How does a new KDP writer supposed to market a book?

Last Updated: 03.07.2025 00:41

How does a new KDP writer supposed to market a book?

How does a new KDP writer supposed to market a book?

E) Take a solid year to learn how to use Amazon or Facebook ads and be prepared to lose quite a bit of money as you figure it out.

You cannot effectively promote books

Trans athlete embraced as California track and field champion by peers while adult activists duel - San Francisco Chronicle

C) Persuade book reviewers on BookTok or Substack or someplace to recommend your book. If your book is unreadably terrible, this is probably impossible.

Are you planning to proofread your book to avoid sentences such as

A) Build a following on social media, a following of people who will buy your books. Good luck with that. There is very little evidence that social media can translate to sales.

NASA is firm: life on Earth will no longer be possible starting from this date - Glass Almanac

B) that are filled to the brim with typos or errors.

Or

Because you cannot persuade readers to buy any book in which sentences do not make sense. This shouldn't be “does.” If you don't see the problem, that is a big problem.

Is Donald Trump's very public crusade against the so-called "woke" and illegal immigration an asset or liability to the popularity of right-wing parties in Europe?

If your book is well presented, well written, and basically free of typos, then

A) that are not actually books.

C) that are unreadably terrible in any other way.

Man Buys $70,000 Ford After Dealership 'Played With the Numbers' for Him. 2 Years Later, He's Speaking Out - Motor1.com

B) Build a newsletter mailing list of people who will buy your book because they trust you to write books they want to read. This is slow, but ideal.

Or

D) Pay promotion services like Written Word Media to promote your book. Legitimate services will not accept your book for promotion if the presentation is crappy or the book is badly written.

Russia’s central bank cuts interest rates for first time since 2022 - Financial Times

D) that are presented with bad covers, bad descriptions, or ludicrously bad interior formatting.