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Publetariat Dispatch: KDP Select Free Promotion: Discoverability Experiment, Part Two

Publetariat: For People Who Publish!

In today’s Publetariat Dispatch, author M. Louisa Locke reports on her experience with the KDP Select program.

As stated in Part One, my goal in joining the KDP Select program had been simple, to get my two Victorian San Francisco historical mysteries, Maids of Misfortune and Uneasy Spirits,  back up to the top 5 rank in the Kindle historical mystery bestseller  category. Their ranks had dropped to between 18 and 24 after Amazon  added hundreds of titles to that category just before Christmas. The experiment in light of this goal was an unqualified success.

I used KDP Select to offer the Kindle edition of Maids for free for two days, December 30th and 31st. When the free promotion ended, Maids of Misfortune was at #1 in the historical mystery bestseller category, and it has stayed there. In addition, Uneasy Spirits, a sequel to Maids, rose to #8 during the promotion of Maids, and by the end of the first week after the promotion, it had risen to #3 in the historical mystery bestseller category.

What I had not expected when I embarked on the experiment was that Maids of Misfortune would also rise to the top ranks in so many other categories.  But it did! When Amazon calculates its rankings, it includes the free  downloads. So, when the promotion ended, those 14,500 free downloads  moved Maids of Misfortune up to the 400s in the overall Paid  Kindle store ranking and to the top 5 in popularity in the categories of  mystery, and mystery — women sleuth, and historical romance. This made  the book very easy to discover by a much wider potential market than ever before. (I published Maids of Misfortune  at a time when Amazon let authors choose more than two categories; for  sales purposes, this gives it an edge over other books, like Uneasy Spirits, that are in only two categories.)

This greater discoverability immediately translated into increased sales that have kept Maids of Misfortune up in the overall rankings during the week after the promotion ended. Last night, at the end of the first post-promotion week, Maids of Misfortune  was #164 in the Paid Kindle Store and, while it has slipped a bit in  the other categories, it was still #1 in popularity in historical  mysteries, #7 in mystery-women sleuths, and #7 in historical romance.  These rankings are high enough to make the book very discoverable —  which leads to more sales — which leads to maintaining a high ranking —  which leads to more sales.

The sales of Maids of Misfortune since the promotion ended have been fantastic. In November 2011, before the promotion, I sold 376 copies of Maids of Misfortune  in all venues combined (Kindle US, other Kindle European stores,  CreateSpace, Barnes and Noble, and Smashwords.) This was an average of  12.5 books a day. In December 2011, before the 2 day free promotion, I  sold 433 books, with an average just under 15 books a day. In the week  after the promotion ended, Maids of Misfortune sold 3183 books in total at an average of just under 455 books a day. Since I was no longer selling it in Smashwords and Barnes and Noble, these sales were almost entirely in the Kindle Stores.

Another unexpected consequence was the number of books I was now selling in the European Kindle Stores. In the 5 months before the promotion I was averaging 16 copies of Maids of Misfortune a month  in these stores (primarily UK and Germany), but in the first week after  the promotion I have sold 148 copies—an average of 21 books a day, pushing Maids of Misfortune up to #2 in the historical mystery category in the UK store.

I had hoped that the massive download of Maids of Misfortune during the promotion would eventually translate into a spill-over to Uneasy Spirits.  I reasoned that, as people finished the first book, they might decide  to buy the sequel. This in turn would lead to a higher ranking that  would make it more visible. This has already happened. Before the  promotion, in November 2011, Uneasy Spirits (which I published  in mid October) sold 341 copies—an average of 11 a day. In December  2011, before the promotion, it sold 531 copies—an average of 18 a day.  During the promotion and the week after, Uneasy Spirits sold 414 copies—an average of 46 a day (well over twice the rate of sales.) One result of this is that Uneasy Spirits is now showing up in the top 100 bestselling romantic suspense books, again making it more discoverable.

A final unexpected consequence has been the number of copies of Maids of Misfortune that have been borrowed by Amazon Prime members.  When you “enroll” a book in the KDP Select Program, readers who belong  to Amazon Prime can “borrow” the book for free for one month. I assumed,  because I was a relatively unknown author and because Maids  was priced at only $2.99, that few people would borrow it.  Why would  they when there are other much better known authors whose books cost  more to buy? Yet, in the first week since the free promotion, 766 people  have borrowed Maids of Misfortune. That means I will  get some, I don’t know how much, of the $500,000 Amazon has reserved to  compensate KDP authors whose books were borrowed during January. These  borrowed books also are included in the calculations that Amazon uses to  determine the book’s rank, so they also help maintain its visibility.

Trying to explain the phenomena, I  looked more closely at the list of books in the historical mystery  category, and I realized that those higher priced books ($8 and above)  by better known authors (like the Maisie Dobbes series by Winspear,  Gabaldon’s Lord John books, or King’s Russell-Holmes series) are not in  the Amazon Prime lending program. Most of the books that are available  for borrowing are by indie authors like myself, who can recognize a good  promotional tool when we see one and who have control over the  decisions we make about our own books. One apparent result of this is  that Maids of Misfortune and other indie-authored books are  ranked higher than those higher-priced and better-known books in the  historical mystery category.

In summary, enrolling Maids of Misfortune  in the KDP Select Program turned out to be much more successful  experiment than I ever imagined it would be. Not only has it made this  book and the sequel, Uneasy Spirits, more visible in the Kindle  Store through high rankings in a number of categories, but the rankings  have produced a large number of sales.

I don’t know how long this pattern will  last, and I can already see a slight slippage in total books sold per  day. KDP Select gives authors the opportunity to do promotions like this  for a total of five days in a three month period, so I still have three  more promotional days that I can use, if necessary. But there is no  getting around the fact that in the first week of January 2012, I sold  3,515 books. And that — by any measure — is wonderful news for this  indie author.

At the end of January I will post Part  III, an analysis of the success of the experiment at the end of a month,  but, in the meantime I would like to hear from those of you who have  also experimented with the KDP Select program to learn what your  experiences have been.

 

This is a reprint from M. Louisa Locke‘s blog.

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