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50 Ways To Reach Your Reader. # 2: Optimise Your Amazon Author Page

50 Ways To Reach Your Reader. # 2: Optimise Your Amazon Author Page

Jeff Bezos, friend of indie authors

Amazon Founder & CEO Jeff Bezos

Amazon, the biggest book retailer in the world, was the first company to see the potential in retailing self-published work.

Indie authors have reason to be very grateful to Amazon for their then radical move of presenting every book to readers in precisely the same way, whether it was an already-known author published by a corporate publisher or an indie just starting out. In doing this, Amazon took the most significant step in centuries towards author empowerment and the democratisation of publishing.

It is not an exaggeration to say that Amazon ignited and allowed the self-publishing revolution. And the company continues to lead the way in innovation and reach, providing an excellent range of self-publishing tools that allow us to create work in printaudio or digital formats.

Amazon has an internal marketing system (known to writers – awed tone, please – as: ‘The Algorithm') that is second-to-none.  The more books you sell, the more your book gets promoted and the more visible your book will be (in listings, on recommendation queues and so on). It's a benign circle that has a major effect on book sales, if you can get picked up.

So before you expend any time or money on anything else, know that the single best thing you can do for your book is to get your Amazon Pages right. Employing the techniques below don't guarantee that you'll become an Amazon bestseller but failing to use them almost certainly consigns your book to obscurity.

OPTIMISING AMAZON

When your prospective reader lands on your book page or author page, they are half thinking: Why should I NOT buy this book or this author's work. Your book pages and author page should work to rid them of fears that they won't enjoy it, that it's no good, poorly edited, over-hyped, not likely to be worth the investment of money and time.  Imagining what their objections to buying your book might be and setting out to allay them will put you in the right frame of mind to tackle your Amazon pages.

How To optimise your amazon author page: self-publishers guideBegin with your AUTHOR PAGE.

Here is where readers, especially those who are unfamiliar with you, can learn more about you and your books.

Amazon's Author Page facility is improving all the time and now can include a biography, photos, blog feeds, videos, twitter and event listings (for virtual and in-person events).

Your page also contains images and links to the books pages for all your titles on Amazon, in all formats — ebook (kindle); pbook (createspace) and audiobook (audible).  Essentially, it's like Amazon hosting a mini-website for you in their shop.

PHOTO: Lots of our members put a book picture instead of a picture of themselves in their Author Profiles on Amazon, Facebook etc, thinking nobody is interested in seeing what they look like or that they don't look “good enough” (modest lot, us authorly types).

This is a mistake. All research confirms that readers buy more books when they see a picture of the author, and regardless of what we look like apparently (forgiving lot, those readerly types), though if you're young and gorgeous it won't go against you here, as anywhere else.

Head and shoulders shot is favoured, with an open and friendly expression and make sure they can see your eyes.

PROFILE. It's not enough to just tell people a bit about yourself. It's not enough to be interesting. The aim here is to try to be nothing less than  fascinatingly compelling. While still being you.

A challenge, yes, but you are a writer and this is the second most important piece of writing you'll do all year. (The first is your book descriptions, see below)

EXTRAS: These all help to supplement your biography and show your best side off.

So if you blog, add your RSS feed (which will display your latest post). Upload your best videos or book trailers. Import your twitter feed if you have one.  All these help the reader who doesn't know you to trust you as a writer — and gives those who've enjoyed your book more information about who you are and what you represent.

AMAZON PEN-NAME. Some writers like to use a pen-name as a marketing tool on Amazon, putting a keyword related to their books into their name. Supposing  I write keep-fit books and my name is Kate Evans. I can call myself ‘Keep Fit Kate' or ‘Keep Fit Kate Evans', and use that name when reviewing books on Amazon, making browsers who read my reviews about other fitness books more likely to click through to my page.

Like most book marketing techniques, this is easier and more useful, generally, for nonfiction writers. But genre fiction writers can also benefit (Mystery Meg, Dan “Thrills and Spills” Carew and so on).

You can learn more about here about Amazon Pen Names.

Amazon also provides a neat Author URL for you to use in your emails, on Twitter etc. Orna’s is: http://www.amazon.com/author/ornaross.

Here's how to create your own Amazon Author URL.

Improve your BOOK DESCRIPTION

The book description is the most important piece of writing an indie author does. These few paragraphs are core to your self-publishing efforts yet many writers resist, throwing off a top-of-the-head description or  a few sentences of summary.  Even those who are making an effort may not be sure of what they are doing, or why.

There are two dimensions to your book description: Persuasion and keywords.

PERSUASION. Your product description is your chance to show what you’ve got and tell the reader why they need to buy this book right now.

You have 30 seconds or less to persuade someone, to overcome their innate resistance to buying — so don’t simply describe what's in your book, tell the potential reader why they need it.  Evoke their emotions by using power words that sell.

