other hand, after replacing regular links with my affiliate links years ago, I haven’t had to spend one extra minute to keep making that extra money.

    Then there are those “other” sales. Once I started using this strategy, I was surprised to see that on top of the affiliate income for my books, I was making another $30 monthly in commissions for other items people bought after arriving at Amazon through my links. That too has dropped as sales have declined, but hey, every little bit helps.

    The payoff can be bigger than my experience indicates. “On average, I make a few hundred dollars each month from my affiliate account, because every time I link to my books from my website I use an Amazon Associates URL that’s got a tracking ID attached,” said Paul Jarvis in a post at Forbes. A few hundred dollars a month is a few thousand dollars a year — not a bad payoff for taking a few minutes to set things up the right way.

    Playing by Amazon’s affiliate rules

    Authors often think it’s against the rules to use affiliate links for their own books.

    Here’s the truth: It isn’t.

    What is against the rules is using your affiliate links when you buy things for yourself.

    It’s perfectly okay to make commissions on your books when other people buy them. This is true when you sell Kindle books, too.

    In response to the question, “Can I link to my Kindle book via the Amazon Associates program?” Amazon says:

    Yes, the Amazon Associates Program provides vendors specially formatted links to Amazon on their websites in exchange for advertising fees when their visitors follow the links and place an order. Anyone with a website may apply for our Associates Program, although we do have certain requirements that may prevent a site from participating.

    One of those “certain requirements” is that you live in an approved state, a list that fortunately includes all but five states. According to the Associates Program Operating Agreement, the only states where you can’t participate are Arkansas, Colorado, Maine, Missouri and Rhode Island.

    If you happen to live in one of those states you’re out of luck . . . almost. You still can sign up for the Books-a-Million affiliate program and send your readers to their website to buy your books. You’ll get a 5 percent commission on sales made within 30 days of the customer using your link to arrive at BooksAMillion.com.

    Read up on the rest of Amazon’s rules. You can’t use affiliate links in emails or PDFs, for example, and Amazon requires you to disclose on your site or blog that you are “a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program.” Getting your affiliate account closed means your extra income stream is gone, and it’s easy to make a mistake. In fact, I may have used my affiliate link in my newsletters once or twice before realizing this was against the rules.

    What does the law say about affiliate advertising?

    As an advertiser (which is essentially what you become), you also have to be aware of Federal Trade Commission (FTC) regulations. For example, the FTC Guidelines say you have to disclose the fact that you might receive payment when visitors use your links to buy something, and they provide these more specific suggestions:

    • Place the disclosure as close as possible to the triggering claim.
    • Preferably, design advertisements so that “scrolling” is not necessary in order to find a disclosure.
    • Necessary disclosures should not be relegated to “terms of use” and similar contractual agreements.

    A simple disclosure might look something like this:

    Disclosure: This website may be compensated for linking to other sites or for sales of products we link to.

    Some bloggers put a statement at the bottom of each page, while others just provide a link there to a disclosure page that has the more-detailed information. That has apparently been enough for website and blog owners to avoid trouble with the FTC so far, but it also appears that neither practice is in complete compliance with the regulations, so you may have to put that disclosure a bit closer to the links. (I’m not a lawyer, though, so you may want to speak with one to make sure you’re covered.)

    Of course, you could be very clear and label it “My affiliate link to my book,” or even say something like, “Do me a favor and use this link to check out my book, so I can make a commission if you buy it.” (Editor’s note: Since we published this post, it sounds like Amazon has started discouraging this type of wording.)

    How to make more money with Amazon Associates

    It’s possible to make even more affiliate income while promoting your books. One method is to share the sales pages on social media using your affiliate code.

    This is tricky because it is against Amazon’s rules to shorten your affiliate URLs and they may be too long for Twitter, or might be shortened automatically on Facebook.

    Fortunately, Amazon provides a way to share your book’s sales page on Twitter and Facebook while using your affiliate tracking code.

    Go to your book’s sales page while logged into your affiliate account, then use the “share” tab at the top to post to Twitter or Facebook. Here’s a simple tutorial that walks you through the process.

    Another way to get an Amazon-approved short link is to search for your book from your Associates home page. See the yellow “Get Link” button? Click the arrow next to it and choose “Shorten URL with amzn.to?”

    I discovered another creative way to boost your affiliate income in a Kindle publishers’ forum. “One thing I’ve done is post product links to the equipment that I or my fictional hero use in the books. Things like knives, optics, tents and such,” said one user.

    For example, he says he made an 8 percent commission on a rifle scope that costs over $2,000 — that’s more than $160 from one sale through his affiliate link!

    Letting your book’s characters sell things for you is a neat trick! Unfortunately, the consensus of Kindle forum users is that it’s against the rules to include affiliate links in Kindle books.

    Many authors get away with it and Amazon has not fully clarified the matter, but a safer strategy might be to have “character profile” pages on your website, with affiliate links to each character’s favorite products. You could then link to those profile pages at the end of your book, or link to a “more information” page on your site.

    Finally, your readers probably value your opinion, so why not have a list of your favorite books by other authors on your website or blog? Of course, you’ll link to all of their books using your Amazon Associates links.

    Will you join Amazon Associates?

    The program offers a way to boost your income from book sales. More than ever writers have to be marketers anyhow, so why not add affiliate marketing to your plan? You’ll at least make more money from your own books, and perhaps profit from recommending other books and products as well.

    Do you use affiliate links to promote your books?

    Photo via  Ollyy / Shutterstock