Three years ago, Sarah had a dream. She’d written a novel in her spare time, working nights and weekends for eighteen months. But when she started researching how to get it published, she hit wall after wall. Literary agents wanted established writers. Traditional publishers had year-long waiting lists. Self-publishing seemed impossible—expensive, complicated, requiring connections she didn’t have.
Then she discovered Amazon KDP, and everything changed.
Within two weeks, Sarah had her book live on Amazon. Within two months, she’d made back her cover design investment. Today, she’s published eight books and makes enough from her KDP royalties to work part-time.
Sarah’s story isn’t unique anymore. In 2026, self-publishing has become the fastest-growing segment of the book industry, with more than two million titles published annually through platforms like Kindle Direct Publishing. The barrier to entry that once kept writers locked out of publishing has disappeared. While Amazon KDP is just one option, understanding the complete landscape of self-publishing on Amazon can help you choose the best approach for your specific goals.
This guide walks you through each step of publishing your book on Amazon KDP with actionable instructions you can follow right now.
What Is Amazon KDP and Why Should You Use It?
Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing, or KDP, is Amazon’s free, self-service publishing platform. You don’t need an agent. You don’t need a publisher. You don’t need connections or a massive marketing budget. You just need a finished manuscript and a willingness to follow some straightforward guidelines.
Why KDP Beats Traditional Publishing
Traditional publishing takes 18-24 months from manuscript acceptance to seeing your book on shelves. KDP takes 72 hours. Traditional publishing offers an advance (usually $2,000-$5,000 for first-time authors) but demands you give up 85-90% of your royalties. KDP lets you keep 35% to 70% of every sale, depending on your pricing strategy.
With traditional publishing, you’re at the mercy of marketing departments that might not prioritize your book. With KDP, you control your pricing, your book description, your cover, your categories, and your marketing strategy. You’re fully responsible for your book’s success—which also means you have total control over it.
What Types of Books Can You Publish?
KDP lets you publish three formats:
– **eBooks** (Kindle format)—The fastest and easiest option
– **Paperbacks**—Print-on-demand physical books
– **Hardcovers**—Premium print editions
You can publish one format or all three. Many authors start with eBooks to test the market, then add paperback and hardcover versions once they see traction.
The Cost Factor: Publishing Is Actually Free
Here’s something that shocks people: publishing on KDP costs nothing. Zero dollars. No upfront fees, no hidden charges, no monthly subscriptions. Amazon covers the infrastructure, the hosting, the distribution to Kindle devices and apps worldwide. You only pay for optional services like professional cover design or editing—which you’d invest in anyway with any publishing path.
Global Reach From Day One
When you publish on KDP, your book becomes available immediately on Amazon Kindle stores in over 200 countries and territories. A reader in Japan can buy your book the same day a reader in Canada can. Your book shows up in Amazon searches, recommendation algorithms, and category listings across the globe. That’s distribution infrastructure that traditional publishers spent decades and billions building, now available to you for free.
Step 1 – Create and Set Up Your KDP Account
Your publishing journey starts at kdp.amazon.com. Here’s what you need to do.
Navigate to KDP and Sign In
Go to kdp.amazon.com. If you have an Amazon account already, you can sign in with those credentials. If not, you’ll create a new account using an email address and password. Make sure you use an email you check regularly—Amazon will send important notifications about your publishing status to this address.
Complete Your Tax Information
Amazon needs tax information before they can pay you royalties. When you first log into KDP, you’ll be prompted to fill out a W-9 form (if you’re in the US) or the equivalent tax form for your country. This takes about five minutes. Have your Social Security Number or Tax ID ready.
If you’re publishing under a business name or LLC, you’ll need the tax ID for that entity. Keep your information accurate—this is what determines how Amazon reports your income and how much tax gets withheld.
Add Your Bank Details
Before Amazon can deposit your royalties, they need somewhere to put them. You’ll add your bank account information to your KDP account. This should be a checking account in your name (or your business name, if applicable). Enter your routing number and account number carefully—a typo here means your payments go nowhere.
Amazon deposits royalties on the 15th of each month for the previous month’s sales. So if your book sells five copies in March, you’ll receive that payment on April 15th. But they only process payments if you’ve earned at least $10 in royalties. Small earnings carry over to the next month.
Verify Your Author Profile
Create an author name and profile. This is what readers will see as your name. You can use your real name, a pen name, or a pseudonym—it’s completely up to you. Many authors use pseudonyms for genre fiction while using their real name for non-fiction.
You can add an author bio (up to 200 words) and an author photo. These appear on your book’s detail page and help readers connect with you. A good author photo is professional but personable. It doesn’t need to be expensive—many authors use good smartphone photos.
Step 2 – Prepare Your Manuscript and Cover Design
Before you can upload anything to KDP, you need two things: a properly formatted manuscript and a professional cover. These determine whether readers take your book seriously.
Manuscript Formatting Matters
Your manuscript file needs to be in one of these formats:
– .doc or .docx (Microsoft Word)
– .epub (E-book Publication format)
– .mobi (Kindle native format)
– PDF (for print books only)
KDP accepts most basic formatting: chapters, headings, italics, bold text, paragraph breaks. But avoid fancy fonts, odd spacing, or unusual formatting. Amazon converts your manuscript to work across dozens of devices—from large-screen tablets to tiny Kindle Paperwhite readers. What looks good in Microsoft Word might look terrible on a Kindle.
