What should you do with the novels you published early in your career?Â
If your old novels are languishing in the dusty corners of Amazon, are they dead? Can they be resurrected? Is there any money left to be made?
To answer these questions, James L. Rubart and I interviewed bestselling author Chris Fox, author of Relaunch Your Novel: Breathe Life Into Your Backlist (Affiliate Link).
Thomas Umstattd, Jr.: Many novelists have discovered that their early books were not as great as they thought they were at the time. After theyâve written several books, they may look back on their first novel and realize that it could be improved, but they arenât sure where to start.
James L. Rubart (Jim): A Novel Marketing Patron asked this question:
âIâve written 60 books, and my first one was not very good. What should I do?â
Novel Marketing Patron
Why should someone consider relaunching their book?
Chris Fox: Perhaps your sales were strong when you launched the book, but three years later, sales have dried up. Or you may have had a weak launch to begin with, and sales have never been good. Either way, you may be wondering what to do with that book now.
On Amazon, your novel is tied to an ASIN (Amazon Standard Identification Number). When you relaunch your book, you can often get a new ASIN. With a new ASIN, Amazon treats your book as a new product, and they will promote it as a new book even though itâs the same book. So a new ASIN gives you a second chance at discoverability.
Thomas: If you have bad reviews, a new ASIN will reset the review counter, which could be a good thing.
Chris: Yes. By default, if you unpublish a book and then republish under a different ASIN, youâll lose all your reviews. However, if youâre attached to your good reviews, you can contact Amazon to explain that youâve published a new edition of the same book. In some cases, theyâll attach those old reviews to your new edition. Some authors have been able to salvage their reviews, but itâs not a guarantee. You have to approach Amazon with your hat in your hand and ask them to help you.
Jim: Chris, in your book, Relaunch Your Novel: Breathe Life into Your Backlist (Affiliate Link), you talk about the different levels of relaunch. Can you give us an overview of that?
Should I relaunch?
Chris: The first question is whether you should relaunch your book. If the novel was poorly written, if the marketing material was terrible, if that book is in a genre you no longer write, you need to assess whether it is worth relaunching.
If it is worth relaunching, take inventory of your time and resources. How much time and money can you devote to the relaunch? Can you get a new cover, rewrite the blurb, set up some new promotions, and call it a day? Or do you need what I call the 6-million-dollar relaunch? At that level, you spend several thousand dollars on revamping the cover, rewriting the blurb, scheduling promotions, and coordinating with every author who owes you a favor to ask them to promote your book.
You can do very little to relaunch, or you can do quite a bit.
Thomas: Youâd be surprised how effective a new cover can be. I know authors who have launched excellent books with terrible covers. Brandon Sandersonâs Mistborn series had terrible covers, but they are some of his best books. Even though the Mistborn books were better than his previous books, the sales were worse, and his publisher was disappointed.
After six years, he convinced his publisher to get better covers, and sales revived.
Chris: I was part of his target audience, and I refused to buy those books because the covers were atrocious. Because of that cover art, I didnât even discover his books until they changed the covers. Now theyâre great.
Thomas: I had read all his books, but I skipped the Mistborn series. I assumed the books were bad because the covers were so bad. It wasnât until after I read his Wheel of Time series that I decided to read Mistborn.
How do you know if you have a good cover?
Chris: Youâre looking for a cover with consistent branding that matches the audienceâs expectations. If youâre part of the audience, you know what looks good and what readers expect. If youâre not part of the audience for that genre, you need to research the genre, find covers that are selling well, and see which books hold the top sales spots on Amazon. Then, see if you can discern a pattern in the cover design of the top-selling books. Your cover design will be dictated by whatâs selling well in your genre.
Thomas: But most authors want their covers to be unique and different from all the other covers.
Chris: Yes, they do. I did that the first time around. We believe that being unique will differentiate our book, and unfortunately, a lot of us succeeded at being unique. Your reader is looking for a certain emotional experience, and your cover needs to communicate what kind of book it is. If the cover is too unique, itâs also unclear, and readers will be confused and therefore uninterested.
When youâre looking for a TV show, youâre looking for a certain genre. So if you see a picture of the expanse and a spaceship, youâll know the show is set in space. But if you see a picture of a proto-molecule from the show, you might not even know the show was set in space.
You have to leverage the visuals to explain to the reader what your book is about so that they read the title or click to read the blurb.
Jim: A great cover will get a reader to the blurb, but the blurb must get the reader to the first sentence or paragraph.
Why is the back cover copy so critical?
Chris: You have about five words to gain the interest of your reader. If the first four words sound like a trope they hate, theyâll click away or put your book down.
For example, if your cover tells them itâs science fiction, but the first four words of your blurb make it sound like a thriller, theyâre already looking for a different book.
You need to know what readers expect, and you have to intrigue them.
