Not exact matches
By the way, did I
mention that most home and beauty
bestsellers are
on sale, too?
The self - published authors
mentioned below are a combination of things:
bestsellers on the NYT's lists, part of the «Amazon's million» book club, and some, like Ksenia Anske, are not even making money off their book sales yet, but already have thousands of supporters.
(Not to
mention that book one in the series was
on the New York Times children's
bestseller list for a year.)
However, while all that is
mentioned above makes the MediaPad 7 a rung below the current
bestseller, Nexus 7, the Huawei tablet still scores
on certain fronts.
With more than 150,000 e-books sold in the U.S. (not to
mention the weeks it has spent
on the New York Times
bestseller list), Tammara Webber's Easy definitely fits into that category.
Howey
mentioned that the launch of Kindle Unlimited could have an impact
on future reports, since there may be a need to correct for the fact that KU borrows are counted in the
bestseller rankings.
Unfortunately, the publishers, because of leveraged buyouts and high debt loads, not to
mention substantial physical infrastructure, have decided to focus
on selling
bestsellers as their model.
Where did that percentage come from and why was Publishers Weekly so confident in it that they could blithely
mention it unsourced in an article
on bestsellers?
But if your free days land you
on the Top 20 (first page) of the free
bestseller list, that exposure might be worth it in terms of increased sales for the days following a free promotion, not to
mention the number of readers who now have your book.
In a post the other day about bargain prices for a couple of Elizabeth Peters ebooks in the Kindle Store, I made the point that readers may actually be able to influence publisher pricing behavior when we jump
on bargain prices like those
mentioned in the post, even while the Kindle
bestseller list shows some signs that Kindle owners are accepting agency - model pricing:
Two days ago, one of my books was
mentioned in USA Today, a box set that has been
on the Amazon Hot New Release and
Bestsellers lists for three months, and today, my newest book, a perma - free novella, hit the Amazon lists for the first time.
In the intro I
mention the first Createspace print
on demand book to hit the
bestseller lists, perhaps indicating a move of digital print into the space traditionally owned by booksellers, as discussed by Hugh Howey.
Do not
mention that your books have been
on the
bestseller lists for years and years, and that you wrote a book in the Star Wars series.
It's also worth
mentioning that this «Kindle matching» price structure is based
on 32
bestsellers.