Steve Weber is Mad as Hell and He's Blogging About It...

Why You Should Boycott AbeBooks

Nothing irks an author more than seeing review copies of his or her book for sale on the Internet. It's tough enough to make a living as a writer, without having to compete for sales against free copies of your own book. I found a galley of mine for sale on AbeBooks.com, and it was listed for sale before my book's publication date! In case you're not familiar with them, ABE is the big bookselling network that recently bought LibraryThing. I've complained repeatedly since finding my galley there a couple of weeks ago. ABE has acknowledged my complaint but hasn't done anything about it -- it's still for sale. Apparently ABE thinks I'll just go away, but they've got another thing coming. I blew a chunk of my retirement savings to print those ARCs, and I'm not going to sit here politely like a chump. If you think I'm mad about this, you're goddamned right. This is one thing authors and publishers get pissed about. And that's why every reputable online retailer prohibits the sale of review copies, uncorrected proofs, galleys, or whatever else you want to call them. Some people even argue that selling ARCs is illegal, citing copyright infringement. Personally, I think that's silly -- there's no law against selling review copies. And I don't have a problem with collectors selling ARCs of out-of-print books. But selling promotional copies of a newly launched book? C'mon, that's just sleazy, and that's why reputable sites have these policies: Amazon.com: [Prohibited]: Promotional media. Movies, CDs, software, books (including advance reading copies and uncorrected proofs), etc., that are produced and distributed for promotional use only. Barnes & Noble BookQuest: [Prohibited]: Promotional items, including Advanced Reading Copies. Here's the deal, folks: Authors and publishers can't make money if parasites are allowed to siphon off marketing resources. If publishers can't make money, guess what's going to happen to ABE and every other bookselling network? They're toast. They'll need to find something else to sell instead of books. How does AbeBooks justify sales of review copies? Actually, they don't, take a look at their participation agreement, they prohibit it too: b. Unacceptable Listings Promotional Items Promotional items are goods that are distributed, free of charge, for the purpose of advertising an event or good, such as a movie or book. Promotional items can include advanced reading copies, un-proofed copies and posters. But it seems ABE is giving a wink and a nod to anyone who wants to ignore this policy, even when a violation is reported. It makes you wonder what else is going on. How many other authors do you think ABE is screwing by looking the other way while ARCs are trafficked on its site? A lot. There are more than 135,000 books on ABE described as "uncorrected." What do you think about this? Feel free to post a comment, and to post a comment to ABE too.

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PLUG IN to Turn On Your Book Sales

A conversation with author and online bookseller Steve Weber
There seems to be a "new" book marketing title published every month, but here's one that is really attracting attention -- because it's fresh, concise, and full of useful information that hasn't been delivered a dozen times before. Steve Weber's Plug Your Book! is all about promoting and selling your book online, by an author who's got the talk and the walk.
 
You see, Weber has been making his living selling books online at Amazon.com and eBay since 2001, having grossed an estimated $1 million in sales. His first book, The Home-Based Bookstore: Start Your Own Business Selling Used Books on Amazon, eBay or Your Own Web Site (2005; ISBN 0977240606), has become one of the most popular books about bookselling and starting a home-based business.
 
Running the successful used book business from his home has gotten him written up in The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, and Entrepreneur Magazine. He loves being surrounded by books, but it comes with its difficulties, such as when he recently moved into a new home -- and had to move his stock of 11,000 volumes along with the furniture and dishes.
 
Weber has been generously sharing his bookselling knowledge through Plug Your Book!, his excellent blog that shares the name of his new book and delivers solid information and timely, well-researched resources. His generosity continues with an offering of the entire book content at the site.
 
We asked Weber about the new book, its unique cover art, and about his hopes for promoting and selling the new book on his home turf, the Web.
 
IP: Your book is all about marketing books via the Internet. Because of the Web, almost everything about book marketing has changed. In which ways has it stayed the same?
 
SW: The biggest thing is, you need to write a good book. Successful book marketing starts with a good book. That sounds corny and obvious, but it's never been more true. The Internet amplifies and accelerates word of mouth. So, if you have a good book, people are going to find out, and it will work in your favor. However, if your book is weak, readers will figure it out pretty quickly. The Internet makes things very transparent, and it's getting extremely hard to sell books that disappoint readers.
 