To find out what intrigues my readers, I test through advertising.
I set up a $.99 preorder on one of my books. Then, Iâll run a bunch of Facebook ads trying to get people to sign up. I know Iâll take a loss on those ads, but Iâll run a dozen ads with different taglines and blurbs to see what the audience likes.
Inevitably, Iâll see that one or two perform much better than the others. Iâll build all my marketing copy around those successful ads. I used that process for my most recent series, The Magitech Chronicles, and the first book made it to the top 100 of all of Amazon.
Thomas: Thatâs a fantastic strategy. Iâve been advocating for testing through ads for years, and almost no one does it. Science and experimentation will show you what works.
I was at a writerâs conference talking to a marketing executive for one of the top publishers. I suggested they test their covers on the audience through Facebook ads. Heâd never even thought of it before.
Testing through ads is one way indies can out-maneuver the marketing teams at traditional publishing houses. Traditional publishers are not testing. They simply send their ideas to a committee inside the company. If people inside the company donât understand the genre, they may have no idea what the audience wants.
Chris: Itâs surprising how easy it is to test. I spend 15 minutes per day modifying my ads to target different and new audiences. The goal is to find out what works and what doesnât. The biggest barrier to entry for most authors is the daily cost of running ads. But if you keep your daily spend low, you can figure out which audiences like your stuff.
How can I improve my marketing copy?
Jim: That small investment can return huge numbers if you tap into the right audience.
If you have several novels published, comb through your reviews for wording readers are already using about your books. You can modify their words and use them in your marketing copy.
Chris: You can even use one-star reviews in a humorous way. Some of my best marketing was based on a one-star review that blasted my book. But, it was funny, and people got interested.
Thomas: I have purchased books based on the quality of a one-star review. If the wrong audience for your book leaves one-star reviews, it will signal to the right audience that your book is something they will like.
For example, a one-star review might say, âThis book has too much Christian content.â But if youâre targeting Christians, then thatâs exactly the kind of review you want!
If someone writes a one-star review saying, âThis book has too much sappy romance,â then readers of sappy romance will know your book is one theyâd like.
Do you have any relaunch success stories?
Thomas: Tell us about some successful book launches youâve seen.
The first that comes to mind was an author with a successful series called Bill the Vampire (Affiliate Link). Itâs raunchy, tongue-in-cheek comedy, but it made him $130,000 in the first three years it was out. Even though he had poorly branded covers, heâd made great money, so he was afraid to touch anything.
I talked with him, and he decided to brand the covers in a cohesive way. He did a light edit on the first couple of books, and then he rebranded the covers. Suddenly, through Facebook advertising, his series took off, and his income tripled. He was making $350,000 per year from that series. Two years after the fact, sales are trickling down, but heâs still making great money. That series is now his flagship series, and heâs built his career around it.
Thomas: I love the idea of rewriting the first book in a series. If you can sell through the first book, readers will buy the rest of the series. So editing and rewriting that first book will pay for itself since youâll sell more of your subsequent books.
Chris: That especially applies to the first 3,000-5,000 words of that first book. Those first chapters are the introduction to your work. Itâs your business card. If you donât delight them in the first 3,000 words, people will put the book down, look for something else, and rarely return to you.
What kind of book is a good candidate for a book relaunch?
Jim: Which kind of books arenât good candidates for relaunch? Our patron had 60 books. How can she decide?
Chris: When I consult with an author in that situation, I want to find out which books were hits for her. Then we start looking for themes. Were they all in the same genre? Did they all have the same heroine? If you find a theme, you can do a light rewrite on the first three books in the series, get new covers, and workshop your blurbs with your author friends in the same genre to make sure your marketing copy is decent. Then you see how they do.
If they do well, you release one a month (or whatever your genre will sustain) until youâve caught up your entire backlist. Thatâs more effective than trying to republish 60 books at a time, especially since you donât know how the market will receive them.
Does the relaunch work for stand-alone books?
Jim: You talk a lot about series. My first three novels stand alone. Do you recommend the same strategy? People arenât compelled to read the next in the series to find out what happens. Theyâre just looking to read something else by me.
Chris: If your books are in the same genre, youâll still see some of the benefits of this strategy. Itâs hard to convince people to read from one book to the next if theyâre not linked in a series. Youâll usually see some readers drop off.
However, you can use your back matter to mitigate the drop-off. For example, you can include a sample chapter from one book in the back matter of another book so that each book becomes an advertisement for another.
Thomas: Itâs important to think about the customer journey even when youâre writing books for the first time. At the end of each book, you want them to read your next book. So make it as easy as possible for your reader to find the next book. Itâs surprising how few books have sample chapters in the back matter. Itâs a proven technique, and it works well. I saw it work when I was the marketing director at Enclave Publishing.
