P.H. James liked the forum thread, What am I missing?
Hi guys, 

Questions like that of Kim’s, is something I get on a weekly basis, and other authors too. I want to give the same advice I gave @A. White who reached out to me, and explain what took me a good month and a half of campaigning, and a lot of conversations with other authors, as well as Jeremy the former CEO, to learn.

I’ve honestly tried every strategy on the face of the planet trying to raise orders, many of my strategies failed, but eventually some succeeded. Here’s what I’ve learned, take some of it or not at all, at your own discretion.  I’ll also repeat stuff that excellent campaigners and authors such as @Tal M. Klein and @Ricardo Henriquez said in older threads - I don’t have the links but it’s worth searching for their posts, they taught me a lot.

I won’t survey the tactics that failed for me such as book stores and book clubs, as they did work for others. So I’d encourage you to think outside the box no matter what. 
First of all, Facebook and Twitter should be considered with a touch of scepticism, IMHO. While they are imperative to make sure people you know hear about your book, the chances of converting "likes" & "RT"s to actual orders are very slim. 

These are the most useful tactics I did manage to work with.

(1) Actual Social Networks - not just your own! Ricardo said wisely that you are selling yourself and not your book. What’s 10$ for family and friends to support YOU ??
My wife & mine social network alone banked about 150 orders, and yes that meant nagging people on WhatsApp numerous times, and emailing the world (I found that a bulk email gets dumped by 8/10 people while personal email gets dumped by few). Don’t be shy of reaching out to old college buddies. Nobody is off the list - was what we said - unless they had a recent misfortune or death in the family. 

Then move on to friends and family friends’ social networks. Write them a generic email that will support yourself and your cause. Pledge a sum of the orders to charity if you think that may tip the scale for people who don’t really know you.
My top referrer in this campaign is my 70 year old  aunt - she sent an email I’ve written for her to all her friends, which incidentally are not poor and are readers, that alone banked about 55 orders! top referrer.

(2) Reach out for Inkshares authors - ask for their orders, whether with credits they have or actual money. If people are active and like your work - they’ll order. But the bulk of orders won’t be them, and you need to give people here time. I have a day-job and two kids ages 10 month and 2.5years - do u honestly think I can read every book I am being sent on the spot. I do listen and try my best to read books of anyone who reached out to me or DM’ed me, eventually. 

(3) Support fellow authors - Find an author who’s in same stages of the campaign as you and preferably same genre. Compare notes. Maybe he’ll have a few friends that will look into your book - worth asking. I know some people here don’t like it when authors ask their base to order another author’s book and vice versa, but if the genres match and people aren’t held back to keep bugging their crowds with requests, this can be legitimate to a small scale.
In all honesty, I doubt more than a handful of people would allow you to bug them to order multiple books, so nurture these gems that do and make sure you choose wisely.
I have a friend that asked me to explain to him how to stop Inkshares emails, and another who told me, after ordering my book, that he was at a point where he’d do just about anything to stop getting my texts. message conveyed? Nag nag nag.

(4) Landing page -  I found this landing page I did useful.  This was advise by Jeremy, who’s been following Tim Farris, a Kickstarter guru. Look, it won’t bring orders but it’s a nice gimmick.
here’s my example: http://www.jondbooks.com/final-stretch.htm
This is a good time to say that a website is pretty imperative, IMO.

(5) Create a buzz - A movie, a givaway (cups for top referrers is a concept I copied from Tal Klein but made original ones for the campaign), charity pledge, anything that will zest your campaign a bit and can create a buzz amongst your friends. I got the marketing department in my firm to step in, especially when they heard about my charity pledge. They sent a pitch about my book in the company newsletter and portal. OK true, this banked ’only’ about 40-50 orders from a company of 4,700 people (percentage-wise it’s not impressive), and not everyone is working in a big firm, but I am sure colleagues would help. Buy them a beer as a reward, or go on a coffee run (I only bought 5 coffees so not everyone would jump on that)

(5) Goodreads - This was probably the most unrewarding channel. I reached out to 300 people, and asked them to read my preview , bundled in PDF for their convenience http://www.jondbooks.com/download-pdf/
remember work under the assumption that people who are not on inkshares will not click into Inkshares straight away - would you?
Make sure the PDF has a link to preordering. Admittedly the response rate was disappointing with 40 Yes, and only 12 orders... but I got in touch with some great people.. Oh and make sure you don’t spam too much there, I got an official warning from them at the time :-)

A couple of notes:
Thank you’s are very important. You are not J. K. Rowling. yet. if somebody ordered your book - please thank them. It will come across down to earth and very polite.
Targets - make sure you work with targets. if you need 5 orders a day until the end - you need to know that you can rest when you hit 5, or stay up when you didn’t. The dashboard is not accurate and doesn’t know what you know and expect. Count out national holidays and days off for you, you’ll need it to keep sane and save your relationship/marriage if you are in one. But it’s important to keep track of the figures and not be left in a situation where u suddenly need 17 orders a day - much less feasible.