Of course, as self-publishers we have a higher hurdle. Booksellers tend to be skeptical of us, because so many self-published books are rushed out before they're ready. But we can turn this around by putting in the extra effort to make our books better than those published by the big trade publishers.
 
It's never been easier to get feedback on your project. Post sample chapters on the Internet, and ask readers for their opinion. Ask other authors and experts you respect to peer-review your manuscript.
 
Hire a professional editor and proofreader. You can find qualified people by browsing the classifieds at the Editorial Freelancers Association, http://the-efa.org
 
IP: That's an interesting and unconventional cover design on your book, the image of a man with ethernet dreadlocks. Who came up with that idea, and who did the artwork?
 
SW: It's interesting, after I'd finished writing the book I hired a book designer and commissioned seven cover designs. I was very unhappy with all the designs, I felt something was really lacking.
 
So I decided to design the cover myself, and began searching some of the stock photography sites to look for something that would illustrate the concept of the book. I went through about 5,000 photographs until I finally found that image of the man with the plugs in his hair.
 
That's also when it occurred to me to title the book "Plug Your Book." My working title had been "Internet Book Publicity," which was a real yawner.
 
I had to manipulate the image quite a bit to make it suitable for the cover, and that took a few weeks. I wasn't familiar with PhotoShop or any of the other art software, so I had to learn that quickly.
 
So I could have published the book a month earlier if I'd been happy with any of the designs by outside artists, but I'm happy with the way it turned out. A lot of people think book covers aren't important these days, especially now that so many people buy nonfiction online at places like Amazon. But I think a compelling cover is just as important, even if your book is for sale online only. The cover sells the book.
 
* * * * *
If you're not sold yet, here's an excerpt:
 
CHAPTER ONE EXCERPT:
 
Electric Word of Mouth
In 1988 a first-time author, British mountaineer Joe Simpson, wrote of his disastrous climbing accident in the Peruvian Andes. His book, Touching the Void, got good reviews, but wasn't too popular outside England. It sold modestly and then, like most books, began fading into obscurity.
 
A decade later, another climbing book was penned by Jon Krakauer, an American journalist who scaled Everest on a harrowing expedition that claimed eight lives. Into Thin Air, with a boost from its conglomerate publisher, was an instant No. 1 bestseller and worldwide blockbuster.
 
And then something really interesting happened. Bookstores started getting requests for the earlier book, Touching the Void. Weeks before, stores couldn't give it away, and now the book was sold out. Library copies went missing. The original hardback, if you could find one, was going for $375. Harper Paperbacks rushed a new edition onto shelves, and Touching the Void started outselling the new "blockbuster" by two to one.
 
What happened? Was it a stroke of brilliance by some publishing mogul? No, it was Joe Six-Pack, reacting to book recommendations from Amazon.com. The online store began suggesting the older book to millions of people whom it knew liked climbing books, based on their buying history. If you've shopped on Amazon, you've seen these recommendations yourself: People who bought this book also bought "x."
 
Many of the new readers liked Touching the Void so much, they wrote rave reviews on Amazon's site. These "amateur" book reviews, written by real climbers and armchair explorers, resonated deeply with the next wave of shoppers. More sales, more good reviews.
 
Ten years after the book's launch, Internet-powered word of mouth did something that no team of marketing wizards could do -- it landed Touching the Void on the bestseller lists. The story was adapted for an acclaimed docudrama. Simpson, his writing career turbocharged, followed up with four successful adventure books, a novel, and lecture tours.
 
And this is only the beginning, for Simpson and all of us.
 
Readers are finally able to find the books they want, even in the smallest niches. Readers are finding their books at Amazon and other Web stores because they offer unmatched choice and convenience. All this is a godsend for authors, who finally have a way to build their audience effectively and inexpensively. Never has it been so practical, so straightforward, for writers to earn a living at their craft and build a following.
 
Today book readers are helping decide which books sink or swim. As an author, you can hope to be swept along with the tide. Or you can take advantage of this new environment, using the techniques described in this book.
 
Riding the Big River
In just a few years, Amazon has demolished the barriers to book sales. No longer are new authors summarily locked out of the bookstore. Whether your book was trade-published or self-published, Amazon will not only stock it, but rearrange the whole store when a likely reader arrives. And if your book sells modestly well, Amazon will do lots more -- like displaying your book right inside the door, at the end of each virtual aisle, on eight different category shelves, and smack-dab in front of the cash register. Think your local bookstore might do this? Maybe if you're William Shakespeare, but the rest of us are out of luck.
 
