Full ROI on Paid Promos – Book Launch Numbers – Week 3

Welcome to the third week of my facts and figures for the launch of my new book, Silence at the Lock. (You can read the first post – about the costs for producing and marketing the book here, the second post about the first round of ROI on the paid promos I did here.)

This week, I’m doing some number crunching on ROI related to the paid promos I did last week.  I have to admit I had hoped for higher returns, but I’ll go into a couple reasons why I think they didn’t come below.  But first, “let’s do the numbers” (I’m channeling my inner Kai Ryssdal for all you NPR listeners out there.)

The Numbers

Income Source # of Books Sold Dates Title Price Per Book Total Income
Amazon 97 ebook/2 print March 4-8 SS 0.99/9.99 37.14
Amazon 7 ebook March 4-8 C12 3.99 27.06
Amazon 1 ebook March 4-8 SatL 3.99 2.79
Draft2Digital 3 ebook March 4-8 SS 0.99 1.76
Total 68.75

So here’s how the ROI breaks down:

I spent $118 for the promos, which pushed Steele Secrets (SS) only. I made just under $69. So my ROI is -41.7%.  

I have to say I had hoped to make all my money back there, but I’m still not completing disappointed in that return.

Also, I’ve had lingering sales on Steele Secrets throughout the last few days, so the promos may still be pushing a few new readers to the book.

Other Measures

I’m also growing my magical realism email list, and last week alone, it grew to 169 subscribers, and right now, it’s at a very strong 25% click rate.

Plus, my mailing list for my writing stuff (including these blog posts and my newsletter) grew by almost 1,000 people in the last month along, the largest burst of growth I’ve ever had.

So overall, things are on a very strong upswing for me.

Analysis – I’m Pleased

Overall, I’m thrilled with how the business side of my writing life is going.  Do I wish the book sales had paid for the book promos? Of course, but I’m confident they will in time.

One thing that didn’t go as well as I wanted was that one of the promos put my book in the wrong category, listing is at nonfiction rather than fiction. That’s a big error on one of my biggest promos, so that alone could account for the lack of sales that day.  (I”m pursuing a refund or another ad opportunity because of their mistake.)

One final measure that did make me happy was that my rankings on Amazon were pretty high for most of last week:

Those rankings show me I’m probably in good categories and that I’m writing in genres that I can compete in.  That’s huge. (Listen to the Sell More Books Show or look at K-Lytics, and you’ll see what I mean.)

Next Steps

I have some options here.

Next week, I’ll be doing the full breakdown on sales figures, dollars spent, and ROI on the book as a whole and sharing updates on sales figures, marketing that worked (or didn’t), and much more.

If you’re interested in checking out the book that is the basis for all these numbers, you can get all the details, links to purchase, and information on the great pre-order bonuses here.

 

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