Here’s a practical checklist for manuscript formatting:
– Use a standard font (Times New Roman, Arial, or Calibri)
– Set single or 1.5 line spacing
– Use actual paragraph breaks, not extra spaces between paragraphs
– Make sure chapter breaks are clear
– Proofread obsessively—typos make your book look unprofessional
– Remove tracked changes and comments before uploading
– Test your formatting by converting to ePub and previewing it
Cover Design Specifications
Your cover is the first thing potential readers see. Poor covers tank sales. A professional-looking cover boosts them dramatically.
For eBooks, your cover should be:
– Minimum 1,000 x 1,500 pixels (larger is better)
– RGB color mode (not CMYK)
– JPG, PNG, or TIFF format
– Around 2.5 MB or smaller
For paperbacks, KDP generates a template based on your book’s page count. The template handles the spine and back cover. You design the front cover to specific dimensions—usually around 6″ x 9″ for a standard novel.
Tools to Help With Design
You don’t need to hire a designer if that’s not in your budget. Canva offers thousands of book cover templates you can customize. Canva’s learning curve is gentle—you can drag elements around, change text, swap backgrounds. Professional results are totally achievable if you put in some effort.
If you want to go fully DIY, KDP has a free tool called Kindle Create that helps you format your manuscript and can walk you through cover creation. Or, if your budget allows, hire a professional cover designer. A good cover costs $200-$500, but it’s money that pays for itself if your book gets traction.
File Types for Different Formats
Here’s what KDP needs from you:
**eBooks:** Upload either your .doc/.docx file or an .epub file. KDP will convert it to Kindle format automatically.
**Paperbacks:** Upload a PDF file for interior (your formatted manuscript) and a separate PDF for the cover (front, spine, and back all in one file). KDP provides exact templates to avoid confusion.
**Hardcovers:** Similar to paperbacks—interior PDF and cover PDF following specific templates.
Quality Checklist Before Upload
Before you hit upload, run through this checklist:
– [ ] Manuscript is completely proofread (read it aloud to catch typos)
– [ ] Formatting is clean with no extra spaces or odd fonts
– [ ] Cover is high resolution and matches KDP specifications
– [ ] Cover text is readable (not too small, good contrast)
– [ ] File names are clear and simple (not “FINAL_v3_REAL_FINAL”)
– [ ] You’ve saved the manuscript as PDF or Word format
Don’t skip this step. A single typo or formatting error makes readers think “this author didn’t care,” and they stop reading.
Step 3 – Enter Your Book Details (Metadata)
Metadata is information about your book. It’s not exciting, but it’s critically important. Good metadata helps readers find your book. Bad metadata means your book stays hidden.
Your Book Title and Subtitle
Your title appears in Amazon search results. Make it clear and specific. “The Art of Thinking Clearly” is better than “Thinking.” “A Novel About Love” is worse than “The Woman Who Loved Red Roses.”
If your title is longer, add a subtitle. Use a colon to separate them: “The Stoic Path: How Ancient Philosophy Solves Modern Problems.” Subtitles clarify what your book is actually about, which helps both search visibility and buyer confidence.
Your title matters for discoverability. People search for solutions, not abstract ideas. A title like “Stop Procrastinating Now: The 7-Day System to Get Unstuck” works better than “Productivity Thoughts.”
Author and Contributor Information
Enter your author name (or pen name). If you’re translating a book, list the original author and yourself as translator. If you collaborated with someone, list them as a contributor with their role. This information helps readers find all your work and understand who’s behind the book.
Series Information
If your book is part of a series, tell Amazon. Enter the series name and the book number within the series. This helps readers who loved book one find book two. Amazon’s algorithms also recommend series books to readers who’ve already purchased earlier entries.
Book Description Optimization
Your book description is essentially your sales pitch. It appears on your book’s Amazon detail page and is the last thing a potential reader sees before clicking “Buy Now” or closing the page.
Write a compelling description that answers:
– What problem does this book solve?
– Who is this book for?
– What will readers learn or experience?
– Why should they read this instead of another book on the same topic?
Here’s a weak description: “This book is about marketing. It covers various topics related to how to market your business.”
Here’s a strong one: “In ‘The 30-Day Marketing Playbook,’ you’ll discover the exact framework used by founders who grew their companies from zero to seven figures without paid advertising. Learn which marketing channels actually generate customers, how to track what’s working, and the psychology behind why people buy. Whether you’re bootstrapping a startup or launching a side business, this playbook gives you the step-by-step system successful entrepreneurs use.”
The strong description is specific. It promises concrete value. It speaks directly to the reader’s situation.
Make your description 150-300 words. Use short paragraphs (2-3 sentences each). Bold a few key phrases to draw the eye. End with a hook that makes readers want to buy.
Language and Publication Date Selection
Select the language your book is written in (usually English). Choose your publication date. This can be today’s date or a future date if you want to schedule your release. Many authors schedule releases to coordinate with marketing campaigns.
You can also mark whether this book has previously been published. If you’re republishing a book that’s been traditionally published, tell Amazon. If this is your original work, leave it unmarked.
Step 4 – Select Categories and Keywords
Categories and keywords are how readers discover your book. Get these right and your book becomes visible to the exact people looking for it.
Choosing Your Book’s Categories
KDP lets you choose up to three categories for your book. Categories narrow down where your book appears in Amazon’s browsing structure. If you write a romance novel about coffee shop owners, you’d pick “Romance” as one category and maybe “Coffee Shop Fiction” as another.
Here’s the category hierarchy:
– Fiction (general)
– Fiction > Romance (more specific)
– Fiction > Romance > Contemporary (even more specific)
You want to go as specific as possible. “Fiction > Fantasy > Urban Fantasy” gets you in front of readers specifically hunting urban fantasy, not just anyone browsing fiction generally.
