December, 2018 - Sacha T. Y. Fortuné

Giving Away the Glory – my “KDP Free Days” experiment

It seems counterproductive, but a huge part of being an indie writer is that, at some point, you’ll have to give away your book for free.

…In a BIG way.

Never mind the fact that you took 15+ years to publish the damn thing.

Never mind the fact that you’re still at the point where you’re jumping for joy when you see even ONE sale pop up on your dashboard.

Never mind the fact that one measly sale only makes you like US$1-2, if you’re lucky.

None of that matters.

If you want to get your name out there (and I do)… if you want the world to meet your characters (and I do)… you have to bite the bullet and start flinging your goodies — for FREE! — at the universe.

KDP & Newbie Authors

First, a little about me.

I’m a newbie self-published author, with my first book “Climbing The Walls (Hart & Cole Book 1)” being on the market for about five months now (published July 28th, 2018).

So far, it’s gotten great reviews (5 & 4 star only) from anyone who made it through (check the Book 1 reviews here).

If you use ‘KDP Select”, you are exclusive to Amazon

I must thank every single reader who read and reviewed, because I know that picking up a book by a new author (especially one 500+ pages) can be a bit daunting!

My book has always been in KDP Select / Kindle Unlimited — which allows users who pay a subscription to read all eligible books year-round at no extra cost.

One of the benefits of having your book in KDP Select is that you get to list your book for free, for up to 5 days within your 3-month KDP Select period.

KDP Select simply means you’re selling on Amazon only. It’s not for everyone, and some authors have good reasons not to do it.

I’m not a full-time writer, I’m new to the game, and I would hate to have to maintain multiple copies of my manuscript at different retailers (I don’t even know the number of times I’ve re-uploaded after noticing a typo!).

Also, I’m not looking to become a millionaire overnight, and just having my book published is huge for me!

So, all in all… KDP works for me.

And the “free” days are a nice bonus, but only really worthwhile if you’re writing a series.

My book pre-promo: some background

My book was promoted for two days Dec 22-23, 2018

First of all, I should mention I’m not “killing it” by any means. A few sales here and there, and I’m a happy camper.

The most I’ve sold so far in one day was 6 books. Many days are 0. I’m cool with that.

It doesn’t upset me, because literally every single sale means that my cover design, my blurb, my writing (the Amazon “Look Inside” excerpt) are on point — and a few hard-earned dollars were spent by someone!

To my best knowledge (as I don’t religiously check this every day), for the Paid lists, my best stats have been in the top 1,000 in my three main categories (Romance, Family Life, Literary Fiction) and in the top 100,000 overall.

So like I said — not “killing it” by any means!

My book is a super-full-length 555-page 200,000+ word opus of a woman’s fiction/romance novel, the first in a series.

I added an excerpt and a pre-order link for Book 2 at the end of it, to promote sell-through if readers want more.

Book 2 “Pandora’s Poison” launches a month from my free promo (Jan 22, 2019). So, there you go — that was my purpose for making it free!

Preparing for KDP free days: Promotion stacking

In late November and early December, I scheduled my free promo through KDP on Dec 22-23, and then got cracking on the marketing strategy.

There’s no point in making a book free if no one knows to go get it!

I made teasers to be used on social media. Here are some samples:

Now, onto the websites/newsletters to mention the freebie!

First things first, I applied to Bookbub. I was declined. No surprise there. (It’s normal to be denied for a Bookbub deal – especially as a newbie!)

I wasn’t daunted, however. Onto other sites!

I put the promo up on BookSprout, which resulted in 43 opens and 14 clicks — not bad, considering this didn’t cost me anything.

Then, I did some research to find out which sites let you announce your freebie for free.

I found these lists handy:

I submitted my book to 45+ sites total.

This. Takes. Time. Lots. Of. Time. Loads. Of. Time. It. Is. The. Most. Tedious. Thing. Ever.

Of these, less than 10 posted my book (that I’m aware of, because they emailed me. There is a chance it was posted elsewhere but no one told me!)

Of the ones that DID post it, it was often buried at the bottom of the page/newsletter.

One site had a great post for the book, but the “Buy” button didn’t work! I reported it, but by the time they got it fixed, half the day was gone, so I’m sure I missed out on some sales.

…So, yeah. You get what you pay for!

Then, I booked a couple of paid promotions.

