Showing posts with label Blogger (service). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blogger (service). Show all posts

Friday, July 31, 2015

How to Self-Publish from India: A Case Study

How to Self-Publish from India: A Case Study


How to Self-Publish from India: A Case Study

It started when this reader from Chennai, India emailed me about one of my books being ripped off.

He was just being honest about finding some books being given away for free. So I thanked him and gave him some more.

Over a few years, we've been exchanging comments and books, helping each other out as we could.

Recently, he told me he wanted to write and publish books - along the line of self-help and personal development. 

The trick to this was that he had no computer or home Internet. He was going out to an Internet kiosk

So I made him a deal - I'd help set him up and he'd then help some others get set up.

The main point is this: If a writer in India with only borrowed Internet access can get himself successfully self-published, then anyone can.

I did the usual, which has streamlined even more as time goes on.

Here's the short-hand notes on how to get started: 

How to Self-Publish in India (For only sweat equity.)

Payment:
  • Paypal + PAN card

Book creation:

Book publishing and sales:

Book Promotion:

Let's take these apart - 

Payment:

Paypal has become pretty conventional these days. In India, you have to have a PAN card as well, so that they can collect their taxes. That's the way it goes there.

Book creation:

LibreOffice is accepted and converted everywhere. It's now simplest to upload your native .odt file to Lulu and they'll create the ebook for you. LibreOffice also generates a upload-ready PDF, but you can get Lulu to do this as part of your hardcopy version. Then simply download the epub and PDF versions (as well as selling that PDF version directly on Lulu) - so you can upload these other places.

GIMP is used to make your covers, if you don't get these made elsewhere.

Calibre is used to store the meta-data (descriptions and tags) as well as keep all your versions of the book in one central location. It will also convert your epub to mobi so Kindle users can upload it. (Most people are now using their smartphones or tablets these days, so will use the epub or PDF file.)

Book publishing and Sales:

Lulu will publish your needed versions in both ebook and hardcopy versions. Flipkart is for India and the surrounding area.

Blogger enables you to get sales directly, when you put a Ganxy script on your site. This also allows you to capture emails, which makes even MailChimp unnecessary to start with. You can email your customers directly. As well, it's possible to make a widget that only does email, and put this anywhere. 

You get blogger with a domain-name of it's own in order to get more respect. Blogger doesn't care how much money you make from it and takes care of all the backend support work. Yes, you're limited like anywhere else, but you can concentrate soley on creating more books, not on security updates, plug-in conflicts, etc.

Ganxy allows you to import and export email lists (just follow their terms of service closely.) So you don't have to have an email client to start with. Ganxy also sells directly to your other distributors without having a person have to leave your blog. 

As you get experienced with this, you can then do the needed homework on Gumroad - which has some great tutorials and short courses you can take. Gumroad has extra features such as memberships and subscriptions so you can get more recurring income by selling courses, etc.

Sellfy works with Facebook on a tab - so you can sell all your books in a bookstore setup.

You'll need to upload your books to each of these (Ganxy, Gumroad, Sellfy) in order to enable direct sales.

Book Promotion:

Podcasting is hands down the fastest way for you to get traffic to your blog. Use archive.org for hosting, and generate the RSS feed with Feedburner, then port that feed to iTunes and Stitcher (plus a few others.)

Social updates are done via Ganxy, and your Blogger blog will post to Google+ for you, but use IFTTT to push your content everywhere else. Almost too numerous to mention here. You will need to post to LinkedIn on your own, through.

Take that audio file and create a video from it, then post to YouTube. (And set up recipes on IFTTT so that they promote your video for you.)

- - - -

It's really that simple. A couple of years have boiled this down to what would fit on one side of a 3x5 recipe card. Funny, huh? 

I've got my buddy in India working through these. I did a lot of these for him, as he started out without having a computer and going to a local Internet cafe in order to get online access.

Now he's got a used laptop and is creating podcasts on his own.

As a side-point, Ganxy (and Gumroad, Sellfy) allow you to sell audio on their site as well - even create bundles with many files having a single check-out. So your audio files can be used as promotion (via Soundcloud or YouTube/Vimeo) and also as bonuses.

It seems the simplest is also the easiest and cheapest. 

