Sentences with phrase «worrying about book sales»

As I talk to expectant mothers and sexually frustrated couples, and as I wake up each morning worrying about book sales and reviews, one theme seems to be recurring: Waiting sucks.
Don't worry about book sales — worry about creating potential customers for your company's product or service.
So having come to the conclusion that this self - publishing business was going to be a lot harder than I had thought, I submitted my novel to a boutique digital publisher that does very well in my genre, thinking about how nice it would be for someone else to worry about book sales and visibility.
Then don't worry about book sales numbers, just write down how much each title (book) has earned you each month.
He tells us not to worry about book sales too much and focus on larger issues.

Not exact matches

Authors under contract with Hachette publicly complained about a drop in their book sales, causing them to worry about a loss of royalties.
Online booking means you can service as many customers at one time as you need to, and never had to worry about dropping a sale because your phone line was busy or unmanned when someone tried to call.
It's going to take a lot of effort to put together your own tour, but you can do it, save yourself, the money, and not have to worry about whether or not your book managed to get any sales from the tour itself.
In this episode, Steve talks about using it as a way to gauge potential book sales in a niche and when to not worry about it.
A: When I'm writing a book, I don't worry about potential sales, potential audience, or potential marketing scenarios.
The promotion the trad pubs take care of is the catalog and sales force to get your books into the brick and mortar distribution channel, which indies don't worry about.
Because at the end of the day, they haven't really ever given a shit about everyone else in the book trade... My worry would be that by selling Kindle devices, we would be converting customers to using Amazon for their physical book sales as well as e-books.
It is about a worry that her husband's legacy will be undermined if sales are split between ebooks and hardcovers, preventing the last book of the Wheel of Time from hitting number one on either list.
the thing I have loved the most about goodreads and these blogs is hearing from authors that they're having the same problems as me... it does suck having to read such great books and worrying that I'll never be as good... or seeing my friends making sales when mine is going nowhere... but I know sometimes it's just the luck of the draw... it's hard sometimes to not compare... but sometimes it's good to know we're all so much alike
Hachette Book Group CEO Michael Pietsch wrote an wrote an editorial in the Wall Street Journal and stated that e-book sales have plateaued and he is no longer worried about them destroying the book selling businBook Group CEO Michael Pietsch wrote an wrote an editorial in the Wall Street Journal and stated that e-book sales have plateaued and he is no longer worried about them destroying the book selling businbook sales have plateaued and he is no longer worried about them destroying the book selling businbook selling business.
If I'm successful in getting enough sales, an agent or publisher will snap me up and they can worry about producing the print book.
So yes, sign up for it, but don't worry about the bookstores, worry about online sales and selling a lot of books in a short time period with a massive launch, guest posting and content marketing.
Don't worry about how your first book does in sales, especially if you are an independent author.
Plus, if you drive any and all traffic you have to Amazon then as a new author you can take advantage of Amazon's internal sales algorithms to have your book rank higher for more exposure, without the need to worry about delivering the e-book.
Responding to a question about why some publishers don't make ebooks available to libraries, Jeremy Greenfield, editorial director of Digital Book World, said they are worried that lending will result in reduced sales.
I think what most writers (self - published or traditional) worry about when it comes to book publicity is that there seem to be no tried and true strategies that will guarantee robust sales.
Writers need to come out with the next product, not worry about social media popularity or even book sales.
Jeff Bezos says we worry too much about change - Kindle owners read more books and recent figures appeared to show that physical book sales were not being harmed by the digital switchover.
A lot of us worry about quality of books in the self - publishing arena; could you break down what you foresee the editor's role will look like in a few years, if you think they will freelance, and whether the world will come back around to trying to guarantee that e-books available for sale will, if nothing else, have proper grammar and sentence structure and punctuation?
His questions funnel you into clarity about what you really, deeply give a shit about, then the book goes on to convince you that dude, quit worrying about stupid sales rank or follower count or whatever metric - du - jour you're using to judge your worth.
If you worry about your Kindle sales plateauing in the US, think about the other territories elsewhere in the world, especially on mobile phones, that have just started to open up to digital book sales.
Growth investors are less worried about the dividend growth, high price - to - earnings ratios and high price - to - book ratios that growth companies face because the focus is on sales growth and maintaining industry leadership.
Secondly, it takes four months to do the sales and marketing simply because, the team in charge of that at any large publisher's won't have just my book to worry about, they'll have many others as well.
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