Now, I’m super cheap, and it physically hurts to PAY to give away your own book, so this was VERY minimal.

There are loads of newsletter options that have a small cover charge.

The thing is, if you want to crack the Bestseller lists, you need to stack your promos and run several at a time.

The BookRaid newsletter

Unfortunately, that approach means that I have zero idea which ones paid off in the end between the free ones and the (cheap) paid ones.

I will say good things about Book Raid, though.

Their customer service is good, and you only pay per click — $0.05 per click, up to a max. of $20 for free books.

(For paid books, it’s $0.08 — and I’ve used them before, and only paid like $2. So, not bad!)

They also have a dashboard, so you know how many clicks you got — for this promo, I got 794 (about 720 of this came during the promo, others trickled in slowly after — as the book is offered via Kindle Unlimited, this extra amount may still count as readers).

As the book is free, and the blurb is in the newsletter, I’d like to assume that most of those clicks turned into purchases!

Plus – it’s purple.

And yeah, I’m into purple (in case you couldn’t tell).

…But that’s not a helpful measure of success! 🙂

Anyway, I digress…

The Big Day – FREE promo begins!

Okay, so December 22nd reached, it was 12:00 a.m. — then 1:00 a.m. (I catered for the time difference between USA/Caribbean) — and my book WASN’T free on Amazon. I panicked.

A couple of sites were already advertising it, and it wasn’t free! OMG!

I contacted Amazon support but the KDP team wasn’t available. I emailed some of the sites to tell them to hold off, and I thought the end of the world was coming.

Nothing else could be done.

I went to bed and when I woke up, my book was free… and had already sold over 100 copies.

Because here’s the thing — the promo is in PST. Pacific Time. As in, four hours behind my own time. Yep. I felt like a nincompoop.

Anyway, I posted on Instagram, Twitter, and multiple Facebook groups. I have no idea how effective these were, but they can’t hurt!

A huge THANK YOU to any and everyone who saw my post and downloaded the book!!!

Results – Short Term Ranking Boosts

At any given time, there are hundred of authors running their own KDP free days, and I’m sure at least half of them know MUCH more than I do, and can spend WAY more money than I can to push their book.

So I’m super-thrilled with my results.

I’m also happy that I was able to hit the top 3 in my categories — and the top 100 overall — three days before Christmas with a book that ISN’T Christmas-themed. I was worried. I needn’t have been.

I stayed at #1 in my two main categories for most of the 22nd. Not bad at all. Romance was a tougher nut to crack. Romance is a TOUGH category to crack the top 3! And then I sat in the top 100 overall (#87) for a few hours, which is AWESOME!

So overall, I’ve had almost 2300 downloads with minimal investment — at least 8-10 sites/newsletters/social feeds posted my promo for free, and I forked out the cash to be in a couple of (very cheap) newsletters.

I also sent out my own newsletter to subscribers — my list is tiny, under 200 — with the simple tagline “Here’s your free copy of Climbing The Walls“.

I got my best success rate yet, 41.5% opens and 27.7% clicks. (People seem to like the word ‘free’!)

I also spammed what seemed like a zillion Facebook groups. I doubt that did much. If I got one ‘like’ or comment on a post, that was a lot. But again, it can’t hurt.

Synopsis of my KDP free experiment

I don’t know how the Amazon algorithms work, but putting your book free helps it to get sold!

I’ve climbed the charts in the Paid listing (I’m in top 50,000 overall as I write this, and top 500-1000 in my main categories). It won’t last, but still… it’s the highest my book has ever been!

I also saw a couple sales come in, the day after the promo. Woohoo!

AND I’ve also seen a trickle of newsletter sign-ups and Bookbub & Goodreads followers. Nice! Be a dear and follow:

bookub    goodreads

If I had to do it again (and I will sometime soon), I’ll connect with other writers to help push my book in their newsletters, groups and social media. That’s the only thing I didn’t really focus on this time, because I wanted to see how well I could do on my own.

If any other writers are reading this, feel free to reach out to drop me a line and see how we can connect to help each other out!

Connect via: insta facebook twitter or drop a line here.

Conclusion: onto the waiting game!

So, here’s my key learning from this experiment:

A lot of TIME, EFFORT and ENERGY go into giving away your book!

It seems counterproductive that you end up paying people to buy your book, but that’s the life of a newbie indie writer.

