book category sales

Stephanie Golden

Registered
Joined
Mar 24, 2011
Messages
44
Reaction score
2
Location
Brooklyn, NY
Website
www.stephaniegolden.net
I'm writing a proposal, trying to figure out which would be the best category(ies) for this book. Could be fitness, could be health & wellness, could be longevity. \

Is there a source to find out which categories (as opposed to individual titles) have the largest markets?
 

Boovis

Registered
Joined
Sep 13, 2012
Messages
28
Reaction score
2
Location
Helsinki, Finland
I'm writing a proposal, trying to figure out which would be the best category(ies) for this book. Could be fitness, could be health & wellness, could be longevity. \

Is there a source to find out which categories (as opposed to individual titles) have the largest markets?

I'd suggest that, when the book is submitted to a publisher, that they will know what genre or subgenre your book fits into so I'd just concentrate on getting it written for the moment and then letting your agent or publisher deal with the headache of how to list or market it :)
 

RedWritingHood

Registered
Joined
Oct 29, 2012
Messages
19
Reaction score
0
I agree with Boovis. Now if you have someone interested and waiting for your proposal, that's one thing. Of course, how would I realistically know, since I've never written a proposal. I've just written the book and then looked for a publisher. Hmm.

What if you tell them it fits in three categories. My works never fit into just one. I'm always between the cracks. Sorry I can't be more helpful.
 

Stephanie Golden

Registered
Joined
Mar 24, 2011
Messages
44
Reaction score
2
Location
Brooklyn, NY
Website
www.stephaniegolden.net
I do have an agent waiting for it, but from what I can gather (and I did a fair amount of research) agents and editors want to know from the getgo what shelves in the bookstore (or more realistically, what category at Amazon) it will be assigned to. So I picked one basic one and two secondary ones.
 

dpawl

Registered
Joined
Nov 6, 2012
Messages
39
Reaction score
0
I do have an agent waiting for it, but from what I can gather (and I did a fair amount of research) agents and editors want to know from the getgo what shelves in the bookstore (or more realistically, what category at Amazon) it will be assigned to. So I picked one basic one and two secondary ones.

I'm having the same experience with agents. It appears they want to know the genre right away for marketing purposes. It makes sense to know your target market, and it's good that you chose one basic and two secondary because a bookstore at the airport may have a different way of displaying books than a bookstore at the mall, and Amazon may a completely different way.
 

Stephanie Golden

Registered
Joined
Mar 24, 2011
Messages
44
Reaction score
2
Location
Brooklyn, NY
Website
www.stephaniegolden.net
The agents want to know because the publishers want to know. They are hysterical because the publishing industry is going down the tubes, and they want everything but a gold-plated guarantee that they can sell the book. The last proposal I wrote didn't sell. One publisher was very interested but wouldn't buy the book unless we could prove to them that we could sell 50,000 copies. Surprise--we couldn't.
 

dpawl

Registered
Joined
Nov 6, 2012
Messages
39
Reaction score
0
Wow! When you say 50,000 copies, are you referring to printed copies, or does that number include ebook sales?
 

dpawl

Registered
Joined
Nov 6, 2012
Messages
39
Reaction score
0
I'm wondering if publishers typically have marketing professionals on staff. It's not an easy process to come up with a projected sales forecast and tailor a marketing program based on this information.
 

veinglory

volitare nequeo
Self-Ban
Registered
Joined
Feb 12, 2005
Messages
28,750
Reaction score
2,933
Location
right here
Website
www.veinglory.com
It really depends what the book is. I mean oif the book really is all about living longer that has modest potential, if it genuinely is about weight loss it would have a hell of a lot more. But a book can only be genuinely, centrally totally all about a fairly small number of things (simultaneously). If it is a little bit about a lot of things but not really focussed on any of them, then the sales potential tend to go down.
 

Stephanie Golden

Registered
Joined
Mar 24, 2011
Messages
44
Reaction score
2
Location
Brooklyn, NY
Website
www.stephaniegolden.net
Publishers have understaffed, overworked marketing and publicity departsments, so except for the rock-bottom basics, they hardly ever do marketing any more, except for really big-name authors. The average midlist author has to do his or her own publicity and marketing, except that the publisher will send a press release review copies to their own list of periodicals, plus any names the author supplies (saving the author lots of money, although usually you have to rewrite the press release because the publicity person never read the book). Being asked to guarantee 50,000 copies was pretty extreme, but basically authors must do their own marketing these days, which is one reason book authors are so quick to complain about publishers.
 

veinglory

volitare nequeo
Self-Ban
Registered
Joined
Feb 12, 2005
Messages
28,750
Reaction score
2,933
Location
right here
Website
www.veinglory.com
My non-fiction publisher put my book in their catalog and take my book to conventions, and the book sells. I am not sure what else I would expect them to do.
 

Stephanie Golden

Registered
Joined
Mar 24, 2011
Messages
44
Reaction score
2
Location
Brooklyn, NY
Website
www.stephaniegolden.net
Used to be they got you on media. The publicity dept would call TV producers, they would get you on radio, call magazine editors to get your book reviewed (of course then magazines actually reviewed books). When my first book came out the publisher actually gave me a mini book tour, which included lots of radio, a local TV show, a newspaper interview, and a talk/signing at a bookstore. When my 2d book came out things were already changing but the publisher got me a gig as a keynote speaker at a book fair. Those were the days.