Keyword Selection Strategy
Keywords are the terms people type into Amazon’s search bar. You get seven keyword slots. Use them strategically.
Aim for keywords that are:
– **Specific to your book** (not too broad like “book” or “story”)
– **Words people actually search** (use Amazon’s search bar to see what suggestions pop up)
– **Mix of short and long-tail terms** (mix one or two-word keywords like “memoir” with longer phrases like “coming of age memoir about grief”)
For a book on remote work, don’t use “work” as a keyword. Use “remote work culture,” “distributed teams,” “working from home strategies.” These are specific enough to attract relevant readers.
You can use up to 50 characters per keyword and can combine multiple words. “Work from home productivity hacks” is one keyword phrase using 32 characters.
Search Behavior Research
Think like a reader looking for your book. What would they search for? If you’ve written a cookbook about meal prep, people might search “meal prep recipes,” “quick meal prep,” “batch cooking for beginners,” or “weekly meal planning.” Those become your keywords.
Amazon’s search bar is your research tool. Start typing a keyword and Amazon shows you popular searches. These suggestions represent actual searches people do. Target those phrases.
Discoverability Impact
Your categories and keywords don’t just help readers find you—they help Amazon’s algorithm recommend your book. When someone buys a book in your category, Amazon shows your book in the “customers also bought” section if you’re a good match. This drives sales without you doing anything.
Keywords and categories also affect where you appear in search results. A book tagged correctly appears on page one of searches. A book tagged poorly might be on page three hundred.
Niche Targeting Best Practices
The biggest mistake authors make is trying to reach everyone. They pick super broad categories and generic keywords hoping for maximum visibility.
Actually, narrow is better. If you write a book about managing ADHD in high school, target “ADHD parenting,” “teen ADHD strategies,” and “high school success with ADHD.” You’ll rank higher for these specific searches because you’re competing with fewer books. And you’ll reach the exact readers who need your book.
Specific beats broad every single time. A hundred readers who specifically want what you wrote beats a thousand people who see your book in a general “self-help” search and keep scrolling.
Step 5 – Upload Files and Preview Your Book
Now comes the moment where your manuscript becomes real. You’re uploading the actual files that will become your published book.
The eBook File Upload Process
Log into your KDP account and click “Create a New Title.” Select whether you’re publishing an eBook, paperback, or hardcover. For eBooks, you’ll upload your manuscript file (Word doc or ePub).
Click “Upload eBook Manuscript” and select your file from your computer. Amazon accepts files up to 2 GB—you’re nowhere near that limit unless you’ve somehow embedded a feature-length film in your book.
After you upload, Amazon processes the file. This takes a few minutes. The system checks for obvious problems like corrupted files or incompatible formatting.
Print Format File Requirements
For paperbacks, you’ll upload two files: one for the interior (your formatted manuscript as a PDF) and one for the cover (front, spine, and back as a single PDF).
KDP provides a cover template generator. You enter your book’s dimensions and page count, and it spits out exact specifications for your cover file. Follow these exactly. A cover that’s one pixel too small gets rejected.
The interior PDF must be:
– High contrast and black text (not light gray text on white)
– Clear page breaks between chapters
– Proper margins (at least 0.5 inches on all sides)
– Images embedded in the PDF (not linked separately)
Using the KDP Previewer Tool
After you upload your files, use KDP’s free Previewer tool. This shows you exactly how your book will look on a Kindle device.
The Previewer matters because your book will display on dozens of devices—small phone screens, Paperwhite readers, tablets, desktop apps. Formatting that looks great on one device might look terrible on another.
Review your book carefully in the Previewer:
– Do chapter breaks appear in the right places?
– Does text wrap properly or does it get cut off?
– Are images clear or do they look pixelated?
– Are there awkward page breaks that leave single lines dangling?
Checking for Formatting Errors
Common formatting issues include:
– **Strange characters** appearing where there should be quotation marks or apostrophes
– **Indentation problems** where paragraphs don’t indent consistently
– **Image placement** where images end up on the wrong pages
– **Line breaks** that leave single words on a page by themselves
– **Font inconsistencies** where some text is larger or different font than the rest
If you spot errors, fix your manuscript file, upload the revised version, and preview again. You can upload revisions as many times as you need before publishing.
Testing on Multiple Devices
If you own a Kindle device, download your book preview to it and see how it actually displays. This is way better than just looking at the web previewer. You’ll catch issues you’d miss otherwise.
Common Issues and Quick Fixes
**Problem:** Text is too small to read.
**Fix:** Check your font size. Kindle typically displays at 14-18 point font, but some devices adjust this. Make sure your minimum is 10 point.
**Problem:** Images appear blurry.
**Fix:** Images need to be at least 300 DPI (dots per inch). Check your image resolution and replace blurry images with higher-resolution versions.
**Problem:** There are random page breaks.
**Fix:** Look for manual page break commands in your manuscript. Remove unnecessary breaks and let Amazon’s system handle pagination naturally.
**Problem:** First line indentation is missing on some paragraphs.
**Fix:** Make sure you’re using paragraph formatting (indent first line) and not manually spacing with tabs or spaces. Manual spacing breaks when displayed on different devices.
Step 6 – Set Your Pricing and Royalty Options
This is where you actually start making money. Your pricing strategy affects your royalties more than any other factor.
eBook Pricing Tiers and Royalty Rates
KDP offers two royalty rate options for eBooks:
**35% Royalty Rate:** You can price your eBook anywhere from $0.99 to $200. You keep 35% of the sale price. So a $9.99 eBook earns you about $3.50.
**70% Royalty Rate:** Your book must be priced between $2.99 and $9.99. You keep 70% of the sale price. A $9.99 eBook earns you about $7.