I’m thrilled with the results. I was hoping to get around 500! At almost 2300, I’m hoping at least 5%-10% of that turns into a review of Book 1, a sale of Book 2, or both.

And now, almost 2300 people have the chance to meet my characters!

Of course, free books often end up sitting around on your e-reader for some time, since it costs you nothing to download it and you can download loads at a time.

BUT I have faith that the book cover will lure you in, while you swipe past others. I have faith that the first few lines will hook you. I have faith that by the end of Chapter 1 or 2, you’ll be invested in my characters.

Most of all, I have faith that if anyone makes it through my book and liked it, they’ll want to buy Book 2! And they should, because Book 2 is going to be SOOOOO much better.

Now, it’s just to sit back… and wait!

Feel free to grab up Book 1 (back to its regular $3.99 price now, BUT it’s still available on Kindle Unlimited), and to pre-order Book 2 – coming January 22, 2019!

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“Pandora’s Poison” – countdown: 6 weeks!

EEEK! Are you ready? I sure am.

Today we are officially 6 weeks away from the launch of Book 2 of my Hart & Cole series!

I wish I could release it NOW, but I know I need to be thorough with my editing — plus, I also need to be patient and have an actual marketing plan this time around! LOL.

First on this plan is putting it up for pre-order, which I just did today.

It’s a little scary to commit to a date when you know you’re still FRICKING EDITING THE DAMN THING, but I did it!

Jan 22nd is my birthday — so publishing Book 2 will be my birthday gift to myself.

Buy Now (ebook)

 

The second time around…

I started writing Darren’s and Luisa’s story (Book 2 & Book 3) at least 12 or 13 years ago, and finally finished writing the first draft in 2016 after my beta reader friend read the first half and SCREAMED at me to finish it!

…And I have just been sitting on the damn thing ever since.

Now, it’s almost time to release it to the world.

I’ve spent the last 5-6 months learning from my own mistakes, learning from others, and absorbing all the info I possibly can from the amazing network of fellow Indie writers.

And I’m ready this time. I’m ready for Darren & Luisa to meet you all. ??

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Buy Now (ebook)

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Romantic Cliffhangers: Will my story survive the “Big Chop”?

Yeah, yeah, I know. The blog post title is misleading since I always make a big deal about the fact that “I don’t write romance. I write relationships. I write people.”

But for all intents and purposes, my Hart & Cole series is about love. It’s a lot MORE than romance, and it covers all KINDS of love, but the relationship is a driving force here.

And there is a huge aspect of ‘romance’ though I classify it more as a ‘Women’s Fiction’ genre since it doesn’t follow the usual trends of a romance.

Anyway, I’m getting off-topic! Romance or not, my concern is the fact that

(1) there is a love story of some kind, and

(2) there is a cliffhanger at the end of the book

Chopping into bite-sized chunks

The reason I’m even worrying about this, is that it took me a LONG while to make up my mind, but I finally decided to make “Book 2” into Book 2 and Book 3.

I’d blogged about this earlier when I got a hard ‘no’ from a book blogger for my 555-page Book 1, and I realised that nowadays the length of a typical e-book is certainly a lot shorter than a traditionally-published one would be.

In fact, everything is general is getting smaller and shorter and is now available in a “digestible” format, so it’s understandable that books would be, too.

Problem is, I simply can’t cut my book down to such bare bones.

My characters have a LOT to say, and my story is long because it simply has to be.

…But while I can’t cut down, I CAN however cut it into smaller pieces.

And… well, yeah. In this case, I think I have to. I’ve been as stringent as I can with editing… and Darren’s and Luisa’s story still comes up to over 300,000 words and 775+ pages!

Yeah. No one’s ever going to buy the print version of that, unless they want a giant brick to prop open a door!

And honestly, after living in their heads for 350+ pages, I myself need a breather!

So… I made the big decision to CHOP, baby, CHOP.

 

Where & How to Chop?

Fortunately, there is a somewhat “natural” point of their story, where it made sense to chop, and it does happen near to the mid-mark — Chapter 30 out of 55, so it was nice to round those up and make it “Chapter 30” for Book 2 and “Chapter 25” for Book 3.

Also, for some reason I had always naturally provided somewhat of a mental recap in Chapter 31 (now Chapter 1 of Book 3). So it wasn’t *too* bad of a change, to split them.