TELL PROSPECTIVE READERS THE FOLLOWING (ALWAYS)
Fiction or Creative Nonfiction:
  • the central conflict.
  • who the main characters are
  • what are their goals
  • why they're not having a good time of it. (Good time = bad novel),
  • what's at stake.
  • where it's set
  • why they probably can't solve the problem (raise a doubt)
How-To Non-fiction:
  • What problem the book will solve
  • Why they have the problem, common obstacles and how the will overcomes them
  • Other benefits of reading the book
  • What they'll learn that they don't already know
  • Why you're the person to help
  • Some examples

GET INTO THE RIGHT CATEGORIES.

Categories and tags are key to how your book performs on Amazon and whether it gets picked up for the various lists and marketing tools that Amazon provides.

Members often put their book into the broadest category – say, fiction – thinking this means it reaches a wider audience. The opposite is the case. Narrow your audience by choosing the smallest sub- or sub-sub-category that is relevant, so your book has a chance of making its mark.

You can view Amazon categories by scrolling to the bottom of the Product Detail Page to the section titled “Look for Similar Items by Category.”

Browse paths are listed in the following format:

Amazon generally limits the number of assigned categories to two per title. Though you will see some titles with more than two assigned browse paths, caused by data from publisher feeds  automatically adding to the book page.

You can change up to two of the existing categories for your title. To change the categories currently assigned to your book, check the categories in which other books like yours are found. Once you've found two categories you like, please Contact Amazon with information about your book, in the following format:

  • ASIN: 0123456798
  • Remove Category: Books>Mystery & Thrillers>Police Prodcedurals
  • Remove Category: Books>Literature & Fiction>Genre Fiction>Action & Adventure
  • Add Category: Books>Nonfiction>Automotive>Classic Cars
  • Add Category: Books>Nonfiction>Transportation>Reference

USE KEYWORDS TO TAG YOUR BOOK

An Amazon “tag” is a keyword that helps readers find your book through searches. For instance, for our fitness book, relevant tags might include “diet”,  “pilates”, “weight-loss” and so on.

Use google keyword search tool, and Amazon's own search engine, to find keywords to use in your title and book description.

Write down several words or phrases that you believe readers would be likely to search for when looking for your book.  Check these with the Google Keyword Tool to find out roughly how many people search for those words phrases. Then look through the list of other, related phrases that people actually look for.

For example, if I've written or want to write a keep fit book, I google search the keywords /keep fit/ and I find 74,000 people searched that term in the past month. But I see that more than 37 million people search for /fitness/.  I should then choose to use fitness as a term rather than keep fit, in my title, book description, author profile and so on.

This research is much easier for fiction than non-fiction and is ideally done before you decide on your title.

GET MORE REVIEWS. 

Sock puppetry notwithstanding, more positive reviews = more sales. ALLi has a comprehensive list of sites that accept self-published books for review on our member-only Forum.  Here’s a post with some other ideas

Also:

1. Find Amazon reviewers interested in your topic (who have reviewed something similar) and offer a free review copy. Amazon’s Top Reviewers are here: http://www.amazon.com/review/top-reviewers.

2. When you receive nice words about your book, an email or comment on social media, ask right away if they wouldn't mind posting it as an Amazon review. If they really like you and they are a member of Goodreads, ask them to cross-post here too (see below)

3. Visit forums and offer free copies in exchange for reviews. Try Goodreads, Facebook, the KindleBoards, the NookBoards, the MobileRead forums. Just wander around, offering your book and see who takes you up.

4. On the final page of your book, ask for a review.  Keep it simple, just something like: “If you've enjoyed this book, please consider leaving a review on Amazon or Goodreads (or ideally, both). Many thanks.”

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This Post Has 27 Comments
  1. Good post. I learn something totally new and challenging on websites
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  2. Good day very nice website!! Guy .. Excellent ..
    Amazing .. I’ll bookmark your website and take the feeds also?

    I am glad to seek out so many useful information right here in the publish, we need
    develop more techniques in this regard, thanks for sharing.
    . . . . .

  3. Hi – I was interested to read your advice about the Book Description but I have a problem that I can’t find any way to get the Book Description onto Amazon. I am using Print-On-Demand worldwide rather than Create Space and can’t find any way to add the Description.
    Can you give me any help

    Thanks
    Rebecca

  4. Thanks Orna: The timing of my reading this article could not be more critical.for me as I am in the process of deciding where to enter my e-books into the contest first.Your detailed discussion of Amazon’s superiority is my game changer. I will await the #3 article with anticipation. Mabe you should include al 50 articles into an anthology?

    Stay well… Warren.

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  9. Thanks for this article. Just joined. I’ve been working my way around shelfari and trying to figure it all out. They do offer an option where you can put it on your blog, but can’t seem to figure out how to put it on wordpress. But this is wonderful insight on optimizing the amazon author page, crucial for a self publishing author.

  10. Thanks so much for this – I had an Author Page at Amazon with both blog and twitter feeds, but had missed the author url. Done in a minute and also uploaded a new photograpoh.

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