Book sales over the Internet now account for 15 percent of the average publisher's business, up dramatically from 1 percent in 1997. But the real impact is far greater -- it's not just the 65 million readers buying their books on Amazon, it's the untold millions more using Amazon's catalog and book reviews to inform their buying choices elsewhere.
 
Amazon is ground zero for your online campaign. It provides free worldwide exposure -- exposure to those readers most likely to buy your book. Simply having your book properly listed for sale on Amazon can create demand for it everywhere. Whether you're a famous author or an unknown, Amazon is essential because it has a critical mass of buyers using its search engine, recommendations, and reader reviews.
 
Amazon helps create demand for niche books that have a widely dispersed audience that can't be targeted effectively through traditional marketing. These are the books readers often can't find in their local bookstore, or even the library -- but they're easy to find on Amazon. Twenty-five percent of Amazon's sales come from obscure books that aren't even carried in a Barnes & Noble superstore stocking 100,000 titles. And the percentage of these "long tail" sales grows every year.
 
Sure, part of Amazon's appeal is its discount pricing and free shipping offers. But the real value for book buyers is being able to find exactly what they want, says Chris Anderson, author of the 2006 business bestseller The Long Tail:
 
"It's not enough that things be available, you need to be able to find them. The big problem with brick-and-mortar stores is, all shoppers experience the same store. But the problem of findability is solved when you go online. You have searching, recommendations, and all sorts of narrow taxonomies -- things can be in multiple categories at the same time."
 
For 50 years, publishers have been chasing blockbusters -- the bestseller hits. They had to, because with limited shelf space, bookstores had to focus on the stuff that moved fastest. Today, chasing blockbusters is obsolete. Authors and publishers have a wide-open opportunity in serving niches.
 
These niche books are the ones people care about most, and the ones Amazon is most effective in recommending, says Greg Greeley, Amazon's vice president for media products: "The Web site is designed to help customers find books they didn't know existed."
 
Getting Recommended
Book sales are a self-fulfilling prophecy, especially on Amazon. The more people who buy your book, the easier it becomes for the next reader to discover it. When Amazon notices your book is selling, it automatically displays your book higher in its search results and higher in its category lists. And most importantly, Amazon starts plugging your book into book recommendations on its Web site and in e-mails to customers.
 
Book recommendations are Amazon's biggest sales engine, after keyword searches. Sixty-six percent of sales are to returning customers, many of them acting on automated recommendations for books popular with customers with similar buying histories.
 
Because they are personalized, Amazon's book recommendations are network-powered word of mouth -- more effective than a highway billboard seen by everyone in town. And as long as your book keeps selling, Amazon continues recommending it month after month, year after year, to its likely audience. No longer are books sentenced to the bargain bin three months after publication. Online word of mouth can keep your book alive as long as it satisfies readers.
 
Each of Amazon's 65 million customers sees a unique store. The layout is personalized, based on which books the customer previously viewed or purchased. Each customer has a recommendations list, based on which books are bought most frequently by other customers with similar buying histories.
 
If you have an Amazon account, view your recommendations here:
www.Amazon.com/yourstore
 
As an author, here's how Amazon recommendations work for you: Let's imagine you've written the book How to Grow Organic Strawberries. It turns out that one of every five Amazon customers who buys your book also purchased an earlier book, Healthy Eating With Organic Fruit. Realizing this, Amazon starts recommending your book to customers who bought the earlier book but haven't yet bought yours. Why? Amazon knows the odds are good that once these readers discover your book they'll buy it, too, and Amazon makes another sale.
Buyers see book recommendations in several places:

On Amazon's home page, where it says, Hello, [NAME], we have recommendations for you. Click here to view all your book recommendations.

In e-mails titled "Amazon.com Recommends" and "New for You," periodically sent to Amazon customers.

In the Gold Box treasure chest icon at the top right of Amazon's home page. Clicking the box reveals special offers on books and other merchandise on your recommended list.

In a book's "Also-Bought" list. Every book's detail page on Amazon includes a list with the headline Customers who bought this item also bought. The Also-Bought list shows the five other books bought most frequently by customers who also purchased the displayed book.

An extended Also-Bought list including many more titles is accessible from each book's detail page at the link Explore similar items. Buyers can view the same list during the checkout process by viewing Customers who bought [Title] also bought...