The 70% rate sounds like an obvious choice, but there’s a catch: Amazon deducts delivery fees for the file size. Larger books eat more delivery costs. A thick book might have a 50 cent delivery fee, dropping your actual royalty from 70% to 65% or lower.
Most authors choose 70% if they can hit the $2.99-$9.99 price range. If you’re pricing higher (because your book is premium content for a specialized audience) or lower (launching to build an audience), 35% is your option.
Print-on-Demand Pricing Structure
For paperbacks and hardcovers, KDP handles printing costs. You set a price, Amazon deducts printing costs, and you get the remainder.
Here’s how it works: A 300-page paperback costs Amazon about $3.50 to print. You price it at $14.99. Amazon takes $3.50 for printing and gives you $11.49.
Undercut your pricing to make it too low and you earn almost nothing per sale. Price too high and nobody buys. The sweet spot usually lands at 2.5 to 4 times the printing cost.
KDP’s pricing page shows you exactly what your printing cost is. Use that as your starting point. Add what you think your work is worth.
Royalty Calculation Examples
Let’s walk through some real examples:
**Example 1: Budget Fiction eBook**
– Price: $2.99
– Royalty rate: 70%
– Your royalty: $2.09
**Example 2: Premium Non-Fiction eBook**
– Price: $12.99
– Royalty rate: 35%
– Your royalty: $4.55
**Example 3: Paperback**
– Price: $15.99
– Printing cost: $4.00
– Your royalty: $11.99
**Example 4: Audiobook (if you add it later)**
– Royalties split with narrator/narrator royalty deducted
– Typically 20-50% depending on narrator split
The KDP Select Program and Kindle Unlimited
Here’s an important decision: standard KDP or KDP Select?
With standard KDP, your book is available everywhere—Amazon, Apple Books, Google Play, Smashwords, etc. You keep more control and can run promotions elsewhere.
With KDP Select, your eBook is exclusive to Amazon. You can’t sell it anywhere else for 90 days at a time. In exchange, your book becomes eligible for Kindle Unlimited (KU), Amazon’s subscription service.
KU readers pay a monthly fee ($11.99) to read unlimited eBooks. Authors share in a pool of money based on pages read. A reader finishing your 300-page book earns you something like $0.50-$2.00 depending on the total monthly pool.
Here’s the real benefit: KDP Select books are eligible for promotional tools like free book giveaways and Countdown Deals. Many authors launch in KDP Select for 90 days, run promotions to build visibility and reviews, then move to wide distribution after that period ends.
Competitive Pricing Research
Before you set your price, research competitor books:
– Search Amazon for books like yours
– Look at top sellers in your category
– Check what similarly-length books are priced at
– Note which pricing seems to be working (books with lots of reviews are getting buyers)
Don’t underprice just to compete. A premium book deserves premium pricing. But don’t overprice either. Readers expect non-fiction books to be $4.99-$12.99 and fiction to be $2.99-$7.99.
International Pricing Considerations
KDP operates in multiple countries. You can set prices for each territory separately or use Amazon’s automatic currency conversion. If you use automatic conversion, Amazon converts your USD price to British pounds, euros, etc.
Some authors set different prices in different countries because purchasing power varies. A $9.99 book might need to be £6.99 in the UK (not a direct conversion) or ₹499 in India.
You can ignore this for your initial launch. Amazon’s conversion is reasonable. Optimize later if you want to.
Step 7 – Publish Your Book
You’re in the final stretch. Everything is uploaded, previewed, and ready. Now you publish.
Your Final Review Checklist
Before you click publish, run through this checklist one more time:
– [ ] Book title is exactly as you want it (no typos)
– [ ] Author name is correct
– [ ] Cover image is professional and clear
– [ ] Book description is compelling and error-free
– [ ] Categories are specific and relevant
– [ ] Keywords are targeted and realistic
– [ ] Pricing is competitive and fair
– [ ] Manuscript has been proofread multiple times
– [ ] Cover and interior files match KDP specifications
– [ ] You’ve previewed the book and fixed any formatting issues
If everything checks out, you’re ready.
Clicking the “Publish” Button
In your KDP dashboard, you’ll see a blue “Publish Your Kindle eBook” button (or the equivalent for paperback/hardcover). Click it.
That’s it. You’ve published a book.
Your book will now enter Amazon’s review queue.
The Amazon Review Period
After you publish, Amazon reviews your book. This isn’t editorial review—they’re not checking if your book is good. They’re checking if it meets their publishing guidelines:
– No copyrighted material you don’t have rights to
– No hate speech or illegal content
– No metadata that misrepresents the book
– Files match specifications
For most books, this review takes 24-72 hours. Your book is usually live within two days.
You’ll get an email when the review is complete. The email either says “congratulations, your book is live” or explains what needs fixing.
Notification Timeline
You’ll receive email notifications at every stage:
– When your book enters review
– When your book is approved (or rejected)
– When your book goes live on Kindle
– When you make your first sale
– Monthly royalty statements
Check the email address you registered with your KDP account regularly during those first few days.
Finding Your Published Book
Once your book is live, search for it on Amazon. Type your title in the search bar. Your book should appear within minutes.
Click on your book’s detail page. This is what readers see. Make sure everything looks right:
– Cover displays properly
– Book description reads well
– Your author photo appears in the author section
– Categories and keywords seem relevant
If you notice errors on the live book, you can edit it. Go back to your KDP dashboard, find the book, click “Edit eBook Details” (or “Edit Paperback Details”), make changes, and save. Amazon usually updates these changes within a few hours.