This doesn't get you around editing your book, or creating enticing covers, or the work in watching your sales and running promotional campaigns. But if a guy in India can do it, then anyone else in the world with Internet access can as well.

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Make sure you're subscribed above in order not to miss out on any hair-raising, white-knuckled, cliff-hanging adventures in self-publishing.

See you next time...


Wednesday, July 8, 2015

I'm Sorry - Updates Galore Coming Soon!



I've been quiet too long. And I apologize.

It's not that I don't have stuff for you - I do. About 5 podcasts which have to be recorded and posted so you can be alerted by email or RSS feed/podcatcher/iTunes, etc. (You are subscribed, aren't you? Good.)

Because I do this all for you.

What's happened that I don't want you to fall into.

I went back to my hard-drives and pulled every backup I had. Of course, because I didn't always have this habit, they only went back to 2005. I look around old files and found that I'd been blogging since at least 2003, but they were on platforms which have since gone extinct.

Anyway, this gave me nearly 5,000 (yes, five thousand) blog posts to sort through. Taking out obvious duplicates narrowed it down to under 4,000. When I simply trashed or turned to draft anything you wouldn't be interested in (like the details of getting a refund from a scammer company that finally went under last year) - this pulled it down below 3,000.

Finally, I had to go through everything which wasn't assigned a category and put these where they belonged.

Moving back to Wordpress off Blogger

I've always liked Wordpress, but had a love/hate relationship with the free blog-hosting sites that used it. All free blog hosting sites have trouble with spammers. Some have taken fairly draconian (harsh) measures to protect their servers and financial backend.

Wordpress.com was one of these. I've had more blogs and profiles turned off on that site than I can easily count. They simply won't tolerate obvioius affiliate links. And will ban you at the drop of a hat. (While meanwhile labeling you a spammer - hope you're not using your real name...)

Since I need to make an online living by offering products (my books) - I had to get onto a platform that would not just tolerate this, but encourage it. So I went to Blogger.

And I was happy, overall. I knew it was more limited than Wordpress, but the minimalist simplicity of it didn't keep you from feeding your muse and working to get paid for it.

Blogger has one major drawback - it doesn't have categories, so exporting and then re-importing to a Wordpress platform leaves you with a huge stack of stuff which is "uncategorized."

Then the fun begins.

(I did see, after a couple of days at this, that it's possible to turn tags ["labels" on Blogger] into categories. And then within Wordpress, to move from one category to another, or combine them.)

Since "uncategorized" is a default on Wordpress, I had to move all these over into a new temp category, sort them, to where they needed to go, and then delete that temp one.

It took days, close to a week of my part-time schedule working at this (the farm chores and other duties still take their fair share.)

And Just When I Thought I Was Done...

...I found out how deep this rabbit hole goes.

Rainmaker is an amazing platform. Amazing. As I don't use that word often, it means a lot.

I was down to about 1200 posts (with at least that many as draft or trash to revive as needed.)

Unfortunately, it isn't really like Blogger or Wordpress, where you can pick out a nice template and just start in. It's way more powerful with built-in memberships, podcasting networks, online courses, and of course - the ability to directly sell digital products.

I'm getting this podcast out to you on the old system to let you know what's coming up. Because I've got a lot of work to do - still - just to help you get the data you want the way you want it.

The problem is that it's going to take some time before I can get a nice base set up and turn on stuff bit-by-bit.

There's no reason to have to have everything ready at once, but let me lay out what looks to be possible at this point.

The Grand Design Revealed

...drumroll, please.

You should really go over to livesensical.com to sign up. That's my new site. Nice video there that starts to explain it.

This site will really be in four parts, which is how I've organized my 50+ years of research and all the workable resources I've collected so share with you.

There are going to be both free and paid memberships, which allow me to fine-tune this material. To begin with, it will all be a free membership - but I'll have a lot of blog posts which live free out there to get people to sign up at all.

These four areas will each have their own podcast, probably bi-weekly, as that's a lot of work.

Just in the self-help area, I already have 4 or 5 ecourses which can be revived. In the online marketing area, there's another 3-4 or more.  This is just what I've found when I was moving stuff around. Other courses exist on video and PDF which can be brought in and connected. Then there are PLR video and audio courses which I've got stashed away and are still fairly useful.