These are my "words of wisdom". I hope it will help some of you. People here are great and can be very helpful, personally, while I didn’t order every book tossed my way, I made time for anyone who asked me for guidance. 

This will be the last thread I participate in for the time being, lack of time and the urge to work on a sequel and copy edit my book are too time consuming. But feel free to email me at ydital gmail address or DM me here - I promise I’ll reply.

remember the most important thing is not to let anyone tell you that you cannot do it. And also, if you fail - don’t miss out on the lesson - and make sure to better prepare for the next campaign.

@Kim Whale GOOD LUCK ! 
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    P.H. James liked the forum thread, What am I missing?
    Kim, your work is great. You aren’t missing anything that I can see. I’ve found that  Book clubs can be powerful agents. Once one or two get behind you they’ll champion your book pretty much how a publishing company does.  Try the local ones first, these are ones you can meet personally and tell them about your work. The drawback to this is they aren’t always exactly open to the idea of the crowdfunding agenda. However,  I do warn__some of the old Garden Club type can be a little intimidating but they’ve lots of pull in the literary world. I started this form of networking because I hadn’t been offline in years and didn’t have a large collection of emails any more.  But vast exposure can be equally as important as sales. Because once the hype of the sale is over among the immediate peers no one outside of them will know who you are.  This is where the non online crowd comes into play. They’ll keep the exposure going long after their initial reading of your work.  Before anyone reminds me that this is an online project. I know that but please do remember the vast majority of your sales will come from those offline as to why I said find them and include them in the procedure of creating your book.
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      P.H. James liked the forum thread, What am I missing?
      Yeah Kim, just keep your head up and engage everyone you can. You’d be surprised at who comes out of the woodwork to support you. Also I must agree with Robert, if at first you fail, just pick yourself up and try again. Second fundings have been successful!
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      People who have liked this comment in the forum thread, What am I missing?

        P.H. James liked the forum thread, What am I missing?
        @Kim Whale - don’t lose heart. It is possible your current campaign doesn’t succeed, but even if that is the case (and I’m not predicting anything here right now), it doesn’t have to be the end. Get involved in the communities (these forums, Critshares over on Scribophile, the Inkshares community on Goodreads, the Inkshares Reddit group, etc). Engage with other readers and writers, then try again.
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          P.H. James followed Storm Song
          Storm Song
          Thoster Chatwyn knows every story there is to tell in all of Elysia. But what if the greatest story he could ever tell was that of his own past and the promise of his future?
          P.H. James liked the forum thread, New Kid Syndrome
          @P.H. James Thank you! :) 
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            P.H. James liked the forum thread, New Kid Syndrome
            As a veteran of the last Geek and Sundry competition who is still clambering his way through his pre-order campaign, I can confirm that everyone is bumbling around here. We’ve all had surprise successes and unforeseeable setbacks in spite of hard work and careful planning.  Trust me: as overwhelming as this all feels right now, everyone who’s been around here for any amount of time knows exactly what it feels like.
            It’s worth figuring out, though! It might end up being more work than it seemed at first, but it’s hard work that does pay off in the end.
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            People who have liked this comment in the forum thread, New Kid Syndrome

              P.H. James liked the forum thread, New Kid Syndrome
              I find myself on the site a lot but also with little direction. I check out the main page feed and camp out on the forums a lot - I think that’s a big key to make it more of a community thing. The forums have been A LOT more active lately and that should help spice things up more.

              @P.H. James - All of your links in this thread are super helpful. Wish I found out about some of those podcasts and youtube videos sooner - got a lot of watching to do this week!
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                P.H. James liked the forum thread, Newbie looking for advice
                Hi Mark,
                Welcome to Inkshares!

                @Amanda Orneck has written a very handy guide to crowdfunding on Inkshares. Check it out here.

                If you are looking to get people to critique your work and help you refine it, then there are conversation threads on that in these forums, but I recommend you join our Inkshares community on Scribophile. @P.H. James has an explanation of that group here.
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                People who have liked this comment in the forum thread, Newbie looking for advice

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                  Come 2019, Graduate Student in Social Policy, transitioning from writing fiction and inventing world...
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