The Wisdom of Crowds
Amazon's recommendations aren't just a computer talking, it's the collective judgment of millions of people acting independently in their own self-interest. Amazon is the biggest and most effective word-of-mouth generator for books because it measures not what people say, but what they do. People don't always recommend their favorite current book to each of their friends and acquaintances. But Amazon factors each buying decision into its recommendations for like-minded customers.
 
Just as a well-programmed computer can defeat a master chess player, automated recommendations can suggest just the right book, including books that would never occur to a brilliant bookstore clerk, says Amazon chief executive Jeff Bezos:
"I remember one of the first times this struck me. The main book on the page was about Zen. There were other suggestions for Zen books, but in the middle of those was a [recommended] book on 'How to have a clutter-free desk.' That's not something that a human editor would ever pick. But statistically, the people who were interested in the Zen books also wanted clutter-free desks. The computer is blind to the fact that these things are dissimilar in some way to humans. It looks right through that and says, 'Yes, try this.' And it works."
 
Bubbling to the Top
The more your book sells on Amazon, the more frequently it's shown and recommended. Books that sell well on Amazon appear higher in search results and category lists.
 
Let's imagine your book How to Grow Organic Strawberries outsells a competing title, Idiot's Guide to Growing Organic Strawberries. When Amazon customers search for the keyword "strawberries," your book will appear on top -- customers will see it first, and notice it before the competition.
 
More benefits result from your Amazon sales: Your book moves up in category lists, providing another way for potential readers to discover it. For example, your title on organic strawberries would appear in this Amazon subcategory:
Home & Garden > Gardening & Horticulture > Techniques > Organic
 
This subcategory list is like a bestseller list for your niche. Amazon has 35 top-level categories (like Arts & Photography; Business & Investing) divided into dozens more subcategories. Unlike general bestseller lists compiled by The New York Times or USA Today, Amazon's subcategory lists show what people care about at the niche level, where passions run deepest.
 

Amazon's subcategories are discrete enough that just a few sales can push your title near the top, exposing your book to more people who care about that topic. In our example subcategory Home & Garden > Organic, your book could claim one of the top three spots with only two or three sales per week on Amazon.

Once you've bubbled up to the top of your subcategory, you're firmly inside the positive feedback loop. Amazon acts as a huge funnel, sending thousands of readers to your book. That's why some authors encourage their Web site visitors to buy books on Amazon -- each additional sale boosts their exposure, prompting yet more sales.

"Simply put, the more customers you send to Amazon who buy your book, the more visible it will be on Amazon, and the more books Amazon will sell for you," says Morris Rosenthal, publisher of Foner Books.

 

If your book continues selling for six months or so, Amazon can assign it to more categories, making it even more likely browsers will find you after browsing in related categories. Books that sell moderately well eventually can be assigned to 12 or more categories, the same exposure as your book being shelved in a dozen different sections of a brick-and-mortar bookstore. The big difference is, Amazon is the world's largest bookstore.
 
To see your book's subcategory assignments on Amazon, find the section on your book's detail page headed "Look for similar items by category." Clicking on those links takes you to a list of the subcategory's bestsellers.
 
Sometimes persistent publishers can talk the folks at Amazon into assigning their books to additional categories, or removing the book from inappropriate categories. Research other books in your niche, and see which categories they're displayed in.
 
Narrow a list down to 10 categories and send your list, ISBN, and contact information to Amazon. You can send your message, along with any other typographical corrections for Amazon, by using this form:
www.Amazon.com/gp/help/contact-us/typographical-errors.html
 
(Chapter one goes on to describe Recommendation Effectiveness, including some nifty charts and statistics, and how your Sales Rank affects the big picture.)
 
* * * * *
About Steve Weber:
A native of Charleston, West Virginia, Steve is a veteran of the U.S. Air Force and a Journalism graduate of West Virginia University. He now lives in Falls Church, Va., with his wife and their four-year-old daughter.
 
About Steve's books:
The Home-Based Bookstore: Start Your Own Business Selling Used Books on Amazon, eBay or Your Own Web Site
Weber Books
168 page paperback; $19.95
ISBN: 0977240606 (November 2005)
 
Plug Your Book: Online Book Marketing for Authors, Book Publicity through Social Networking
Weber Books
208 page paperback; $24.99
ISBN: 0977240614 (February 2007)