I've mentioned before that I have a couple dozen-dozen books out there already. Some are very applicable to your studies, some were just tests (aka: cannon fodder). There are a great number of these I want to make available for free, and then offer the other version of them (epub, mobi, audiobook/podcasts, videos) for small fees - well, at least higher than they are sold on Amazon.

Eventually, I'll get onto some major projects I've been laying out and putting off - such as

  • a set of classic evergreen fiction bestsellers made available to authors to improve their craft. 
  • There's also an online marketing training course to enable people to really think with what they find online and be able to spot real winners and the scams. This has particular use to people who have been into Network Marketing
  • My series on Masters of Marketing needs quite a bit more work - and porting to LinkedIn for their use.
  • There's a final book on selling books online, which takes all the data I've set out here and packages it up in various formats. This also needs to be a course, plus bundled with audio.
  • Eventually, I'll be caught up and will start in on Children's Books, both writing and illustrating them, but they'll have a companion set of books so anyone can train themselves on this genre. (It will probably be it's own site, although that's a future scene I haven't fully figured out as yet.)
The Rainmaker platform has built-in SEO scripting, so all the surviving posts need to be gone through and updated. That alone would take weeks if I didn't also have some forward progress to make (and bills to pay, and promises to keep.)

The backend bells-and-whistles to set this up take a bit of study - but there is an excellent set of tutorials and walk-throughs which tell anyone how to build their own stuff.

The great part of Rainmaker platform is that this is the same tools that Clark & Co. have used to build Copyblogger into a multi-million dollar annual income. Same tools - just like they use. In short: it's truly powerful.

What happens to these old blogs?

Well, they stay right there. One datum you must know is that you never, ever delete a blog once you set it up. Fill it with usable content, put an opt-in form on it, update it if you can here and there. But like vintage wine, it gets more valuable with time, not less. Google gives them more authority (meaning: higher rankings) the longer they are out there. Even free blogs. Put them on a spreadsheet and drop some content in on them from time to time. (If you can set up IFTTT to syndicate your content, that fine.)

You see, each of these free blog hosts have their own community. So they recommend your stuff to their followers differently. That means more people can find your stuff that you'd not necessarily connect with otherwise.

Meanwhile, the search engines can link all these in on very long-tail basis to help other people find your stuff. 

I don't really have a system in place to deal with all these. Like I said, I've got a spreadsheet which hs most of them on it - some will stay forever lost to my access, but will never be deleted.

In some cases, like that scammer content, this can be posted back to specialty blogs just on that subject - the history of a particular Utah scammer company. Might even become a book if I can ever get around to it. But having this content on a Blogger blog is a fitting bookend to this chapter of my own history.

You also never throw away old content - you just re-purpose it when you can.

Well, thanks - Gotta run.

I really, really appreciate the time you spend listening to these rambles. It's all designed to help you learn from my mistakes and earn your own extra online income faster. 

I've got a long post (just written last night) on free blogs all by themselves. Another on how to effectively promote on social media without having your time sucked away with no income. And some others I wrote last week about what I'd been inspired on through this journey. 

These are all waiting for me to find them, record them, and get them out to you.

Today, though, I though you deserved an update.

Let me know what you need covered in more detail. I'll get to it when I can - you can see above that my schedule is a bit packed now...

Luck to us all.

Sunday, May 31, 2015

When Your Case Study Becomes the Next Case Study (11)

When your Book Selling Case Study Becomes Your Video and Podcast Case Study (11)





This could have happened to you - or maybe not.

The scene was this: I was listening to some podcasts while working (as radio these days is nearly as bad as the TV news) and got inspired to use this fancy mic I had gotten a few months back.

It would be a nice test (I told myself) as you've got all these programs and it would be a good thing to do what you've been telling others all along - you know, publish to multiple eyeballs in as many formats as possible...

So I "ate my own dogfood" - I did what I thought was a good blog post about what I'd just done the night before in publishing.

Then I read this over, just the way I'd tell someone the same data - well, maybe a bit more interesting than that. Recorded it, and edited in Audacity on a MAC. (Could have done that on my Linux box as well - or Windows, if I was into self-torture.)

I uploaded that to Archive.org, then took that file location and set it into Blogger as an enclosure link. Voila! I was podcasting.

Went back to the blog post and embedded the audio on the page.

