Authors
know that getting their books listed at Amazon is crucial for book
sales. The AZ Code Review More and more readers are making Amazon their first place to go
to purchase books, and with Amazon's free shipping options and the
convenience of shopping from home, that trend is not going to change.
But Amazon offers different options to authors to sell their books,
which can be both confusing and time-consuming to unravel. Here are some
simple ways to maneuver through that process.
Amazon offers
basically three ways to sell your book at its online store: 1) listing
the book at Amazon and then shipping copies to Amazon, 2) having a
seller's account, or 3) selling your book for Kindle. I will focus on
just the first two options, which relate to printed rather than digital
books.
What are the differences between having Amazon sell your
book and your creating a seller's account to sell your book yourself at
Amazon? Time and money. As an author, you will have to decide whether
time or money is more important to you in working with Amazon, or you
can balance out both ways at least until you decide which works best for
you. Below are explanations for how to do both and the advantages and
disadvantages of each.
List Your Book for Amazon to Sell
How:
This requires creating an "Amazon Advantage" account, perhaps aptly
named because Amazon rather than the author receives most of the
advantage. To join, you need copies of your book, an ISBN, and a bar
code. Then visit Amazon Advantage. AZ Code Review Follow the steps but read the fine
print. Amazon charges an annual fee ($29.95 currently and nonrefundable
whether or not any of your books sell) and its commission is 55% of your
retail price. Amazon will notify you to send books and how many. You
pay the shipping and have no say over the number you send. If Amazon
wants fifty, you pay the shipping on fifty, even if the books don't
sell. If Amazon only wants two at a time, you may find yourself making
frequent small shipments which can be time consuming and more costly
than one large shipment if your book is selling steadily.
Advantage: Once Amazon receives your books and starts selling them, you don't have to deal with mailing out individual orders.
Disadvantages:
Not only do you have to pay an annual fee to be listed, but Amazon's
55% commission is very high. For example, a book priced at $25.95 would
mean a profit of $11.68 for the author. Remember you also need to figure
in the cost of shipping the books to Amazon so your profit will be even
lower.
Be an Independent Seller Through Amazon
How: You
can't sell your book independently on Amazon until it is listed there,
so regardless, your book needs an Amazon Advantage account. You can
follow the steps above, become an Amazon Advantage client, and then
later tell Amazon the book is no longer available, or if you are
traditionally published, published by a subsidy press, or sign up with a
distributor like Ingram, your publisher or distributor will create your
Amazon Advantage account for you and pay the fees, just giving you the
royalties you agreed on with the publisher or distributor. The AZ Code Today, many
independent printers and book design firms will also list books at
Amazon for self-published authors and simply charge a small flat
one-time fee (usually around $50) to list your book for you. The book
can be listed as out of stock, meaning Amazon has no copies, and you
don't need to send them any.
Once your book has a listing at
Amazon, you can open a seller account with Amazon to sell your book
independently. First, look up your book title on Amazon. On the right
side of the screen for your Amazon listing is a little boxed area with
the question, "Have one to sell?" followed by a button to click on that
says, "Sell Yours Here." Click the button and follow the steps to list
your book and your information. You can list as many copies available as
you like, provided you have that many copies in stock. Customers can
now buy the book directly from you rather than Amazon. You pay nothing
to Amazon until the book sells.
Advantages: The advantages
are many, especially in terms of your profit. Rather than take 55% in
commission like with an Amazon Advantage Account, Amazon takes something
closer to 25%. Amazon also gives you a $3.99 credit to ship your book,
which should pay the cost of shipping if you ship via media mail. So for
example, that $25.95 book we used as an example previously and which
weighs about one pound, will cost you $2.77 to mail. Amazon pays you
$23.71 for the sale, including the $3.99 for shipping) which means your
profit is $20.94 (about double the $11.68 minus shipping had you sold it
through Amazon Advantage).
Another advantage to an individual
seller account is that while Amazon may list your book at retail of
$25.95, in your seller account you can list it slightly under that price
so it appears less expensive to customers. You can also list the book,
not only as "New" but include that it is autographed by the author and
personally shipped by him or her. Even if you sign the books you ship
directly to Amazon, Amazon won't advertise for you that they are
autographed, so listing your books on your seller account as "signed by
the author" may be an advantage for you. Many readers will feel an
autographed book is of more value than one that is not.
A final
advantage is that you get your buyer's address and email information, so
you know more about your customer than you would if Amazon had sold the
book. You can retain that information for future marketing mailings or
updates to the customer when your next book comes out. Eventually, you
might persuade the customer to buy directly through your website rather
than through Amazon, thus giving you a greater profit in sales.
Source:
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/795729827885433909/
https://medium.com/@peakluckcom/the-az-code-review-get-huge-35-000-bonuses-package-now-the-az-code-bonus-48b2dbc7466e
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