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I received e-mails from reviewers...these are pay-to-play, right?

Haven't seen those myself yet, though it's likely to be due to the fact I am not finished with my debut yet.
Anyway, paid reviews are a problem. First, it breaks the rules. Second, you can't even be sure the review will make any sense. They are doing it for the money they get from it, not to genuinely share their opinion with others as organic reviews do. At least that's my opinion on that matter.
Anyway, paid reviews are a problem. First, it breaks the rules. Second, you can't even be sure the review will make any sense. They are doing it for the money they get from it, not to genuinely share their opinion with others as organic reviews do. At least that's my opinion on that matter.

Let me guess... they said they're interested in your book, but did not give a title or even a hint as to why they're interested.
Stuff like that is nearly always a scam of some kind. Ignore it.
Stuff like that is nearly always a scam of some kind. Ignore it.

As I said in another thread, if their profile is private, then hands off. When you can't see their shelves, what they read and how they rate/review it, it's likely they just want free stuff in the better case, get money out of you in the worst.

I'm extremely cautious with things like that. I think some scammers prey on indie authors, knowing how desperate some are for reviews.



Sadly, Author House deals in steering people to self-publishing, and offer to "help" with editing, cover design, and other such supposed services.
Never forget that agents and publishers don't contact you. They already have ten or more times the submissions they need. And money flows to the author, never the other way,
Jay said it right in the last paragraph. In short: If they ask you for money, it's 99% a scam.
Be aware of any paid services from such 'publishing' companies. More so if they ask for hundreds (let alone thousands) of dollars.
Be aware of any paid services from such 'publishing' companies. More so if they ask for hundreds (let alone thousands) of dollars.

I've never heard anything good about Author House. I think it was David Guaghran who has written extensively in his blogs about what a scam they are. Be warned!!
At the same time, I think if you are lucky, you might get contacted by an agent or publisher if you are indie. Andy Weir certainly did, and I've known one or two other authors who have. But you really have to develop your audience before that happens.
Yeah, David Gaughran makes a lot of posts about these scams. I've seen his list of those companies, and it was a long one.

I do think the shysters either want a free book or want to take that free book and pirate it, thereby profiting off my labor. I politely refused the first one. The rest...? Straight into the spam folder!
Chris

There are more free books out there than you can shake a stick at. At this point I'd rather get read by a reader that wants a free book than not read at all. They could pirate all the books they wanted from KDP giveaways and run out of time to put them up on TPB.
The way I see it, books cost so little these days and are so easily available for free, that anybody asking me for a free copy must be really hard up. I hope that my stories take them away from their drudging existence for a few hours ;)

Sometimes I get emails from people offering to promote my book in some way. If they have a website I'll sometimes visit it out of curiosity. I find with these that they usually sound fairly legitimate, and in fact I don't think they are necessarily all scams (though some probably are). I think sometimes people are genuinely trying to do something to promote books, but in reality I expect you would be paying for a service that doesn't really work. If you are contacted by a website like this the best thing is to google something along the lines of "anyone used insert name of site here" and quite often you'll find other people's experiences, particularly on Kboards there are often discussions about promotion sites.
In terms of being contacted by traditional publishers, this has happened to me, so it can happen.

I just started getting these, too. They seem off somehow—but with no money request, the nature of the scam isn't clear to me. Pirating my book? Seems like a stretch.
Here are red flags I watch for:
- The offer message is very similar to other oddly-vague messages
- As mentioned above, their GR profile is private (seems odd if they're offering to post lots of reviews)
- Their email address looks like [a-cat-walked-across-your-keyboard]@gmail.com
- I Google site:goodreads.com "their-GR-name-goes-here", which finds all references to them on Goodreads, and the only way they've ever engaged with anybody is to offer a free review (doesn't work well for common names)
- If I'm still not sure, I Google the first few words of the message (putting the text in double quotes) and see what comes up.

I got three of these offers in the last week. Thank you very much for the offers, but I'm not falling for whatever scheme they have in mind.
The rule of thumb for me: If I didn't contact you, don't bother contacting me. I'll not do business with someone I don't know or asked about your business. As for reviews, if I get them, it get them, If not, I'll not use any underhanded method to get them.



The profile is private of course. If they mentioned the title of my book I'd be more inclined, but even then I'm not very trusting. Although my book is officially published and I could get them for offering it up elsewhere - that would be a lot of work and I'm certainly not going to make it easy for them.

"Hi,
If you are looking for reviews for your newest book, I am willing to read and review it. You can send me a review copy to xxxxxxx@gmail.com. I accept epub, mobi and pdf formats. I am also available as a beta reader.
Please email me your queries at xxxxxx@gmail.com. I don't login to Goodreads often.
xxxxx
P.S. I don't have a Kindle Unlimited account."
The XXXX's are the person's private info. Even though it's probably just someone trying to scam a free book out of me I probably still shouldn't post their name and email address.


