Episode 88 of the Kobo Writing Life Podcast isn’t the usual interview, but rather, features KWL’s Director, Mark Lefebvre outlining five strategies that successful authors use to build their sales, raise their author profile and get readers to sign up their author mailing lists with Free eBooks.
First, Mark talks about the updates to FREE tracking.
If you’ve been paying attention to the updates in the Notification header of the Kobo Writing Life dashboard (which link to this VERY HANDY – hint, hint, nudge, nudge – part of the KWL Community) throughout July, you may have noticed that the Web team and the KWL Team have been working at revisions to the broken free tracking that we’ve been dealing with for quite a while.
Currently FREE TRACKING is being refreshed and updated. But in the meantime, there’s something important you should know about the FREE DOWNLOADS numbers you’re seeing.
The most important has to do with PREVIEWS. First, please don’t worry, Kobo is NOT giving your non-free books away.
At Kobo, readers have the opportunity to preview the first 5% of eBooks. Whenever an ePub file is loaded into Kobo’s database, the catalog generates a unique new ePub file that is comprised of the first 5% of that full eBook, then it tacks on a final page with a “BUY NOW” Button for the full book into the end of that ePub.
And whenever a customer clicks on the “Save Preview” button on a book’s item page, it adds that preview ePub file to that customer’s library. Since there isn’t currently any filtering that distinguishes the preview ePub file from the full ePub file, it appears as if that eBook was given to a customer, and is tracked as a “free download” in the dashboard.
(The KWL, Web and UX Teams will be adjusting and fixing this, but having that information can be extremely valuable, because it allows you to see how many customers have PREVIEWED your book. IE, if you have a huge number of PREVIEWS but not a huge number of sales, that could tell you something important about the conversion from free preview to sales)
1) First Free eBook in Series (Perma-Free)
Although this isn’t a new practice, it continues to be something that works quite nicely for authors looking to increase their sales and author profile at Kobo.
Authors can set any book on Kobo to free at any time for as long as they want with no restrictions and no requests for exclusivity.
The concept is creating a funnel to get a lot of people to grab the first book for free and hopefully converting them into buyers because the worlds, characters, settings and situations they are reading about in your series are so compelling that they HAVE to keep on reading.
Below are some stats that are typical of the conversion rate from FREE to SALES via studies done on multiple different first book in series promos.
2) Free Book/Novella/Novelette Kept Perma-Free that ISN’T the first in the Series
The same technique used above can be used for other books in the series (rather than the first book), or perhaps for interstitial stories in the series universe.
Remember that, with Kobo Writing Life, you can enter Series metadata using decimals. IE, imagine you have a novella that takes place between Books 1 and 2 in your series. Entering 1.5 into the Volume Number value in your Series metadata connects those book. (See this post on how that works at KWL)

An example, from 2013, on how a FREE title in a series helped increase the sales volume of related books in that same series. Note that the Free Title and Paid Titles are on slightly different scales, but the effect on increased sales through FREE promotion should still be obvious. (Author/Title kept anonymous)
3) Free related/connected Short Story hook into a novel or series
Mark shares a personal anecdote about using a short story to entice readers to want to learn more or explore more about characters that appear in a full novel.
His example is how the FREE short story, This Time Around, a 10,000 word short story, has been successful at helping new readers discover his main character Michael Andrews, who is a werewolf attempting to live a normal life in the midst of one of the world’s largest metropolitan centers in the novel A Canadian Werewolf in New York.
4) A Free eBook that is a stand alone novel / NOT part of a series
For those of you who do NOT have series books, don’t despair. There is still a correlation between the “funnel” of free eBooks and readers going on to buy more books by the same author (rather than books in the same series)
Mark shares how his friend Sean Costello, a thriller/horror writer he works closely with, uses free to build a readership, not based on the book being part of a series, but based on readers discovering the voice of a brilliant author who they feel compelled to read more books from.
Costello’s SQUALL has garnered almost 3300 reviews on Kindle and more than 800 reviews on Kobo with a 4 star average.
Again, good news for authors who don’t write series books. Free works for gaining new readers and selling more eBooks for you too. 🙂
5) Using FREE eBooks for Newsletter sign-ups
While it’s great that retailers can help authors sell more using algorithms and targeted emails to their customers making recommendations, it is important for authors to get readers to sign up to their author newsletter.
Folks like Nick Stephenson (Your first 10,000 Readers) and Mark Dawson (Self Publishing Formula) have been helping authors use techniques to help get readers signed up for their newsletter mailing lists which allow authors to better control their own success. (Being able to let your best fans know when you have a new release or have a promotional price available has a direct correlation with sales success)

An example of one of the free courses that Mark Dawson offers helping authors use Facebook ads via online training videos via the Self Publishing Formula website
The way this works (and you can get FAR BETTER details direct from Nick and Mark by clicking the links above), authors set up a newsletter sign up at the end of their eBooks or via targeted social media ads (Facebook, etc) and when a customer signs up, they can get a free eBook sent to them from the author. These are typically eBooks that are NOT free on the various retail websites. So these readers who become newsletter subscribers get something of value directly from the author which helps built brand trust and loyalty.
Other authors, such as M.L. Buchman don’t ever make their eBooks free nor do they give free eBooks away. But, instead, they create unique, fresh and interesting new stories and content specifically FOR their best fans, via either an author newsletter or directly on their own websites. (They will sometimes release this material via regular retail channels at a later date) This ensures that their best fans get access to reading fresh and exiting new material before anybody else can read it.
That, in a nutshell, are merely five different ways that authors are using FREE to help build their sales and their author brands.
We would love to share more strategies that work well, so if you have a strategy that works for you, please free free to share that in comments section below.
Related Links:
Free eBooks on Kobo – curated from KWL titles and updated weekly. You can apply to be featured via the PROMOTIONS tab, which is currently in beta release. If you don’t have it, simply request it by emailing writinglife@kobo.com
A Few third party operated FREE promo websites that include links to Kobo:
- BookBub
- Freebooksy
- ENT (Ereader News Today)
- Free Books for Free (which includes a Kobo Specials feature derived from Kobo’s own curated FREE EBOOKS list) – Great bang for an author’s KWL Promo buck, since this website includes links to the books on Kobo and that other large US retailer derived from the name of a South American river – just sayin’ . . .
If you enjoy this podcast and would like to automatically download episodes as they go live – even before the show notes are posted to the Kobo Writing Life website – subscribe to the RSS feed via your favourite pod-capturing platform (such as iTunes) using this link: RSS feed for Kobo Writing Life Podcast.
Reblogged this on Chris The Story Reading Ape's Blog.
I so agree about the ridiculousness of people who have no problem with reading about murder, rape, and mayhem, but who get their undies in a bunch when they hear the F-bomb. I write hardboiled crime fiction. Don’t expect it to sound like an episode of the The Andy Griffeth Show. “Oh golly gee, Pa, that drug dealer just murdered Aunt Bee. Who’s gonna cook us dinner now?”
great idea at the end, i need to append a newletter signup at the end of the ebook
Thank you for the link to Free Books For Free. I’d never heard of that site. I’ve just signed up to get an account there. You guys are awesome, as always!
Erin
Glad we could help! 🙂