It did call for some rewriting, though. I had to rewrite the last scene of “Book 2” so it seems like it’s somewhat of a conclusion-for-now, of sorts.

And as Book 3 was shorter than Book 2, for balance I made a few chapters in Book 3 a bit longer — which was fun, actually.

I threw in a MUCH longer scene for a convo with Luisa & new gal-pal Vicki (because OMG I just love Vicki, and she’s been begging me to fluff her up a bit since I’m making her wait SO long for her own story!)…

And I also did a MUCHHHH longer final scene with Darren and Nicole that made my toes curl! *eh-ehrm, a bit too much info there*…

So objectively speaking (or as objective as I can be, given that I’ve written the damn thing myself!) I don’t think the chop is HORRIBLE.

And I think it’ll benefit me in the long run, to have two books instead of one giant brick.

Yay, me.

…But what about the readers?

 

Angering the readers…?

I guess it’s fortunate that I’m not super-famous yet, and chances are that Book 3 (planned for 2 months after Book 2) might actually be released before most readers even get the chance to read Book 2.

So maybe I’m overthinking this, and it won’t matter. I haven’t sold enough books yet to have a throng of fans chasing me with pitchforks because they don’t know who ends up together!

But I did throw the question out to a few writer groups, and came back with responses at both ends of the spectrum.

My first response (which made me regret even posting it!) was…

“By ending with a cliff-hanger, you’d have pissed me off enough not to care, because I wouldn’t purchase the next one.”

Ouch.

Fortunately, he (and others like him) were in the minority and others quickly jumped in to point out:

  • Cliffhangers are the norm these days, not the exception.
  • Once you DO warn readers in the blurb, it’s generally acceptable.
  • You may not sell as much for the series until ALL the books are out, as readers have been burnt before.
  • It works fabulously if you have a short time period and a pre-order link for the next book, so you reassure them they just have to hang on a little longer.
  • You may get bad reviews if you have a cliffhanger (especially if you DIDN’T warn them), but you’ll sell better overall in the long run.
  • Once you DON’T wait TOO long, your readers will forgive you and will gladly hold on patiently and remain loyal when your next book comes out.

Phew. Okay.

Which brings me to the heart of what I was actually asking…

 

What’s “too long” for a romantic cliffhanger?

That question got responses everywhere from 6 months to a year (on the long side), 1-3 weeks (on the short side), 1-3 months (on the average side), and a few jokesters who said:

Two hours!

And…

3 days! Did anyone say 3 days yet? Is this like “The Price Is Right”?

Ha, ha. You can always trust writers to come up with the best responses! 🙂

My foray into reaching out to other writers did bring me to ‘Zon’ (the equivalent of “Google” but on Amazon Kindle) a few of them, and get an idea of their success with cliffhangers. Generally, there were negative reviews but they were more than balanced out with high ratings and gushing reviews.

So despite its iffy bad-boy rep, readers do tolerate — and some even love — that pesky cliffhanger.

 

Will my story survive the “Big Chop”?

So… I’m going with the cliffhanger. I’m going with two books, two separate entities, though I originally wrote it as one story.

I’m going with a story that feels half-baked when it winds to a close, and as a reader I’d be ripping my hair out and flinging the book at the wall.

Because, you see…

I personally hate cliffhangers, romantic or not, and prefer to have all the words available if I choose to read on.

I personally hate short books with cliffhangers, as it feels like I’ve been cheated into buying another one. (Bitch, I’m cheap!)

…But does it change things, if each book is long, like mine are? Hmmm…

…And does it change things, if I throw in a preview of what’s coming up? (I do)

…And does it change things, if I make it VERY clear in the blurb that this IS a cliffhanger?

…And does it change things, if I have the preorder link with a two-month gap in between?

Sigh.

I’m still doing, as a writer, what I would hate to have done to me, as a reader!

My proof of what’s now going to be “Book 2”

I personally still see Darren’s and Luisa’s story (and oh lordie, it’s a doozy!) as one holistic entity.

But no sane person needs that giant brick 775+ page opus; that might scare everyone away from the jump!

There are far too many good reasons to split it, than there are NOT to!

Plus… my 385-page print of what’s now going to be Book 2 is such a cute size to hold 🙂 …

*Deep breath*…

Cliffhanger, this could be the beginning of a beautiful friendship…

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