Welcome back to another Open Book Blog Hop!
Today’s topic is: If your book took off tomorrow with enormous worldwide interest and sales, are you prepared for all that entails?
And remember to pay a visit to my fellow writers to see what they have come up with. You can find their works here!

This one is quite a pertinent topic for me this week. I’ve been thinking a lot lately about my novel, Chasing Shadows and its follow-ups. From the perspective of my writing, I have a wealth of ideas. Almost too many I sometimes wonder. But how do I shift copies? I’ve done okay with friends and family and people in the social circles that I inhabit. But beyond that, it’s been very hit-and-miss. As of April this year, Chasing Shadows celebrated its first birthday, so something needs to change.
The short answer to this one is no, I am not even remotely ready for my book to suddenly go global and develop a mass of interest. I’m okay with creating the occasional piece of promo material such as the image above. But I’ve come to realise I need to sit down and work out what my elevator pitch is. Imposter syndrome really holds me back from pushing further. I don’t rate my own work too highly, don’t believe it warrants people parting with their money for it, so don’t push it as hard as I should.
I need to look at advertising. I’ve heard that Amazon ads or Facebook ads are better, depending on who you ask. So my solution will be to run some tests, put up the same amount of money on each platform and take notes. I can’t expect to sell any copies of my book if it isn’t in front of people. As for distribution, as a self-published author, I sell through KDP/Amazon. I also offer signed copies which I ship from home, printing labels and packing in book sleeves, though I cannot compete with Prime free delivery. This certainly wouldn’t be entirely sustainable if I suddenly became wildly famous and generated a mass of sales, but I’d definitely make it work.
But the key thing is, I am slowly but surely becoming more aware of what I need to do to improve my chances, and am willing to work on it!
I think that marketing is much harder than writing, good luck with your efforts.
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It really is! It might as well be astrophysics!
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I’ve had more success in selling books via (free) BookFunnel than I ever did using Amazon Ads.
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Now that is interesting! I haven’t really looked into BF, so have no idea how it actually works!
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It takes a while to get your head around it, but it’s a good way of marketing our books.
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I might add it to my test case then! As I hear so many mixed things about Amazon and FB ads (good and bad) I figure I should try them for myself.
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I’ve never had any luck with FB ads. And Amazon is hit or miss. I went thru about 9 months where they didn’t work at all, and then BAM! the Amazon ad started selling books again. (But it hasn’t been cost-effective.)
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This is the thing, I hear so many mixed views. Hard to know what is for the best really.
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Marketing is definitely harder than writing. It’s a completely different skillset. @samanthabwriter from
Balancing Act
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Writing a 75k word book was easy by comparison!
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