Author Alistair Haddow, would like everyone to know that his short novel, Disconnect, will be available for download free from Friday, January 30 through Sunday, February 1. Check it out, and remember to share with your peeps! Thanks, and good luck, Alistair. Hope you get lots of downloads.
Member News
I’m leaving KDP Select, and here’s why
My term in KDP Select expires tomorrow, and I’m declining to renew it in favor of going wide. This is not a hot-button topic for me the way it is for many who’ve had to adapt their strategies because of Kindle Unlimited. I released my first (currently only) book after the program launched. I have no idea how different my sales chart might look if Kindle Unlimited were not a thing.
But my hunch is: not much. I’ve had precisely four borrows since my release. Now, I’m not taking the world by storm; my sales rank tends to fluctuate between 100k and 700k in a given week. (Funny how one sale can shoot you up 500,000.) But I can still say that four represents a pretty small percentage of my total readers to date.
And at least two of those were from people I know, versus people who found the book via browsing. Which means KDP Select, whose main benefit is supposed to be increased visibility, has increased mine by: 2. And I think that’s mainly because my book is actually really without hyperbole not visible to most KU borrowers. Not because it’s a magic stealth spy ninja book, although that would be cool. I think KU appeals most to a specific audience of very high volume readers in particular genres–mostly, I suspect, romance.
Those are not my readers. Their eyes are going to go whooshing past the thumbnail to your right without ever really seeing it. I don’t get the benefits, and there are many, of writing for that audience, but I also don’t face the same challenges. (As a side note, I think this is important to remember if you frequent forums where a lot of the indies write romance, and you don’t. What works for their genre does not necessarily work for others.) For a lot of indies, KU is a lose-lose situation. If they’re in it, they make considerably less for a borrow than a sale. If they aren’t, a not-insignificant percentage of readers will simply borrow something else and pass them by entirely.
In my case, it’s more of a whatever-whatever situation. I don’t think KU, or KDP Select, makes a big difference either way. (I also did a Kindle Countdown deal at 99 cents that did okay, but I can’t say whether I’d have had an equal number of sales at the same price point with the same promotions, without the Countdown label.) But the only way to find out for sure is to go wide and see if I can sell more than, you know, four, through other retailers over the same period of time.
And that’s really my takeaway: there’s no reason not to try stuff. KDP Select runs in three month terms. If you’re going to succeed in a small business, you have to play the long game. Three months is not the long game.
So I’ll see how it goes. I’m also knocking the price down to 99 cents at the same time, so as to have a nice low entry point into the series. (The next book comes out in about 3 months.) If those changes end up not working for me, I’ll reverse them. In, like, less than five minutes. One of the advantages I have over the traditionally published is agility. But it’s only an advantage if you use it.
When to go wide

One of the thorniest decisions in self-publishing today is — enroll in Amazon’s KDP Select program (which requires that your book remains exclusive to Amazon) or go wide and try out all of the different publishers. So far, I’ve used the first approach, which has lots of benefits:
- 5 free days or 1 countdown deal every three months, which (if done right) can really increase your exposure to new readers while also keeping the rank of your book high
- Eligibility for being borrowed via Kindle Unlimited, which helps with exposure and can also increase your income (although the amount you get per borrow has been dwindling rapidly in recent months, from $2 to $1.50 to $1.33 and some authors report lower overall income as a result)
- Keeping all of your eggs in one basket means that all readers have to go to Amazon to buy your book, which means your book is likely to have a higher rank than if some of your readers bought elsewhere
- Simplicity, with only one file to upload, one system to learn, etc.
On the other hand, you’re obviously eliminating the possibility of making sales on other retailers if you go all-in with Amazon. And, while the majority of indie authors find that Amazon is the much easier nut to crack and thus that they make most of their money on Amazon even if they go wide, you might just be the exception to that rule. I hear rumblings now and then of authors who sell more books on non-Amazon sites, particularly All Romance Ebooks (if you write romance), Google Play (for children’s books and perhaps some other genres), and Barnes and Noble (for erotica and romance).
And then there are international sales. While Amazon does have branches nearly worldwide, if you appeal to a Canadian market, you’re shooting yourself in the foot by staying out of Kobo, the dominant Canadian ebook retailer. Similarly, iBooks and Tolino are reported to be big in Germany, where Amazon only has 40% of the ebook market according to Joanna Penn. Of course, once you start branching out beyond English-dominant countries, you also have to start considering whether it’s worthwhile to get your books translated, which is fodder for another post. But 7% of my Amazon income last month came from outside the U.S., making me wonder if I could turn a couple of hundred dollars a month into much more if I learned to leverage other platforms.
The final point in favor of going wide with your book distribution is perma-free. The accepted method of getting a book listed for free on Amazon is to list it through Smashwords or Draft2Digital (both of which distribute to many of the non-Amazon retailers), setting the book at a price of $0 through the distributor and waiting for Amazon to price match. But if you’re going to have the first book in your series up for free on other platforms while keeping the other books in the series only on Amazon, you’re spitting in reader’s faces. I know that if I was a nook user, if I downloaded and loved a free book, and then I found out that I’d have to change devices in order to read the rest of the series, I wouldn’t be very pleased.
Which is probably why most of the self-publishing heavy-hitters recommend going wide once you have more than one or two books in your arsenal. I thought long and hard about that decision as I prepared to launch Pack Princess, the second book in my Wolf Rampant series, and I’ve decided to stay in KDP for now…at least until I publish book three. At that point, I might decide that making the first book perma-free is the best way to get exposure for the growing series, making it worthwhile to pull out of KDP Select and explore other retailers.
In the meantime, I’d love to hear your thoughts on the topic. Are you in KDP Select? Why or why not? And, if you’re still reading, I hope you’ll take a minute to snag my middle-readers fantasy novel, Burgling the Dragon, which is free today. (Gotta take advantage of those KDP Select benefits!)
Please Send A Prayer or Some Positive Thoughts
This blog is very new, but I already feel like we are becoming a family, so I wanted to let you know of some folks who could use your kindest thoughts today. Those of you who follow Ned Hickson’s blog may have already seen his post, but for those who don’t, two young high school friends of Ned’s son were killed this morning on their drive to school. It has hit their small community hard, and Ned & his family are feeling a lot of pain today. It is a stark reminder that we are all here on loan, and may be called at any time, even as young as these kids were. Hold your family close and count your blessings, every single day.
If you’d like to read Ned’s very poignant post, it’s here. He has a way of making you remember what’s really important in this world.
Ned, our thoughts, prayers, best wishes, and love go out to you, your family, your community, and most especially, to the families of these children.

