Birthday weekend sale: the rounduppening

Man, it’s funny: I’m effectively unemployed right now, right?  I work one night a week at OtherJob and while I pretend that my full-time job is “Writer” right now, the fact is that without my own initiative “Writer” and “unemployed” look exactly the same and frankly at the moment are bringing in the same amount of income.  But hell if I don’t feel insanely busy right now.  I’ve hit my word count for the day as of 1:30, which is when I’m writing this, but I’ve got about ten thousand things to do before the wife gets home and SHIT THERE’S SOCCER TODAY.

Arrgh.  Anyway, point is, if I was ever worried about keeping my life full of stuff to do during the summer, I seem to be doing a pretty damn good job with that at the moment.  Granted, most of my “stuff to do” boils down to “read this” or “write this” (I have promised several people I’d take a look at manuscripts, work I enjoy doing, but… yeah, I probably ought to actually do it) so maybe I’m more of a grad student than an actual unemployed person but the point is damn, busy.

So let’s talk about this:Screen Shot 2014-07-08 at 1.25.44 PM

I’m gonna call this a success, I think, and I’ve learned something about Amazon.  With a minimal amount of promotion and a decent-sized audience (theoretically 3200 people subscribed here, although daily hits aren’t remotely that number, and around 800 on Twitter, with who knows how many seeing any individual Tweet, plus about 130 on Facebook who are likely mostly represented on other lists as well) you can hit #1 in a smaller sub genre for a couple of days.  I hit #1 in Short Stories and Anthologies, topped out at #4 in Space Opera, and maxed out at #1031 (that I saw, at least) in all Kindle free downloads.  In three days, I moved 311 copies of the book– 200 on Saturday, 72 on Sunday, and 36 on Monday, with three more that bled over into early Tuesday morning before Amazon officially shut the spigot off.  That kept me at #1 for all of Sunday and most of Monday, so I’m going to attribute those drops less to the dwindling effects of my own promotion and more to Amazon’s own ebb and fall of traffic on the course of a weekend.  I had not fallen out of the top 10 in Space Opera and was still #3 in Short Stories and Anthologies when I went to bed Monday night.

Suggestion: if you’re going to do a free day, do it on a Saturday.  Hella more hits.  This means that, combining this sale, the previous free days, and all of my sales, there are somewhere in the neighborhood of 450 copies of my book in the hands of readers right now, which I feel pretty good about.  There are eight reviews on the site, another on Amazon.ca, a few on Goodreads, and at least one that is just on the author’s blog and to the best of my knowledge not posted anywhere else.  Three more are posted in the “Reviews” section in the mast up there because Amazon has removed them.  All but one are positive, and most of them are glowingly so.  I literally couldn’t be any happier with how the reviews have gone.

Now to see if the increased exposure over the weekend leads to any spike in actual money sales ($2.99 cheap!) this week.  I’ve not made any so far today, but the pattern thus far has been that since the first couple of days that the book was available I never make any sales in the morning or afternoon.  They’re always in the evening and sometimes very late at night for whatever reason.  So we’ll see tonight if I get a bump or not.  Here’s to hoping, right?

And let me repeat this one more time:  Thank you so, so much to everyone who downloaded/read/retweeted/told a friend/reviewed/hell, sent positive vibes regarding this book this weekend.  I appreciate it more than y’all could possibly know.

Now back to work on the sequel.  Well, after I finish murder-painting the bathroom and these ten other errands I have to do.  🙂

Last day for BENEVOLENCE ARCHIVES free promotion!

I’ve been tremendously happy with how The Benevolence Archives, Vol. 1 has performed over the last few days; we’ve spent a good chunk of that at first place in the “Short Stories and Anthologies” subgenre and top five for “Space Opera.”

…but it could be better.

You.  Yeah, you.  Have you downloaded The Benevolence Archives, Vol. 1 yet?  This blog has 3200 followers, so probably not.

Don’t you think you should?  It’s freeeeeeee today.  But just until midnight, and not any more after that.

Go for it.  Treat yourself.  You know you want to.

Check this out

Have I told you how awesome Winter Bayne is yet?  Or recently, at least?  Because Winter Bayne is awesome.  Not only did she write an excellent review of The Benevolence Archives that, crap, I just realized I haven’t linked to yet , she did this for me:

bacover3d

(I only wish the thing was available in print.  It will be sooner or later, just not yet.  Haven’t had time to learn how CreateSpace works yet.)

Sales update:  We’re still #1 in Anthologies/Short Stories, after almost an entire day, and have slipped a teeny bit to #6 in Space Opera, even though sales have dropped off from yesterday– and the combination of those two facts makes me think it’s probably just Amazon in general that’s slower on Sundays than Saturdays.  Fifty copies moved so far today vs. about 100 at this point yesterday.  The book is still free until midnight Monday night, so go download it if you haven’t yet!

Ceci n’est pas une promotional post

So this is what 38 feels like.

True fact: yesterday was not a big deal as far as the whole “birthday” angle went.  I have been telling people I was 38 for months for some reason, and in fact– this is not a joke, I swear– spent part of the year legitimately convinced I actually was 38 and not 37, a delusion that ended when I literally  lost an argument with my brother about how old I was.  So… no biggie.  40 might be a biggie, but I’ve kinda gotten used to being old by now, so maybe it won’t.  We’ll see.  We went over to my parents’ place in the morning to clear more detritus from the storm– they had a lot more than I did– had lunch over there, went and got my wife a new phone, and I pretty much spent the rest of the evening on the Internet cackling over numbers and hitting “reload” on websites.  My birthday dinner was Jimmy John’s, ordered when I realized that I hadn’t eaten dinner yet and legitimately didn’t have much time left to get someone else to bring me food.