Curiously, I received a bunch of these for about a week after I started posting my prepublication book on a few sites (Amazon, Goodreads, Bookbub, NetGalley, etc.). After that -- nothing. It's been a couple of months.
At first, I was concerned that I'd ended up on an author spam list and would keep getting these. But for me at least, it seems like new listings are what triggered the emails.
Andy, it makes some degree of sense:
If you were about to release the book (If I understood you right, you listed it but not yet released, correct me if I am wrong) - that means your book is ready and the potential scammers would not need to do anything but offer ludicrously-priced marketing packages without pretending to do any other services (such as editing) while still getting to label it as published by them. And, at that stage, it's still early enough to pull the book down for some last-minute adjustments. After it's fully live, there's not that much to do.
If you were about to release the book (If I understood you right, you listed it but not yet released, correct me if I am wrong) - that means your book is ready and the potential scammers would not need to do anything but offer ludicrously-priced marketing packages without pretending to do any other services (such as editing) while still getting to label it as published by them. And, at that stage, it's still early enough to pull the book down for some last-minute adjustments. After it's fully live, there's not that much to do.

The only reason I was (pleasantly) surprised by the ensuing silence is that, with most other kinds of spammers, they just keep sending you offers. Since the book isn't published yet, I feel like I should be a ripe target. I'm just glad they don't see me that way.
I'll shortly sum up what I've been reading about scam-type emails.
Told simply, the first email is to be done in a way that not only baits those they can scam but also weed out those who are too smart to fall for it*. For any kind of scammer (whether it's 'publishing' or a Nigerian prince promising wealth or long-lost cousin or whatever), the worst-case scenario is trading e-mails for months only to get nothing out of it. So, if one does not take the bait on the first try, they move on.
They need to make sure all their people (in several cases outsourced from third-world countries) are working as much as possible on the people they can get money from and waste no time on those they can't get anything from.
That's the difference from spam which keeps sending offers to as many people as possible but those offers don't need any further communication (think advertising spam full of links to whatever they try to sell).
* on a side note, that is why there are spelling errors in the scams trying to get money from people: those who'd not fall for the bait anyway will notice them and will see right away what it is, and ignore it. On the other hand, those who don't notice the critical errors are most likely uneducated enough to fall for the ruse as a whole.
Told simply, the first email is to be done in a way that not only baits those they can scam but also weed out those who are too smart to fall for it*. For any kind of scammer (whether it's 'publishing' or a Nigerian prince promising wealth or long-lost cousin or whatever), the worst-case scenario is trading e-mails for months only to get nothing out of it. So, if one does not take the bait on the first try, they move on.
They need to make sure all their people (in several cases outsourced from third-world countries) are working as much as possible on the people they can get money from and waste no time on those they can't get anything from.
That's the difference from spam which keeps sending offers to as many people as possible but those offers don't need any further communication (think advertising spam full of links to whatever they try to sell).
* on a side note, that is why there are spelling errors in the scams trying to get money from people: those who'd not fall for the bait anyway will notice them and will see right away what it is, and ignore it. On the other hand, those who don't notice the critical errors are most likely uneducated enough to fall for the ruse as a whole.




"Hi,
If you are looking for reviews for your newest book, I am willing to read and review it. You can send me..."
This is EXACTLY the wording I got, and I fell for it! Scam me once... Oh well, glad I found this out while I am still new.

Best bet...hit the delete button and put it where it belongs.




My books are on a website called lovebestsellbooks.id and having just checked, yours is on there too Jordyn. I suspect that a lot of Goodread books are giveng away for free on there. Possible with some kind of bug or virus downloaded with them.

And I never give PDFs away! No betas either. So they got it from a give away years ago or just stole it from Amazon.
You probably already know this, but don't try to download your own book to see if there is actually anything beyond a cover. It's a phony site.

I raised this on Twitter a few months ago but nobody had heard of that site. There should be somewhere you can report it you'd think.



Personally, if all the famous writers are having this issue, it does trickle down. I'm not famous enough, so I'm not going to worry about it at this time. I'm getting sales here and there, so I'm good.

Correct about giving away PDFs, and I will never give away PDFs again by email and in fact if I feel I need reviews I'll ask for them if and only if the "reviewer" has read/bought book or books. Like the comment part about the advertising part and if the scammer does read the book they just might repent of their behavior. You Know Who works in mysterious ways... The reason I got worked up over this was because the email came "from Goodreads." Otherwise I would not have fallen for it.

"Hi,
If you are looking for reviews for your newest book, I am willing to read and review it. You can send me..."
That's good to know, I've gotten 6-8 of these and it's good to know they're a scam for future reference (I haven't given them anything as reviewers should review your book naturally in my opinion)

I've been getting a lot of these emails lately, and yes, they are looking for payment for reviews. Typically, if someone reaches out to me, unsolicited, offering book reviews or anything else of that nature, I just assume they want my money.


I also received a PM here on Goodreads. I thought this was an actual request to review my novel and sent this person a pdf two weeks ago. Today there was an author question posted by this same person on my profile page saying they would review my novel. I flagged this message as spam for Goodreads to deal with it.
Sharing so others are aware of this problem.

There are people sending emails, pretending to be interested reviewing your book. In reality, they want access to your book and information, in order to make it their own for sale. So far these names have made contact:
Cheryl Simmons
Ryan Lawson
Erin K. Ison
Even though they have different email addresses, I traced them coming from the same IP address.
Am I misreading their intent? Do you get these e-mails, too? And isn't it against Amazon TOS to pay for reviews?