This post is part of our series, 50 Ways Your Website is Not
Helping You Sell More Books

13. Booksense Nonsense

“I’m quite certain that your book is not stocked in my local store, so I go to your site to buy it online. You’ve used Booksense for all your links… but the closest store they list is 100 miles away, and none of those listed actually sells online.”

Provide a variety of ways that your readers can get your books. Include Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble, and perhaps even an out-of-print search service. You want it make sure it is easy for people to buy your books online. As much as we admire their principles, BookSense makes online shopping unnecessarily difficult, especially for readers in rural areas.

Posted by admin in 50 Ways Your Website is Not Helping You Sell More Books at 9:41 amcomment


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Elsewhere

News on author websites, blogging, and book promotion

GoDaddy, the domain registrar we often use, has a $1.99 special right now. The trick to registering with GoDaddy is to ignore all the extra junk they try to sell you after you start the checkout process. Look for links or buttons that say “No, thanks” or “Continue with checkout.” Caveat: if you don’t have a PO Box and you don’t want your address and phone number becoming public, you might want to add private registration.

Agent Colleen Lindsay is running a great series on book promotion on her blog.

While we were on vacation last week, agent Nathan Bransford wrote a couple of great posts on author websites and how authors’ blogs influence book sales. There’s some great info in the comments, although there’s also some misinformation about technical issues. (Feel free to ask us about those!)

Text Prefs — a U.K. design firm is conducting a survey on how people like to read onscreen text. Tell them how you like it! They’ve promised to publish the findings so we can all do better at designing things people read.