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With no sales and a single 1-star review, I still published my second book

rodyne.com

2 points by chinabot a year ago · 11 comments

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JoeAltmaier a year ago

I had such a book, no sales, no reviews at all. So I printed some paper copies and distributed them to a retirement home. Got plenty of positive feedback there, face to face, and demands to read the second book in the series!

No revenue either, but lots of satisfaction and the sure knowledge that there may actually be a demographic for my writing.

WheelsAtLarge a year ago

I've always wanted to write a book, but it’s challenging for people to discover it. It’s like searching for a needle in a haystack. There are literally millions of books out there—who will even notice mine? I believe this is the main issue with OP's book; he needs to find a way to promote its existence. It's a classic business challenge: effective marketing is essential. That’s why publishing companies are so important; they know how to market a book and have the necessary industry contacts. When you self-publish, part of your responsibility is to manage this marketing aspect as well.

I understand he started since I know about the book but I’m an unlikely customer. I don’t particularly enjoy sci-fi books, especially random ones. I prefer to know a bit about a book before committing to the hours it will take to read it. My suggestion is to study other self-publishing authors and see how they made their books successful, then model the approach after theirs.

chinabotOP a year ago

A short (and hopefully) uplifting post about what happens when life throws you a lemon.

  • AlbertoGP a year ago

    > The difference is that with the new novel the launch won’t be with any fanfare. I won’t be telling anyone about it unless they ask. I won’t bother with any publicity (other than here and maybe HN where it will get flagged as something dodgy and never seen).

    Having it flagged wouldn't be that bad, it would mean that several people noticed it in the new submissions page. Worse would be to get a single downvote with no comment. ;-P

    I would ask you for the free epub you mention but in the last years I've found barely any time to read novels. The abstract sounds interesting:

    > When her grandfather dies, Alexa Martins simple life is changed immeasurably, going from a humble history scholar to owner of the world’s leading company in AI and energy research and a symbol of hope for millions. The emergence of her company’s sentient AI systems, and science fiction level technologies however do not go unnoticed by world leaders and those behind the scenes pulling their strings, and she and her team find themselves in a race against the corrupt and the powerful to elevate humanity from the sins of its past to a brighter utopian future. However, with this technology and science improving almost daily, there is now another power, infinitely more capable she needs to deal with.

Fade_Dance a year ago

Why even sell the book in such a situation?

It seems to me that a first release from a casual author with no marketing beyond friends and family has nearly zero chance to even get a single sale. The revenue aspect seems completely moot in such a situation, and effectively what one is doing is throwing the work into a void.

On the other hand, I can see how it might seem demeaning to just to give a work away that so much time was spent on, but at least it then has a chance to get maybe a dozen readers or so, especially if you go out and do some casual posting on forums and discussion boards, maybe go to a local book club, that sort of thing. Of course, there's always a slim chance of it going viral out of the blue, and I suppose that's one reason to attach a price to the work, but to me it seems like the virality chance is indistinguishable from zero if it's just tossed out there with a paywall among millions of other hobbyist books, While if there's a lower barrier to entry, that chance probably goes up at least an order of magnitude. In the infinitely small chance that it does go viral, it would be pretty easy to transition to a Patreon and put a price tag on the second work too.

I occasionally read these stories about authors working so hard and getting no one even reading their stuff, and it just seems so grim to me, even after accounting for the "make lemonade out of lemons" state of mind that OP has.

gus_massa a year ago

Is there a free chapter (of the first or second book)?

  • chinabotOP a year ago

    All the online sites like amazon, apple, kobo etc can download the first 10% of any ebook as a sample so you can try-before-you-buy

    • gus_massa a year ago

      I can't find a link to amazon, whatever, ... in your site. Is it there?

      * If the links aren't there, add it now! Even better, add one in the side bar and others at the bottom of the article.

      * It the links are somewhere in the page: Add a more visible copy (or two) for people like me that can't find them.

      If someone was interested enough to read your post, they may want to take a look. Make it easy.

      • chinabotOP a year ago

        Links to the books are not on that page, the post was not meant to promote them but the links for both books are on the RHS of the page in recent posts.

        or here => https://books2read.com/b/b6qlWE

        • gus_massa a year ago

          You don't want to be accused of promoting your books, but some moron will complain anyway. It's impossible to avoid all the morons in the Internet!

          Anyway, my recommendation is to add an explicit section of the RHS that says "Books" with a link to each book. Bonus points for an image of the cover of each book.

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