Chris: You can even get email subscribers by offering a free ebook in the back matter. An email subscriber is even more valuable because that often leads to multiple sales over the years.
What mistakes do authors make when relaunching their books?
They donât prepare. Often, an author will launch a book that doesnât do well, but they donât take the time to scientifically research why it flopped. They donât find out what the problems were. Instead, theyâll throw money at it. Iâve seen people spend $5,000 to $10,000 on a relaunch. They might get a new cover, but they donât research why they needed a new cover or how the blurb should be changed.
If youâre going to relaunch, try to get a second, third, and fourth opinion on your cover and blurb from people who have the kind of sales numbers youâre after.
If you write science fiction, look for the top authors in your genre and email them saying, âIâm thinking about doing a relaunch. Would you take two minutes to look at this new cover or blurb and tell me what you think?â Youâll be surprised at how many authors will offer advice.
Thomas: Change for its own sake doesnât do any good. If you donât know why itâs broken, you wonât know how to fix it.
How do you test a cover on Facebook?
Chris: Start with a budget. Before you get a new cover, try to figure out what is selling at the time. If you have people on your list who have read your book, email them and ask what they think the cover should look like. Those readers have spent time in your world with your characters. They are your most passionate fans. Many of them will have great ideas for potential covers.
Once you have ten potential cover ideas, post them in your Facebook group or send out a survey and have people vote. That way, before youâve spent a dime, you already have an idea of what kind of cover you should get.
After youâve compiled the best ideas, visit DeviantArt.com. Most artists maintain a profile there. Start searching for the type of art that represents your genre. You can find artists who are just starting out. Theyâll make you a high-quality cover at a price a new author can afford.
Thomas: After an author buys cover art, how do they test it for their audience?
Chris: Create several Facebook ads using the artwork from your artist. Then use the most interesting text you have. For example, in one ad, you might use the first paragraph from the book. In a second ad, say something exciting about the plot. Then start plugging in different Facebook audiences to see how they respond to the ad.
Youâll quickly see data for the cost per click (CPC). If you see a high CPC, that means people in that audience arenât interested in that ad, so youâll want to turn it off.
If you have a low CPC, youâve found people who really like your image, and youâll know that image is working, and youâve got your cover.
Thomas: The temptation is to survey your readers to see which cover they vote for. But with a survey, people are terrible at knowing what they want. When you survey people, they become a more rational version of themselves. But when you test through ads, people either click or they donât, and you get real data from their subconscious. A survey doesnât tell you what people are feeling, but you do get that data with clicks.
Facebook will show your ad to 5,000 people for a few dollars, so the ads are relatively cheap.
Chris: If funds are a real issue, you can kind of get around it by posting your cover image in Facebook groups where members are familiar with the genre. Itâs not as good as the data youâd get from ads, but itâs one way to get started.
Whatâs your one piece of advice for someone thinking of relaunching their book?
Chris: Be patient. People are so eager to publish. They feel the industry is moving at light speed, and theyâll be left behind. I donât think thatâs the case. Take the time required to write the best book possible. Take time with your marketing and research. Maybe you only run a $2.00 ad, but youâre still taking action that will bring you closer to success than you are today. Donât let yourself get overwhelmed.
Jim: In your book, you talk about your experiments, and you reveal what worked for you and what didnât. You explained that this is a strategy for the long haul. If authors learn from their mistakes, theyâll have a lot of success. I appreciated that perspective.
Thomas: Chris, You are my favorite marketing guru for authors right now. The good-advice per page ratio is the highest of all the marketing books Iâve read. Other books are good, but you have great advice, particularly in Relaunch Your Novel: Breathe Life Into Your Backlist (Affiliate Link)
Where can people find out more about you?
Chrisfoxwrites.com is my website. Youâll find my YouTube channel there with tutorials for authors. My book, 5,000 Words Per Hour, is available for free on my website. I also have three free prequel novellas on my website if youâd like a sample of my fiction.
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Thanks for this advice! I found a lot of helpful tips even as I’m writing and launching my first book! I also didn’t know that Facebook adds are that cheep. I will look into that when I actually have a book to market đ
Just trying to help so please donât take this as nit-picking, but I believe itâs the âBill the Vampireâ series Chris is talking about. Your show notes has it as âBuild A Vampireâ. And I just discovered your podcast this week. Binge listening on my way to work. 30 minute commute. Gray work guys. Really enjoying it!
Peace!
Of course Iâd have a typo in my comment! I meant âgreatâ not âgrayâ. Duh!
John, welcome to the show and thanks for the catch! I have updated the show notes and even included a link to the book on Amazon.
Thanks, guys! This is EXACTLY what I was looking for. I’ll be listening to this one several times! I’m off to buy his book so I don’t make new mistakes while fixing my old ones! Have a great day!