What to Do While You Wait
While Amazon reviews your book (and after it goes live), here’s what to do:
– Share the news with your email list and social media followers
– Reach out to friends, family, and professional contacts who might be interested
– Start thinking about how to get reviews (more on that later)
– Set up pre-order links on your website if you have one
– Begin planning your marketing strategy
Your book is only live for you right now. Very few people know about it. That changes through deliberate promotion.
Essential Tips for KDP Publishing Success
Your book is live. But living and thriving are different things. Here’s what separates books that sell from books that disappear.
The 10% Bonus Content Rule
Here’s a trick that works: add approximately 10% bonus content to your published book. This doesn’t mean 10% more words than other books in your category—it means something extra that makes your book more valuable.
Examples:
– A non-fiction book about productivity includes bonus templates and worksheets readers can download
– A novel includes a map of the fictional world, character backstories, or a deleted scene
– A memoir includes a family tree or timeline of significant events
– A business book includes sample contracts or email templates
This bonus content doesn’t cost you anything to create. You probably already have most of it. But it makes your book feel premium. It gives readers something extra to share with friends. It makes them feel like they got a deal.
Mention the bonus content prominently:
– Include it in your book description: “Includes 12 downloadable templates”
– Add a note at the beginning of the book
– Mention it in your marketing materials
This increases perceived value, which justifies higher pricing and attracts more readers.
ISBN Requirements and Options
ISBN (International Standard Book Number) is a 13-digit code that identifies your book. Traditionally published books always have ISBNs. Self-published books don’t need them for KDP.
KDP automatically assigns a free ISBN to your book. You can use this ISBN to list your book on other platforms and in library systems (though libraries rarely buy self-published books).
You can also purchase your own ISBN from Bowker (the US ISBN agency). An ISBN costs $125 for a single book or $295 for ten. If you plan to publish multiple books, buying ISBNs in bulk makes sense. If you’re testing the waters with one book, KDP’s free ISBN is fine.
Only buy your own ISBN if you plan to distribute outside of Amazon. If you’re going wide (selling on Apple Books, Google Play, Smashwords), your own ISBN looks more professional.
Metadata Guidelines Compliance
Amazon has specific guidelines for metadata. Following them helps your book:
– **Book Title:** Can’t be longer than 200 characters. Should clearly indicate what the book is about.
– **Subtitle:** Optional, up to 200 characters. Clarifies the main title.
– **Author Name:** Should match how you want to be credited. Consistency matters if you write multiple books.
– **Description:** 4,000 characters max. Should sell your book, not just describe it.
– **Keywords:** Must be relevant to the book’s content. Don’t stuff keywords or mislead readers.
Amazon rejects books with misleading metadata. If you write a romance but tag it as science fiction to reach different readers, Amazon will flag it. Tags need to be honest.
Book Description Best Practices
Your description is your sales tool. Weak descriptions lose sales.
**What works:**
– Start with a hook that addresses a problem: “Do you struggle to wake up energized?”
– Include specific benefits: “Learn the three morning habits that transformed my energy levels”
– Use short paragraphs (2-3 sentences each)
– Bold key phrases so eyes catch them
– End with a clear call to action: “Order your copy today”
– Include social proof if you have it: “Based on feedback from 10,000+ readers”
**What doesn’t work:**
– Vague descriptions: “A book about happiness”
– Overly long blocks of text
– Too many adjectives: “This beautiful, inspiring, magnificent book will change your life”
– Focusing on the author instead of the reader
Read descriptions of best-selling books in your category. Notice what works. Steal the structure (not the content) for your own description.
Professional Editing Importance
Typos, grammar errors, and awkward phrasing kill credibility. Readers judge books fast. A single error on page five makes some readers think “this author didn’t care” and they stop reading.
You don’t need to hire a $3,000 developmental editor. But you do need someone besides yourself to read your manuscript.
Options:
– **Beta readers:** Ask 5-10 people to read your manuscript and give feedback. They’re free.
– **Developmental editor:** Focuses on structure and content ($2,000+). Better for fiction.
– **Copy editor:** Focuses on grammar, consistency, style ($500-$1,500). Better for non-fiction.
– **Proofreader:** Final check for typos and errors ($200-$500). Essential for all books.
– **DIY:** Read your manuscript aloud. Read it backward to catch typos. Use Grammarly. Not ideal, but better than nothing.
At minimum, have someone else read your book before publishing. Your brain autocorrects your own typos. Someone else’s brain doesn’t.
Cover Design Importance for Conversions
Your cover is the first thing potential readers see. A bad cover means they don’t even click to read your description. A good cover makes them curious.
Studies show that book covers influence purchase decisions more than reviews, description, or price. A professional-looking cover can double sales compared to an amateur cover.
Invest here. If you can only invest money in one place, invest in your cover. Hire a professional designer on Fiverr, 99designs, or Upwork. Expect to pay $200-$500 for a really good cover. It’s money that pays for itself.
Pricing Strategy for Launch
Don’t launch at your full price. Use launch pricing to build momentum:
– **Week 1:** Launch at $0.99 or $1.99 (under normal pricing)
– **Week 2-3:** Raise to $2.99
– **Week 4+:** Move to your target price ($4.99, $9.99, etc.)
Low pricing initially gets you sales and reviews. Once you have reviews and traction, raise your price. Readers trust books with reviews. Books with 50+ reviews at $9.99 sell better than books with 5 reviews at $9.99.
Alternatively, run a free promotion in KDP Select. Make your book free for 5 days. You’ll get hundreds of free downloads. Some of those readers will leave reviews. Books with reviews rank better in Amazon’s algorithm.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Learning from others’ mistakes means you don’t repeat them.