Then, I worked up a presentation, based on the outline of what I was saying. Did this in LibreOffice Impress. Exported each frame as a jpeg file.

These images and the audio were combined in a video editor (OpenShot - on Linux) and created a video file for YouTube.

But it was a bit dry, so I looked up some PLR bumper music on my hard drives and added this to the sound-track.

Produced the video again, and uploaded it to YouTube. Then embedded it onto the original page - below the podcast file.

Finally, I added the presentation to the bottom of the page, where it could be downloaded.

Where this could be improved

It took most of the day, with interruptions. Most of the time spent was in finding everything the first time. Knowing how to use Audacity and a video editor made it faster.

Still, it took at least as long to edit the audio into shape as it took to record it. (Peacock in the background - see if you can hear it...)

The presentation took some time, although I didn't even try to create the whole transcript (original blog post) as a presentation. This would have been way too many images to set up - so building one based on a simple outline makes the video possible.  I'll probably keep doing this on future videos as a time saver.

What I still need to do is to scrape that original blog post and make a simple PDF of it (with links - through LibreOffice) and post that as well to Slideshare.net.

I'll use the same bumper music - to brand these - so that will be faster on the podcast.

If I podcast all the blog posts from here on out, then I'll be able to burn an RSS feed via Feedburner and post this to Itunes.

This, of course, makes your book discovery more possible. (A future blog post will happen on this.)

The assembly-line sequence for your multi-media production


  1. Blog it like you'd talk to someone you know and respect.
  2. Podcast this. (Edit goofs, add bumper theme intro and outro.)
  3. Scrape and create the PDF of this blog post.
  4. Create a presentation of the outline.
  5. Turn the presentation into images (jpeg's.)
  6. Combine the audio and images into a video.
  7. Post the podcast to your hosting service. Add the link as an enclosure.
  8. Embed the podcast.
  9. Post the video. Embed the video.
  10. Post the PDF's. Embed the PDF's.
  11. Review and make your blog post live.
  12. Rinse, repeat.

This should just takes an hour or so, once you have all the tools in place.

Why do all this work?

As I've covered before - it's a point of Search Engine Marketing. Now I have backlinks from YouTube, Slideshare, and Archive.org coming directly to that blog post. As well, I've got peripheral links out to Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, and Pinterest. Some got hit a couple of times.

This means I have some rudimentary social linking happening. And I have some of the biggest sites now saying that my little blog is important to them. All good.

While I can cut out the video to save some time (still posting the podcast and PDF's) - that wouldn't be the smartest move, as videos tend to convert more than just blog posts or audio only.

The point is to set up a Gary Vaynerchuk scene, as there's a lot to say on this subject. All that would enable people discovering my books that much easier.

Believe me, I see that there is still a lot to learn in this area. For a first try, that wasn't bad (IMHO.)

It's all downhill from here.

PDF download:



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Make sure you're subscribed by email or news-reader (and soon - podcast feed) so you don't miss an issue.

Saturday, May 30, 2015

How I Fouled up Self-Publishing My New Book Series - Case Study 10

(...and what you can do to avoid this mistake)


How I Fouled up Self-Publishing My New Book Series (...and what you can do to avoid this mistake)
(Yes, I know - Fouled up isn't the same as Fowl, which isn't a cute chickie...)



Video edition:


OK, I got busy getting some hard-cover books done up - mainly because Lulu had a 25% discount which ended last night. (And that mostly paid for shipping...)

I had these books which I thought were ready, but actually were only half-way there. Out of the 13 books in that series (yes it grew from the first 6), I was able to get 8 of them coming to me as proofs. (I have one more actually ready, but was too close to the midnight deadline to order, and the others are either too short to print, or have a lot of work yet to make them ready.)

The problem was, I screwed up with the self-serving links in them.

I told you years ago - or was it just last year sometime - that you need to start tracking your links from these books.

It's true that Google is able to read these books, and so can follow links. If you put a link-shortener in there, you get no SEO. So my foul-up isn't that bad.

OK, let's backtrack a bit - this is getting us both confused.

The error you shouldn't make

I had these books ready, or so I thought.

Instead of putting a single link back to the site, I thought to add a "Bibliography" to each book which would give links to all the books in that series. (This is instead of a single link front and back.)

