BookBub is one of the world’s largest book deal sites. Their main promotion channel is a massive email list with millions of subscribers, segmented by genre and geography. Each day, they send targeted emails to these groups, sharing a handful of discounted ebooks with them.
Getting featured on BookBub requires making it through their application process, and it also costs a fee. But if your book ends up in one of their emails, you could get hundreds, even thousands of sales. Plus, if word of mouth catches on, your book’s sales can stay elevated for a long time after the deal is over.
Since even bestselling authors are keen on making it into BookBub, I didn’t have high expectations when first starting to submit my books there. But after publishing The 4 Minute Millionaire in late 2021, I immediately began. You’re allowed to submit each of your books about once a month. So every five weeks, I handed in my book again.
The application itself is simple, but your book needs to be high-quality. No confusing book cover. No typos in the description. And, ideally, existing customer reviews. My book had all of those. I had sold over 1,000 copies myself during the launch. And yet, I kept getting rejected. Month after month after month. After publishing my second book, 2-Minute Pep Talks, in September of the following year, I started submitting that one, too. I applied 12 times over the course of a year and got…nothing. No deals.
At this point, I reached out to BookBub. “Am I doing something wrong here?” I asked them. Their rejection emails said they only feature 20% of the books submitted—but that meant, statistically, I should have been selected for two deals at this point! Was something wrong with my work? A kind representative eventually confirmed everything looked good, except my books being available only on Amazon. “Making them available on more platforms could help, since we want to offer our readers as much choice as possible in where they get their books from,” she said.
I got to work and made sure my books popped up on Apple Books, the Google Play Store, Kobo, and a slew of other market places next to Amazon. Then, I kept submitting. Four months and eight more submissions later, I finally got my first deal. I’ve had several since then, and while they haven’t propelled me to stardom, they’ve helped me sell thousands of books with a little bit of profit to boot. At first, I didn’t get any of the big geographies. Several years and submissions later, I was eventually nominated for a US feature, which is their biggest audience. Recently, I landed my first global deal. All because I kept submitting.
The book market, like all markets, is broken. It’s riddled with gatekeepers, power laws, and unfair competition. But if you’re an author, what are you going to do? Quit writing? Of course not. You choose to play in a broken system, and you play until you win or die.
Wherever your work is eligible that’s relevant and could make a real difference: Keep submitting.