Skipping the Pre-Launch Phase
Your book doesn’t go from “finished manuscript” to “published” overnight. The best authors spend weeks preparing:
– Get the cover designed and approved
– Do multiple rounds of editing
– Have beta readers provide feedback
– Finalize metadata and description
– Set up your author platform (email list, website, social media)
– Plan your launch marketing strategy
Authors who skip this phase publish books that tank. Their cover is mediocre. Their description is weak. Their first sales trickle in because nobody knows the book exists.
Give yourself at least four weeks of pre-launch prep.
Poor Metadata Optimization
Metadata determines discoverability. Weak metadata means readers can’t find your book.
**Mistakes:**
– Choosing too-broad categories (everyone picks “Fiction” instead of “Fiction > Mystery > Cozy Mystery”)
– Using generic keywords that apply to thousands of books
– Misleading categories to reach bigger audiences
– Writing a vague title that could apply to ten different books
– Writing a description that doesn’t clearly explain what the book is about
Spend time getting metadata right. Research your categories. Test keywords. Write a description that sells the specific book you wrote, not some generic version of the genre.
Inadequate Proofreading
Typos happen to everyone. But too many typos sink books.
Common proofreading mistakes:
– Assuming you’ll catch errors yourself (you won’t)
– Rushing publication without a final read
– Not checking your preview one last time
– Trusting spell check (it misses grammar errors, homonym errors, context errors)
– Not reading your manuscript aloud
Read your book aloud before publishing. You’ll catch awkward sentences, repetitive words, and typos that silent reading misses. Your ears catch things your eyes skip over.
Weak Book Descriptions
A weak description loses sales. Readers scan descriptions for 10 seconds. If they don’t get hooked, they move on.
**Weak description:** “This book is about marketing strategies for small business owners.”
**Strong description:** “You’re spending money on marketing. But are you reaching customers who actually want what you’re selling? In ‘The Customer Magnet,’ discover the five marketing channels that drive real revenue for small businesses—without expensive ads or agencies. Learn which channels work for your specific business type, how to track what’s actually working, and how to scale what works. The strategies in this book have generated over $50 million in revenue for the businesses that used them.”
The strong description is specific. It promises concrete value. It addresses the reader directly.
Ignoring Categories and Keywords
Your categories and keywords determine who sees your book. Ignore them and you’re invisible.
Mistakes:
– Picking “Fiction” when you should pick “Fiction > Romance > Contemporary”
– Using keywords nobody searches for
– Using keywords that are too generic to rank for
– Not researching what categories and keywords your competitors use
– Treating keywords as decoration instead of discovery tools
Spend time researching your category. Look at best-selling books similar to yours. What categories do they use? What keywords do you think people would search? Test those. Refine.
Pricing Too Low or High
Pricing affects both sales and perception.
Pricing too low:
– Makes your book seem like low quality
– Attracts readers who won’t review it (they feel like they got a deal)
– Means you earn almost nothing per sale
Pricing too high:
– Prices out your actual audience
– Means fewer sales, which means fewer reviews
– Positions your book as premium when it might not be
Research your market. What’s the average price for books like yours? Stay within that range unless you’re explicitly premium (for example, a specialized technical book can charge more).
Not Following Publishing Guidelines
Amazon has publishing guidelines. Break them and your book gets rejected.
Common violations:
– Using copyrighted images without permission
– Copyrighting someone else’s work
– Using hateful or discriminatory language
– Using excessive keywords in your metadata
– Misleading metadata (claiming your fiction book is a memoir)
– Sexual content involving minors
– Graphic violence in ways that glorify violence
Read Amazon’s publishing guidelines before uploading. Make sure your book complies. If it gets rejected, you’ll get an explanation. Fix the issue and resubmit.
Minimum Requirements for KDP Publications
Amazon has minimum requirements for different formats. Know these before you start.
Paperback Minimums
Your paperback must be at least 24 pages. There’s no maximum.
Page count is determined by your file. A standard novel page (12-point font, 1-inch margins, 1.5 spacing) contains about 250-300 words. So a 24-page minimum is about 6,000 words.
Most paperbacks are 200-400 pages. Very short books (under 50 pages) look weird in paperback format. If your book is very short, consider eBook-only distribution.
Hardcover Minimums
Hardcover editions require at least 76-79 pages depending on trim size. Again, no maximum.
Hardcover books are premium products. Amazon charges more to print them. Most authors use hardcover for non-fiction books or premium editions of popular books.
eBook Minimums
There’s no strict minimum for eBooks. They can be as short as a single page. But practically speaking, aim for at least 24 pages (about 6,000 words).
Readers expect books to be, well, books. A 2,000-word document feels more like an article than a book. You’ll get few sales and poor reviews.
If you write short content, consider bundling multiple short pieces into one eBook or publishing as a short story collection.
File Format Requirements
Different formats require different file types:
**eBook:** .doc, .docx, .epub, or .mobi
**Paperback:** PDF (interior) and PDF (cover)
**Hardcover:** PDF (interior) and PDF (cover)
Always upload PDFs for print formats. Word documents don’t translate reliably to print, and spacing/formatting can shift unexpectedly.
Image Resolution Standards
Images in your book must be at least 300 DPI (dots per inch) for print and 72 DPI for eBooks.
Low-resolution images look blurry and pixelated. High-resolution images are crisp and professional.
If you’re including photos, get them from high-quality sources. Stock photo sites like Unsplash and Pexels have free, high-resolution photos. Paid sites like Shutterstock and Getty have even more options.
Font and Spacing Requirements
Use standard fonts: Times New Roman, Georgia, Arial, Calibri, Verdana.