What I did then was to quickly set up landing page addresses for each book (set up the page on the site, copy the link, then turn the post back to draft.)

The step I omitted (which isn't a big deal, since the print versions don't have links anyway) is to convert all these books into bit.ly-shortened links.

The two reasons for using bit.ly are, first - they are the only shortener left standing which actually tracks your links and can give some analytics on it. The second reason is that they have become a form of social media in themselves.

The whole point of this is to have trackable links from your ebooks to show you whether they are coming from your books or somewhere else. I don't know that Google Analytics can't track these, but the point is that you want to be able to - and bit.ly is the only way I know of right now to do so.

Why the trade paperback isn't a bad start

It's true that they don't have links, but why paying for the expense of getting these books printed instead of the easy route of ebooks?

Well, for a start - Amazon can't/won't reject them. Second, you are only paying a few bucks for each book and will have a nice copy for your effort, with the satisfying touch and feel - being able to dog-ear and use a real bookmark, etc.

True, I've said to get them out into the ebook distributors first and then only spend the time and money on proven sellers.

And that is still very valid advice. When you are broadshooting with a few dozen books available to publish, that would be the way to go. Particularly with PLR to show you which book markets are hottest - of course you've already done your market research to pick out PLR ebooks based on what you've found. Publishing ebooks just tends to verify and narrow your field (providing your covers and descriptions are enticing and fascinating.)

And maybe this was a mistake. I kinda think not - since I can sit down and rattle off a 5-10 minute book trailer with a hardcopy in my hand, doing a half-dozen or more books in a single sitting. This then gets the book trailer out of the way.

It also takes time to get those books to me, while I then build out the landing pages for each one (yes, you can imagine having to build 13 landing pages will take some time.) With snail-mail (cheapest) figure about 10 days to 2 weeks before they arrive. I should be able to get all those pages back up and running.

The other error I'm correcting 

It has to do with IFTTT (If This Then That - ifttt.com). This we've covered - it's a way to get your message out to all sorts of social media. I have to post the original video, cover, blog post, audio, and PDF to basically five sites. Then IFTTT sends these out to:

Tumblr
Wordpress
Blogger
Facebook Page
Instagram
500px
Twitter
LinkedIn
bitly
delicious
diigo
digg
Box
and Facebook
And some get multiple posts. That saves me a lot of work promoting these - the problem is: I don't have these set up via IFTTT, either. Or all verified, anyway.

So I pulled down (reverted to draft) all the landing pages I had put up. So when I put these live, they'll be covered. (You can see my CYA post here.)

All that work is headed in a certain direction - which is how to market these books, any books, effectively. And as I said before, what starts right tends to go right, but you can always start over...

What about this Membership stuff?

Funny you should ask. That's probably the fourth error I have to fix.

When I started looking ahead to all the work I had to do, I considered that I wouldn't want to do anything twice - and that why should I invest my Synnd coins on a Blogger blog, when I can spend them promoting the same post on my membership site which I can then syndicate over to that Blogger site (which IFTTT then syndicates to Wordpress and Tumblr, etc. for me.)

About the time I get all done, I'll need to change it again. Not funny.

So my next real step is to figure if I can CNAME deep inside my membership, or simply redirect my Blogger blog over to a category inside my wordpress-based Rainmaker platform.

The original Blogger site will still get set up as planned, it's just that the main promotion is going to be spent on my Rainmaker-hosted site, with the freebie site carried as a version of the first. Is it worth it? Well, you never throw away a blog which has been around for awhile. And this standalone blog will be devoted entirely and only to assembling and promoting the know-how of creating children's books. (I've got plans after this as well - when I start cranking out children's books by the gross, literally...)

Lots of work ahead, one step back for every two forward, and so on.

But you're worth it, aren't you?

You are why I'm doing this after all - so you don't have to go through this pain on your own.

- - - -

Be sure you're subscribed by email or news-reader to this site so you don't miss anything coming up...

Presentation version:

Thursday, May 21, 2015

What Begins Well, Goes Well - and You Can Always Start Over

What Begins Well, Goes Well - and You Can Always Start Over

So, I was all set to get back to publishing books - when I discovered I really should drop back and punt.

(Not hand it over to someone else, but like you're playing as a kid and doing both sides of the game - practice, you know...)

