Should you Sell eBooks from your Website? @JoRobinson176

Many web owners sell books directly, and sometimes exclusively from their sites, collecting one hundred percent of the price via PayPal. If you publish with Amazon KDP Select, this is obviously not allowed – in fact, if your book is with Select, you are only allowed to distribute the digital books through them, and only the selling of your paper books after ordering them from your POD supplier is considered kosher.

If you’re not with KDP Select you can sell them anywhere you like, so the website option then becomes viable, and a very good idea too. As an independent publisher you get to try a variety of avenues for selling and marketing your books. We all know about Smashwords and all the other sites where you can make your books available to buy. It’s quick work to load them up there – although – not such quick work to get them taken down by the way. I unpublished two of mine from Smashwords months ago, and I’m still trying to get Barnes & Noble to remove them from their site so I can enrol them in Select again.

So there are all these options open to you for spreading your books far and wide, but do consider having one or two for sale directly from you. I’m in the process of getting a couple ready for this very thing. Many of us use WordPress.com. Me, because the thought of hosting my own website terrifies me, but moving to WordPress.org in the future will be necessary because of Google visibility.

You can’t install a PayPal button and sell your books from WordPress.com, although that needn’t be a hindrance. Why not set up your own website with a link to it in your sidebar? Setting one up is only a little work to begin with, and then occasional updates after that. A nicely designed static website is a great thing to have to use for all your future promotions, sales, new releases, and a great way to showcase yourself and all of your books.

A couple of free website hosts are Weebly, and my favourite, Wix. It shouldn’t take you more than a day to get it looking nice and professional. One little tip though – take your time picking your theme and theme fonts, because once you publish and go live you can’t change those. It’s up to you how much you use your website. You have the option of a blog to go with it, which you can use weekly, bi-weekly (or not at all), and share links to pages from there to all your social networking sites regularly, so it needn’t be something that stagnates. Wix has a lot of really lovely, and easy to use features, and setting up your PayPal button is the work of minutes.

Once you’ve got your book written, proofed, and beautifully formatted, convert it to an eBook format (or a selection of formats, such as PDF, Mobi, and ePub) using free downloadable software such as Calibre. Calibre is a great tool for Indie authors to have, with many useful functions other than book conversion – which is a whole lot more words, and best kept for another day. The important thing is how easy it is to use, with step by step instructions, your books will be ready to sell very quickly. Obviously these books will not be protected from customers emailing copies to their friends, but the same applies to every eBook you ever send as a prize or review copy, so that is a thought – the ever present and growing piracy. The customers who do buy it from your website are unlikely to be buddies with each other though, so you probably won’t lose any sales if they do send it on to their grannies and so on, and pirates prefer not to spend a dime at all mostly.

Whether you write something specifically to sell yourself, or experiment with a book you’ve already written that may not be doing so well, it is always an option for the Indie writer. Some authors are making a lot of money this way, especially those in the health and recipe book sector, so if there is a book lurking in you that would help or add value to readers enough for them to buy straight away, rather than taking the time to look for it online, go for it! I personally can vouch for the quick finger of the impulse buyer, and I can’t think of one bought this way so far that I regret buying, and the more you are spread around, the more visible you will be – always a good thing.

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Author: jorobinson176

South African writer.

31 thoughts on “Should you Sell eBooks from your Website? @JoRobinson176”

      1. The biggest drawback is trust.. and the big boys play on this.. ‘watch out for pirates, con artists and people who will take your money without delivering.. Also Paypal did not have a great reputation at one point but is much improved. We have been using for years now and touch wood have not had a problem. I think that this will change as authors realise that they are getting ripped off on the online bookshops.. Ebook margins are so tight and ending up with pennies for your hard work makes not sense with Ebooks. Selling yourself means that you get the full price. But you do need to build an online presence so that you have the market place. It will all change in the next few years but in the meantime we are in the transitional phase.. born to early Jo… we shall just have to live to 100+ to take advantage. hugs XXS

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        1. You’re so right Sally- it’s really great to hear this from someone who is already doing this like yourself. So far I haven’t had any problems with non-delivery when I’ve bought books from websites, although to be fair, they are mostly sites I know from following blogs and newsletters and so on. I think that there’s a window too to report non-delivery to PayPal and get your money back these days. Now you’ve inspired me to get a move on getting the books I want to sell this way locked and loaded! We’ll toast the 100+ with champers over our 100th book release. 😉 HUGS! X

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    1. Thank you Tess! The Wix site is actually a lot of fun to set up – it’s like play more than work. I also go a bit gaga with information overloads and tend to run and hide, but these two tricks are easy. 🙂 ❤

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  1. Thanks for sharing some great ideas here Jo! 🙂 So to re-iterate, are you saying even if we have a blog site to open up another ‘static’ domain to sell books and add the paypal there? 🙂

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    1. Thank you! If you have WordPress.org with a hosting site then you can sell directly from there with PayPal, but if you’re using a free WordPress.com account selling isn’t allowed. If you open a static site like Wix, you can add your PayPal buttons on all of your pages there for straight sale and download. 🙂

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