Michael Hebler's Blog: and Fan Page - Posts Tagged "amazon"

Book Marketing: Categories and Keywords

Walking through the doors of a physical bookstore or a library, you will find shelves of books that categorized by either subject or genre. This makes it easy for the consumer to browse or locate a title easier than just rummaging through a large mound of books. E-Books are categorized on eShelves similarly for the same reason. When you write and publish an eBook, any site that would sell your book should be thought of as a physical bookstore when selecting your title’s categories. Notice that I say “categories” (plural). The luxury of eBooks is that they can be placed on multiple eShelves at the same time. Your book can be featured in mystery, romance, horror, western, humor, sports… all at once, and then sub-genred beyond that, but you must pick the correct categories that are appropriate for your book.

Depending on who you publish your book through, you're allowed a determined number of book categories by that company. If you want your book to appear on more than that designated number, you'll have to expand. Amazon, iTunes, and other book sales sites categorize your book not only from the sections you chose, but also from the keywords and description in your book listing. The easiest way to take advantage of this is to use the right keywords. And like categories, these sites allow a certain number of keywords for each listing. Each company considers all the words and spaces between commas as one keyword, ie. ‘Civil War romance’, ‘underwater deep sea fishing’, and ‘toxic food chemicals’ counts as exactly the same number of keywords as ‘romance’, ‘fishing’, ‘food’. The secret is to find the right keyword strings to make your book end up on the right eShelves. Amazon has kindly published a listing of keyword phrases that guarantee listing in its categories, as long as you list them between two commas. It's a simple page called Selecting Browsing Categories, and it contains links to pages for categorizing the major book niches such as Young Adult and thrillers. Additionally, in your perusing of Amazon, you might notice that some books contain more categories than others. How do I get my book listed under more categories than what Amazon allows you ask? Go to Library Thing. It is a company owned by Amazon. There you can go to your previously uploaded title and choose additional categories that will be added to your book’s Amazon page.

When making your selections of categories and keywords, just remember to be a reader and not a writer. Step into their shoes and use the search engines, as well as scouring pages for good examples. You don't want to fill your keyword space only with these keyword phrases. Aim for three or four good category phrases and fill out the rest with good search phrases people would use when looking for a book like yours: ‘19th century western horror’ or ‘award winning romance.’ Using both types of keywords will guarantee the maximum number of people who are looking for something to read. No matter where you publish your book, these keyword phrases will work for you toward getting your book onto the right virtual shelves.
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Published on April 10, 2015 14:46 Tags: amazon, book-marketing, categories, category, ebook, inspiration, keyword, library-thing, phrases

Amazon is Tweaking its Review System

I found this very interesting article that needs to be shared as it relates to this community, both readers and writers alike. In regards to original content for this blog, I know I've been absent lately. There is more coming soon and my only defense is this ol' adage... There just isn't enough hours in the day.

But for now, enjoy this current release:


This article was originally published by Ben Fox Rubin courtesy of CNET.

Amazon is rolling out a big change to its customer reviews system in the US, introducing a new machine-learning platform it developed in-house to surface newer and more helpful reviews.

"The system will learn what reviews are most helpful to customers...and it improves over time," Amazon spokeswoman Julie Law said in an interview. "It's all meant to make customer reviews more useful."

The change, which started Friday, will probably go unnoticed at first, as the e-commerce giant's new platform gradually starts altering the star ratings and top reviews on product pages. The new system will give more weight to newer reviews, reviews from verified Amazon purchasers and those that more customers vote up as being helpful.

A product's 5-star rating, which previously was a pure average of all reviews, will also become weighted using those same criteria, and so may change more often.

There's no word yet on whether this new platform will roll out to other countries.

Customer reviews have been a crucial part of Amazon's websites for over 20 years, with the written reviews and 5-star rating system becoming an important form of accountability and sign of popularity and quality for items buyers often can't touch or test out before purchasing. Because the system has become so important for selling products online, Amazon carefully considers any changes to the ratings system to ensure customers continue to trust it. Additionally, in April the company said it sued a handful of alleged fake reviews websites to fend off a small but potentially threatening amount of phony reviews.

The new platform was something the company looked at "very closely" before instituting, Law said, though she declined to say how long Amazon had been developing it.

"It's just meant to make things that much more useful," Law said, "so people see things and know it reflects the current product experience."

For example, sometimes a company will make small tweaks to a product or address some customer complaints, though this product isn't officially updated or renamed. With the new system, Law said, these small modifications should become more noticeable when shoppers are buying products.
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Published on July 07, 2015 13:12 Tags: amazon, kindle, prime, readers, reviewers, reviews, stars, writers

What Adam Wants is now free to download on Kindle

Short ghost story, What Adam Wants, is now free to download from most sites for all devices, including Amazon, Barnes & Noble, iTunes, Smashwords, and Kobo.

Losing a child during birth is difficult, but not as difficult as when that child's spirit refuses to leave.

Days after losing her child while giving birth, Rachel, and her husband, David, are haunted by the incessant cries of a baby. It is their stillborn, Adam, and he wants something from Rachel...
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Published on April 12, 2016 09:47 Tags: amazon, download, free, ghost, haunting, itunes, kindle, kobo, mystery, nook, short-stories, smashwords, thriller

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