I'd just reached the end of describing (with a fair amount of detail) the marketing strategy for ebook marketing.

By the end of it, I'd convinced both you and I that we aren't so much book publishers, but media-content producers. eBooks are one format we push - one that can make us considerable income - but the reason they exist is to get people into our mailing list so we can give them more value. The underlying purpose is to help them improve their lives.

About then I realized this was what the Copyblogger Rainmaker platform is all about - they had stated that idea most clearly, even though they didn't sell books (but they do give away plenty in their free membership.)

As fate had it, I was sent an email by PayPal saying that some old membership I had (which wasn't running) still was misconnected somehow to their backend.  Looking that up (it's a script called InstaMember, which I discovered and described in my Mike Dillard Expose) - I found that I'd misplaced that plug-in and had to download it again, in order to get it set up again, so I could turn it off - or so I thought. (By the end of this little adventure, I'd found the actual corner of what hard drive I had stashed it in, although I'd already paid to "extend the download period" - and also that I could have simply gone to PayPal and turned it off, but didn't discover that until I had rebuilt the blog that plug-in originally was on and got into the plug-in's setup. *Sigh*)

About then it hit me like a ton of bricks...

The sudden realization came to me that I should really be publishing all these books via Rainmaker and sending promotion to those landing pages rather than my Blogger blog-host.

And that's where I sit now. We're going to get this going for real, with a real backend.

Meanwhile, I'll still push all the content over to that Blogger backend so you can see how to do it for cheap. I owe you that much. Since I always tell you to do a lean startup in publishing and give you the frugal path first.

The reason I can afford a monthly fee to Rainmaker is because my books are selling well enough to afford it. Same with Synnd

Memberships are tougher to set up for nearly nothing, but it can be done. (Theoretically, you only need PayPal and an autoresponder - and Mail Chimp is free for the first 500 or so on your list.)  We'll explore how to do this with GumRoad and also InstaMember.

That means I've just committed to carve up my time even more - but don't we agree that laying out all the options for you is worth it? That's why you're here, isn't - to save yourself some time? (So you don't have to spend the decade like I have just to get to this point...)

As the old saying goes, 

"What starts well, tends to go well." But you also have,

"'Tis a lesson you should heed: 
Try, try, try again
If at first you don't succeed,: 
Try, try, try again."

Thomas H. Palmer

All this is to explain that our next study steps will be to review setting up a membership, as I go through these with GumRoad (on Blogger),  InstaMember (on a WP blog), and Rainmaker (by itself).

Means more homework and testing for me - and probably missing some daily posts to you. 

The new research lineup:

As I see it right now, we'll get Rainmaker running, then see how to do the same thing on a Wordpress (WP) setup with InstaMember, then come back and see how close we can come with Gumroad and Blogger.

InstaMember is a one-time purchase with life-time updates, so that's not bad an investment on your budget (somewhat like Market Samurai, though not so intense.)

I don't know at this point what exactly we are going to find. I know all three will work, and also that you get what you pay for. 

The frugal/lean startup, however, doesn't have a choice.

As this blog is devoted to the struggling author with that ever-present day job, I'll give you these three options to see which fits you best.

The ideal is to get you to financial freedom so you can write full time (well, about a third of your day - with marketing and recharging taking the other two-thirds.)

Like I said - you're worth it.

- - - - 

Make sure you're subscribed by email or news reader so you don't miss any installment of this adventure...

Sunday, May 17, 2015

At last, you're published - telling the world: Case Study 05

(Photo: "Riverside Stompers - Wolfgang Straka 2007 e")

Time to let the world know about your book.


Technically, you've been published ever since you first submitted to Lulu to get your ISBN. The completely-published part was when you got it to all the major distributors. We're just talking ebooks and hardcopies here. When you put your original PDF to Scribd and Doc-Stoc, you took an extra step most self-publishers don't. Even then, there are still more places to publish your book, as part of a binder or bundle of material - which we'll cover today.

Errata:

This wouldn't be an exciting journey without some mis-steps and side-adventures.

You probably saw that I had mis-numbering of the Case Studies, now corrected. (Two 03's, for anyone counting.)

I also had to go backwards and fix up the site theme for our test case site - http://picturebook.midwestjournalpress.com/ .