Avoid decorative fonts, script fonts, or unusual fonts. They don’t display consistently across devices.
Use single or 1.5 line spacing. Double spacing wastes pages and looks unprofessional.
Set one-inch margins on all sides. Too-small margins are hard to read. Too-large margins waste pages.
These guidelines might sound picky, but they matter. Following them makes your book look professional. Ignoring them makes it look amateur.
What Happens After Publication
Your book is live. Now what?
How to Promote Your Book
Publication is day one of your actual work. Publishing is easy. Selling is hard.
Here’s what successful authors do:
**Tell your email list:** If you have an email list (and you should build one), email them about your book. Make it personal. Explain what the book is about and why you wrote it.
**Share on social media:** Post on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn. Create multiple posts over the first week. Different posts work for different platforms.
**Reach out to existing contacts:** Email people who know you—friends, family, former colleagues, past clients. Ask them to buy, read, and review your book.
**Request reviews:** Ask early readers and friends to leave reviews on Amazon. More reviews boost your ranking. Reviews from verified purchasers carry more weight.
**Run a launch promotion:** Consider a free or discounted promotion in the first two weeks. Free downloads boost visibility. Discounted pricing attracts deal-seeking readers.
Building Your Author Platform
Your author platform is your audience. The bigger your platform, the more books you sell.
Start with these:
**Email list:** Create a simple landing page offering a free resource (first chapter, email course, checklist) in exchange for email. Use Mailchimp, ConvertKit, or GetResponse. Email your list when you publish new books.
**Website:** A simple author website (not necessary, but helpful) shows readers you’re a real person. Include your bio, books you’ve written, and a newsletter signup.
**Social media:** Pick one platform where your readers hang out. If your book is business-focused, that’s LinkedIn. If it’s for women, that might be Instagram or Facebook. Post regularly. Engage with your audience.
**Author community:** Join writing groups. Connect with other authors. Share advice, resources, and reviews of each other’s books.
A strong author platform means:
– Every time you publish a book, you have hundreds (or thousands) of people who know about it on day one
– You get reviews faster
– You build fans who buy your next book
– You create a sustainable book business, not a one-off book
Email Marketing Strategy
Email is the most effective marketing channel for authors. Here’s why:
– Readers opt-in intentionally (they want your emails)
– You control the message (unlike social media algorithms)
– Email drives action (readers actually buy)
Build your email list by offering something free:
– Free chapter of your book
– Exclusive short story
– Email course related to your book’s topic
– Templates, checklists, or other resources
Send emails to your list:
– When you publish a new book
– Monthly or weekly tips related to your book’s topic
– Personal updates (they want to know about you, not just your books)
– Exclusive discounts or early access for your list
Most authors see a 20-30% open rate from their email list when they announce a new book. That’s 20-30% of their subscribers buying or reading about the book, which drives sales and reviews.
Social Media Promotion
Social media drives awareness. It’s less direct than email (fewer people see each post) but reaches broader audiences.
Posting strategy:
– Share behind-the-scenes content (writing process, author life)
– Ask questions that spark discussion
– Share quotes or tips from your book
– Celebrate milestones (books published, sales milestones, reviews)
– Engage with other authors and readers
Post consistently. Once a week minimum. More if you can manage it.
Different platforms work for different people. Test, measure, and focus on what works for you.
Review Generation Tactics
Reviews are oxygen for book sales. More reviews mean better rankings and more visibility.
Generate reviews:
– Ask readers directly: Email everyone who bought your book and ask for a review
– Include a note: At the end of your book, include a note asking readers to leave a review
– Make it easy: Include the direct Amazon link in emails and website
– Be specific: Ask for “honest reviews” not just positive ones (Amazon trusts mixed reviews more than all 5-star reviews)
– Incentivize: Offer a bonus for reviewers (free next book, access to exclusive content, etc.)
Never buy fake reviews. Amazon bans authors for this. Never ask friends to write positive reviews. Amazon flags suspicious review patterns.
Ask for honest reviews. A book with 30 honest reviews (some 4-star, some 5-star) outranks a book with 10 fake 5-star reviews.
Tracking Sales and Royalties
KDP provides a detailed dashboard showing your sales, royalties, and trends.
Check it regularly:
– You see sales in real time (with a 24-48 hour delay)
– Royalties are calculated monthly
– Amazon deposits royalties on the 15th of each month
– You can download detailed sales reports (by country, by date, etc.)
Use this data to refine your strategy. What marketing efforts resulted in sales? Which days sell the most? What pricing generates the most revenue (not just the most sales)?
A book priced at $2.99 might sell 100 copies earning you $200. The same book at $4.99 might sell 60 copies earning you $240. The higher price often makes more money despite fewer sales.
Updating Book Information
If you notice an error in your book details, you can update it:
– Title changes (rarely worth doing after publication)
– Description updates (constantly improve this)
– Cover replacement (if you get a better design)
– Category changes (as your book gains traction, optimize its categories)
– Metadata updates (keywords, etc.)
Changes usually go live within 24 hours. Update anything that’s wrong, unclear, or underperforming.
Ready to Get Your Book in Front of More Readers?
You’ve now learned the complete process of publishing a book on Amazon KDP—from setting up your account all the way through building momentum after launch. You understand what readers are searching for, how to format your book properly, how to price strategically, and most importantly, how to ensure your book actually reaches people who want to read it.
But publishing is only the beginning. The real game-changer for self-published authors comes after your book goes live: getting it in front of actual readers who will buy it, read it, and leave reviews that boost visibility.