At one point, I had been planning on cooking a decent meal yesterday.  Whoops.

As of right now, BA vol. 1 is still sitting at first place in the “Short Stories and Anthologies” genre for free Kindle books, and you best believe that as minor as the achievement is in absolute terms, the fact that I’m moving more books than an honest-to-God Grand Master of science fiction is pretty fuckin’ awesome.  I’m at fifth place in “Space Opera,” 50th in all free sci-fi, and #1052 in all free Kindle books.  I’m hoping to have that down to three digits by the end of today.  So far I’m continuing to move books faster than I did yesterday; I had 200 downloads by midnight and am at 25 right now– I think it took until after noon yesterday for 25 copies to happen, so I’m a couple of hours ahead.

Interestingly, the last time I did a free day and (I thought at the time) promoted it heavily, it moved 80 copies.  200 is way more than 80.  Several theories as to the difference:

  • The book has several very positive reviews now, where during the first week it didn’t.  People who don’t know me from the blog or real life have several better reasons to try it out now.  Getting a couple of excellently-timed positive website/blog reviews during the sale that I could link to also really helped, I think.
  • I have four times as many Twitter followers as I did last time.  I should have 800 followers within an hour or so.  While I’m still not getting a lot of clicks on individual posts, I’m getting a lot of help from other folks with retweets and their own messages and things like that, so a lot more people saw the book through Twitter than last time.
  • There are about 2-300 more people subscribed here than there were in May, also.
  • Facebook.  A bunch of my (real life) friends shared, and some of them actually wrote their own posts promoting the book.  Always good.  (And, again, thanks.)

Things that I don’t think have made much of a difference:

  • Twitter recirculation from authors’ groups and free book notifier style Twitter accounts.  I spent probably two hours this week filling out applications online and making sure FreeKindleBooks or HeyHaveABook or whatever knew the book was going to be free.  If they retweeted or promoted anything, it never crossed my radar.  Similarly, the money I shelled out to join Self Publisher’s Showcase and the Independent Author’s Network doesn’t seem like it’s going to end up paying out.  It was grant money, so I don’t mind, but unless something changes I’m not planning on any renewals.
  • Facebook.  I went ahead and dropped $15 to “boost” one of the posts on the Luther Siler page, just to see what would happen.  What happened:  Facebook claims that 10,964 people have seen that post as of right now, with $5.46 of my $15 left unspent.  The results:  five likes on the specific post, four from 13-17 year old girls and one from a 13-17 year old boy, who are not exactly my target demographic, and one general like on the Luther Siler page.  I have no reason to believe that there was even a single download from the boost.  I don’t think I’ll be doing that again.

The real interesting thing, to me, is that I only actually have 125 friends on Facebook, and the book moved 200 copies yesterday and has probably been downloaded a total of around 350 times by now.  This leads me to suspect that with very few exceptions everyone who I actually know on Facebook that has any chance of downloading the book has already done it, meaning that my own personal real-world reach is probably pretty close to exhausted and I’m into word-of-mouth and actual advertising now.

I promise, there won’t be nearly as much advertising here today either, although I’m still gonna keep doing a post every hour and a half or so on Twitter, because I feel like I’m getting a bump each time I do that.  We’ll see how day two goes.  (And, I note, I moved five copies while I was writing this.  Cool.)

FIRST!

BAM:

Screen Shot 2014-07-05 at 11.27.24 PM

I believe, by indie author Twitter standards, I’m allowed to call myself a “bestselling author” in my description now.  Sadly, no other culture on earth follows said standards.

🙂

(Thank you so so so so so much, everyone who downloaded, or shared, or reviewed, or anything today.  Or ever.)

(I am officially done with promo for today, and barring something insane happening I plan to dial it way back tomorrow.  Thank you for putting up with that, too.)

In which I AM OUTSELLING HUGH HOWEY

(Well, okay, “selling” is the wrong word, because the book is free, and it’s just the first chapter of Wool, not the whole thing, and it’s been out for forever, and there’s still that world-famous Grand Master of Science Fiction Dianetics dude in between me and genre supremacy, but…)

BAM.

Screen Shot 2014-07-05 at 9.17.12 PM

BAM.

Screen Shot 2014-07-05 at 9.17.24 PM

And also #6 in Space Opera BAM.

Screen Shot 2014-07-05 at 9.17.45 PM

We’re #4! We’re #4! We’re #4!

…and behind some serious science fiction heavy hitters.  Also, just crossed the three-figure mark on downloads today.  Can we claim third place?  Go go go!

Screen Shot 2014-07-05 at 7.22.02 PM

(For those of you rolling your eyes at the ceaseless self-promotion: Unless something ridiculous happens, like hitting first place, I’ll be dialing back a bit tomorrow, I promise.  Just ignore me for another 24 hours or so.  Love ya.)

MOAR

moarCopies of The Benevolence Archives, Vol. 1 are flying off the shelves… well, digitally, I guess.  There aren’t actually shelves.  And “flying” may not be the best metaphor for digital transmission.  Beaming off the servers?  Sure.

Point is people are downloading it, and we’re currently #6 in one of the two genres I get to file the book with.  I WANT NUMBER ONE.  IN THE WORLD.  FOREVER.

Care to download a lovely batch of stories for absolutely none of your money whatsoever?  (You don’t need a Kindle, remember; there are apps for smartphone and for computers/tablets.)

DO YOU WANT THE ANNOYING ADVERTISING TO STOP?

Of course you do.

(EDIT:  I just looked at the top ten.  First place is an L. Ron Hubbard novel and second place is Wool, by Hugh Howey, which I paid for in paperback.  So… uh… LET’S SHOOT FOR THIRD!)