Writing

Circa 2016: Sales Rank Express is not longer active because of changes to Amazon’s core programming.

Sales ranks can now be found only for individual novels or by publisher, but they are still a fairly good barometer for estimating sales and rates of sales.

Before querying or submitting work to an unknown publisher, consider checking out how well they’re selling on Amazon. Amazon isn’t the only online vendor, but they are one of the biggest. If a book isn’t selling there, it better be selling like crazy on the publisher’s or author’s website. *

Here’s an easy way to get ballpark figures of current Amazon sales ranks: go here to www.salesrankexpress.com and enter the publisher’s name into the ‘Publisher’ field. Hit search. You’ll see sales ranks for that publisher’s books listed on Amazon. They’re not exact, and are known to be inaccurate for strongly selling books. But those figures seem to be scarily accurate for low-selling books, especially those with estimated single-digit or double-digit Amazon sales per year.

Hint: sales ranks on Amazon are shown in ascending order, ranking all books currently in Amazon’s catalog. The best seller will be #1, the worst way down in the tens of millions.

Why should you check? A publisher with a lot of books ranked over 500,000 simply isn’t selling that well on Amazon, so they might not be good at selling your work there, too.

* There are ways to see how popular a publisher’s site is on the internet, too, if they claim to be selling more from their own site. I’ll cover that in a later aside, or you can go here to learn more.

Day 10. Wow. ‘Herding cats’ is nothing on keeping track of a bunch of writers. But we’ve made it this far. Today, Kimber Vale hosts author Ravon Silvius here. Check out their interview for another in-depth look at creativity, storytelling, M/M steampunk mysteries, and great giveaways from both authors. *** As a side note, I’m…

Read More 2014 AbsoluteWrite Erotica Writers blog hop Day 10

Today, I bring you LGBTQ erotic romance author Kate Lowell. You very nearly had a very silly bogus interview between me and her squirrel shifter character, so be thankful Kate answered the call, instead. Author’s note 7-14-2014: I am so out of it I didn’t realize until today I had the wrong book. And Kate…

Read More 2014 AbsoluteWrite Erotica Writers blog hop Day 7

Haiku for fallen idols:

 

Gold crown in sunlight,

A distant beacon; come near

To see tarnished brass.

 

 

 

 

Day Four of the AW Erotica Writers blog hop dawns with the usual levels of snafu and triumph. Thanks for alerting me to broken links; they’ll be fixed as soon as possible. Today, Scarlet Day interviews M/M author Zoe X. Rider here. If you like your M/M with an edge of hard rock, blue-collar angst,…

Read More 2014 AbsoluteWrite Erotica Writers blog hop Day 4

Welcome, welcome, step right up! Day 3 begins with Emily Veinglory interviewing Scarlet Day. Emily is a powerhouse erotic romance author, published through several houses – I know her for her great M/M fantasy novels. Scarlet’s made a name for sizzling shifter menages in vivid tropical settings. Check out the interview, then browse Scarlet’s book descriptions…

Read More 2014 AbsoluteWrite Erotica Writers blog hop Day 3 (adult content advisory)

A little later today, Anais Morgan will be interviewing Emily Veinglory here. Be sure to check the authors’ blogs outside their scheduled interviews, excerpts, shameless pandering, and smack talk: you never know what extra content people will share!  Being erotica writers, this group is a very sharing bunch…

Read More 2014 AbsoluteWrite Erotica Writers blog hop Day 2

Tomorrow 6-23-2014 is the big day, ushering in the next two weeks of excerpts, interviews, insult contests, and shameless pandering that is the 2014 AW Erotica Writers Blog Hop. (Thanks to Ana J. Phoenix for the lovely header!) If you haven’t visited the AbsoluteWrite Water Cooler (link to the left), it’s part of a massive…

Read More 2014 AbsoluteWrite Erotica Writers Blog Hop 6-23 to 7-7

Twitter is a wonderful tool for writers.  It creates interactive communities and allows extremely customized newsfeeds. Twitter also opens doors between authors, agents, and publishers, through intermittent pitch contests like #pitmad (Pitch Madness), #AdPit (Adult fiction pitches), or #SFFpit (science fiction & fantasy pitches). In general, contests like these allow participants to post their novels’ short…

Read More Twitter pitches in publishing