Mobile-ready Blues

You remember I like Blogger because it really has no footprint on your domain server and also is simple? Well, one major problem is that their idea of "mobile-friendly" is to not show all the sidebar widgets. This even happens sometimes when you go right into the code and tell them to, specifically.

Something had to be done on a cope basis while I move to Rainmaker (eventually.)

This is also a problem to anyone who is managing their own site, which is common to our idea of a lean startup home publishing business.

The ideal is that viewers see your opt-in form right after they finish the content they came their to see. However no one could - and I have several of these subdomain-type blogger-hosted sites for the various niches I publish books to.

The solution was to find some free blogger templates which are "responsive" - meaning they resize according to your screen width. So the same content is on a big screen as well as a smartphone.

Since I had several sites, I had to look up, download, extract, re-upload, and then  tweak the code so it worked. Not as simple as blogger's own interface.

Again, this is simply a patch - but these blogs aren't going away, even when they are superceded. So they have to continue to work on mobile sites. Meaning eventually, I'll have to convert all my sites to these templates. (Sigh.) Because more and more people (myself included) are viewing (and buying) through the Internet mostly on mobile devices.

To shorten this story, I got it done. And also found a few I'll be able to use on my other sites to get them really "mobile-ready."

It just took all day yesterday, plus some hour or so today.

Now back to explaining our to-do list spreadsheet...

Promoting Where Readers Live

This last section of the promotion checklist (spreadsheet) doesn't require you to convert any of your content to any other type of media.

We're simply going to get onto the most effective lines we can and let the people who live their do their magic.

As well, we're going to get all these ebooks and produced media into the hands of professional sales people to expand our reach beyond anything we could ever do ourselves.

Once these steps are done, we run our analytics again - then celebrate, take a very short break, and ... start on our next book. We want to see if we can make a bigger splash with what we've learned from this last one.

There will be some bonus points to cover at the end - so read carefully (this is not a quiz, but I don't want to confuse you...)

OK: That last section starts with
Book Sites
    OpenLibrary,   Library Thing,   Goodreads

This took me a couple of days to narrow down. These three are the only social book-readers site worth anything - out of 50 or more of them.

You need to create author bio's on each of them. And make sure your book is listed there. These book sites are ones which routinely come up on Google searches and also have a decent-enough traffic to help get your book discovered. Also, you are doing something which no one really recommends to do - which is to get your book on lists where readers (and librarians) form the communities.

This is sheer promotion, but it's really pretty mundane - details of book size, weight, number of pages are needed. All in addition to your cover and description. By doing this, you get backlinks and whatnot. Even though it doesn't seem like much, every step on this spreadsheet counts toward book discovery.

Additional formats
We've covered these cursorily, but these need a discussion here.

Next on our spreadsheet:
Audiobook

Course
On Amazon, you see all versions of the book linked together (and you can email them if they don't get it right.)

You're then cross-selling your book - and about as much as Amazon will let you. Ebooks sell hardcopy and vice-versa. Some people like to have multiple versions of your book. If it's selling well, you really should consider milking (leveraging) your sales by providing all the versions anyone could want.

Here, we are translating every single chapter into audio. You can DIY or hire it out. The point is that you can have several hundred more coming in each week.

Once you've gotten all that audio done, it's logical to make short (free) and long (paid) course versions of it. That's completely logical for a non-fiction book. Especially since the author usually has a lot more to say about each step which was left on the "cutting room floor" so to speak. In making a course, you have the chance to add even more value, yet again.

Creating a short ecourse version to get opt-in's is obvious. What is a great trick is to give your opt-in's access to a library of content on a free membership basis.

The longer course is also a great part to sell by itself, or as part of a paid membership. The Rainmaker Pro version has this built-in as part of your monthly benefits. Build as many courses as you want. There's also ways to do paid courses with Gumroad for free. (See this Gumroad Integration page for ideas..)

Behind Your Velvet Rope.

We've mostly covered this in pieces earlier.

Memberships.

There's a study I need to go back and complete. But I know enough to sign up for Rainmaker months ago so I could build one for real. There was a short study of this when I was chasing up how a particular milllionaire got so rich.

There's a lot on that blog which details how to build one (or you could simply get the book...) That post above will tend to explain tons of why memberships are the way to go for authors and just about anyone. It has to do with the trust factor of emails.

