Question of the Week: When it comes to subscription services, would you rather have unlimited content per month, or limited access?
Amy Teegan joined Jim this week as Bryan relaxed in a lake. After thanking their patrons A Band Director’s Guide to Everything Tuba, Gone, and The Cordova Vector, Amy and Jim discussed cultivating ideal readers, relaxation, and experimenting with Amazon Ads. News stories included a new mobile fiction app, Scribd’s changes to its service, Amazon Books backlash, Amazon Charts backlash, and Joanna Penn’s annual ebooks revenue review. This week’s Question of the Week: When it comes to subscription services, would you rather have unlimited content per month, or limited access?
What You’ll Learn:
- How authors can use the right kind of rest to refuel their creative juices
- Why some authors are putting obstacles between readers and their books
- How authors can optimize their Amazon ads for both fiction and nonfiction
- What features a new serialized reading app has to offer
- What new content Scribd has added to its subscription service
- Where the newest Amazon Books opened and how publications and professionals reacted
- Why Publishers Weekly questions the placement of Amazon imprint books on its Charts
- What one author’s annual revenue review says about the state of the indie market
Links:
- Amy Teegan’s Website
- A Band Director’s Guide to Everything Tuba: A Collection of Interviews with the Experts by Andrew Hitz
- Gone by Stacy Claflin
- The Cordova Vector by C. Steven Manley
- Tip #1: Obstacle Course
- Tip #2: Frankie Says Relax
- Tip #3: Amazon Ad-justable
- News #5: Now You See It…
- News #4: Extra, Extra, Read All About It!
- News #3: New York State of Prime (1)
- News #3: New York State of Prime (2)
- News #3: New York State of Prime (3)
- News #2: Playing Favorites
- News #1: Revenue Review
Question of the Week: When it comes to subscription services, would you rather have unlimited content per month, or limited access?