For the indie self-publishing author - and with all this content - it makes sense to make it available in one place, as free or paid or both. Sure, it's going to get out on the Internet - that's what you want. Inside your membership is where they are going to find it all in one place. ("and with a paid membership upgrade, you get access to the author...")

See how this can work? Study up on these yourself and you'll see how it just makes sense to get this as part of your backend. Again, if Rainmaker is too pricey for you, it's also possible through Gumroad.

Bundles, and Binders, and Collections, Oh My!

Now we come to another logical extension. This one, however, is still untested.

The next step of promotion is to open up the floodgates and allow people to sell bundles of your media-content.

Here's our final steps to this to-do list spreadsheet:
Other Promotion  
Bittorrent Bundle  

Affiliate Sales Bundles (under testing)
Distribly,   Scubbly,   JVZoo,   MyCommerce,   PaySpree,   Click2Sell,   DigiResults,   BlueSnap
At this point, you have all sorts of media to offer. Cover art, promo PDF's, ecourses, full courses, audiobooks, several versions of the book itself (don't forget you can offer discount coupons for your ebooks, sold directly from your site with Sellfy, Payhip, or Gumroad) and discount direct-purchase links from Lulu on your hardcopy versions. (Itunes also offers discount coupons, even giveways.)

In BitTorrent Bundles, this started out as only promotional - but now people also sell their movies and audio there.  You can sell your ebook and digital media from there. So it's actually yet another distributor.




I have substantially more tests to run on this area. When I started, you couldn't sell there, just promote. One bundle I put up there, "Secrets of the Marketing Masters" was to promote a series of public domain books by successful copywriters. I've had over 6,500 views, 575 downloads - and (get this:) Since I put it up there 10 months ago, I just found out that I've had 107 people give me their emails. Those are potential leads and opt-in's to my list.

Imagine if I were actually selling something!

I don't know about the quality of these emails (they're almost all free accounts) - but the real value to this is that you already have created this content. Simply posting this to BitTorrent Bundles can make you additional sales and even get you leads. Obviously the next step would be to make a nice "thank you" video and tell them where to go for even more great data.

Leverage.

Getting people to pay you for letting them sell your books.

Seriously, this is all Affiliate marketing is. They get you sales you wouldn't have otherwise. So giving them a substantial commission is another way to get paid for people joining your list.

The original use of this is to enable your existing list to evangelize your books and get rewarded by it. And that is the best use of it.

However, when I was working out how to get that accomplished (before I found Sellfy and Payhip) I was checking into the various affiliate sales platforms. These people enable full-time affiliate sales people to do their magic.

You already have bundles of stuff ready - or stuff to make a bundle - so why not put together a sales page and other useful stuff so that affiliates (and your evangelists) can get you extra sales and build your list of fans?

The point on commissions is simple: Don't be penny wise and pound foolish. Getting even 30 cents on the dollar is a sale you wouldn't have had otherwise. Google gives you around 52% for a sale, Amazon can go as low as 35%, Espresso Book Machine gives you 25%. Kobo only gives 20% for public domain books. So paying someone who already has an email list to promote your book to their buying public is similar to getting a lower royalty - or simply paying to get someone on your list who will probably buy the rest of your books in that series from your site or Lulu's for 90%.

Like giving away the first book in your series so they buy the following ones. Only in this case, you're getting their email as part of the deal. Amazon can't do that for you, can they?

Caveat: I've checked into these places and posted about this area several times. I've yet to do a full test even on a single bundle - all I know is that these are the best of the lot as an entry point. Again, it's the frugal speaking here - and being a lean startup, we want to post our product and get sales the same day, only being charged when a sale actually happens.

So I'll keep you posted what I find as I do.

Spreadsheet Summary

That wraps up all our to-do list of publishing and promotion. You've now been introduced to the wide world of what is possible for just sweat equity.

I do have to go over some details next of how to get these automated as much as possible, to cut down on that sweat.

This continues as we always have - nothing up front, pay as you go. But I'll also tell you the great bargains to invest in once you've cracked the point of being able to support some investment in your business - which is coming from the business itself.

These next tips, tricks, and tools will be a little intensive setting up, but they start paying you back in time saved. Stay tuned...

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