DailyBookList is a book promotion email service that specializes in non-fiction books—the only major promotion service focused exclusively on non-fiction in a market dominated by fiction-focused platforms like BookBub and Freebooksy. When you submit your non-fiction book to DailyBookList, it gets featured in promotional emails sent to thousands of engaged readers specifically interested in your genre. This means more visibility, more sales, more reviews, and real momentum for your book when it matters most.
Ready to get your book in front of readers who actually want to read it? Submit your non-fiction book to DailyBookList today and start building the reader base your work deserves.
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Frequently Asked Questions
**How long does it actually take for my book to be published on Amazon KDP?**
From the moment you click “publish,” Amazon’s review process takes 24-72 hours. Most books are live within 48 hours. The entire process from account setup to live book, if you’re organized, takes 2-4 weeks.
**Can I publish the same book in multiple formats?**
Absolutely. You can publish your book as an eBook, paperback, and hardcover. Each format has its own sales channel and royalty structure. Many successful authors do all three.
**What’s the difference between using KDP Select and publishing wide?**
KDP Select means your eBook is exclusive to Amazon for 90 days. You can’t sell it on Apple Books, Google Play, or anywhere else. In exchange, you get access to Kindle Unlimited and promotional tools like free days and Countdown Deals.
Wide distribution means your book is on Amazon, Apple Books, Google Play, Smashwords, and other platforms. You keep more control and reach more readers, but you lose access to KDP Select benefits.
Most authors start with KDP Select for 90 days to test the market and run promotions, then go wide.
**Do I need an ISBN for KDP?**
No. Amazon assigns a free ISBN to your book. You only need to buy your own ISBN if you plan to distribute outside of Amazon or list your book in certain retailers or library systems.
**How much money will I actually make from publishing a book?**
This varies wildly. Some books make nothing. Some make thousands per month. Most fall somewhere in between.
Factors that matter:
– Your book’s quality (covers, editing, descriptions matter)
– Your marketing effort (books that are actively promoted sell more)
– Your audience size (an existing platform drives sales)
– Your pricing strategy (different prices generate different revenue)
– Your book’s genre (some genres are more lucrative)
– Your book’s competitiveness (how many similar books exist)
A realistic first-year expectation: if you do everything right, you might make $500-$2,000 from your first book. That’s not a fortune, but it’s real money.
If you publish multiple books and build an audience, the income compounds. Authors with ten books earn significantly more than authors with one.
**Can I republish a book that’s already been traditionally published?**
Yes, but there are rules. If you signed a contract with a traditional publisher, your rights might be tied up. Check your contract. Some rights revert to you after the book goes out of print. Some contracts give the publisher rights indefinitely.
If the rights have reverted to you, you can republish. If rights haven’t reverted, you can’t republish until they do.
**What if my book doesn’t sell?**
Lack of sales usually means one of three things:
1. **Discovery problem:** Readers can’t find your book (weak categories, keywords, or title)
2. **Appeal problem:** Readers find your book but aren’t interested based on the cover or description
3. **Quality problem:** Readers buy but don’t finish or don’t leave positive reviews
Fix discovery by optimizing metadata. Fix appeal by redesigning your cover and rewriting your description. Fix quality by improving your editing and book content.
Most books that “don’t sell” have a discovery or appeal problem, not a quality problem. Those are fixable.
**Can I update my book after publishing?**
Yes. You can update your manuscript, cover, description, pricing, categories, and keywords anytime. Changes go live within 24 hours.
Many authors use this to their advantage. They publish, see what works, and refine. They update their book description based on what phrases are driving sales. They replace their cover if it’s not performing. They adjust pricing as they learn their market.
Your book isn’t static. You can improve it continuously.
**Should I offer my book for free?**
Strategically, yes. Continuously, no.
Free books build your audience. They generate reviews. They introduce readers to your writing.
But free books don’t build income. Use free strategically:
– During launch week to build momentum
– During KDP Select free days (5 days per 90-day period)
– To promote when launching a new book
– As a loss leader to get readers into your email funnel
Don’t keep your book free permanently. Once it has reviews and traction, charge for it. Authors who charge generate more revenue and attract readers who respect their work.
**How competitive is publishing on KDP?**
Competitive depends on your genre. Romance, thriller, and mystery are saturated. Niche non-fiction and specialized business books are less competitive.
Saturation matters less than you’d think. If your book solves a specific problem better than existing books, readers will find it and buy it. A very specific book (like “The Entrepreneur’s Guide to Cold Email for SaaS”) will outsell a generic book (like “How to Get Customers”).
The advantage goes to books that are specific and well-executed, not books that are first to market.
**Can I hire someone to publish my book for me?**
Sure, but make sure they’re legitimate. There are scams where “publishers” charge thousands and deliver nothing.
Real services exist:
– Freelance formatters will format your manuscript ($100-$300)
– Cover designers will design your cover ($200-$500)
– Virtual assistants will handle the KDP submission process ($100-$200)
You can hire help with pieces of the process. But understand what you’re paying for and make sure the price is reasonable. You should never pay thousands to publish on KDP because it’s free.
**What’s the deal with KDP Unlimited (Kindle Unlimited)?**
Kindle Unlimited is Amazon’s subscription service. Readers pay $11.99/month for unlimited eBook reading. Authors are paid from a shared pool based on pages read.
A reader finishes your 300-page book, you might make $0.50-$2.00 depending on that month’s pool size.
Some months the pool is rich and you make more. Some months it’s lean and you make less.
KDP Select books are eligible for Kindle Unlimited. Standalone books aren’t.
For most authors starting out, the royalty from selling books at $4.99-$9.99 outpaces KDP Unlimited earnings. But different books perform differently. Test it for 90 days with KDP Select and see what works for your specific book.
**Do I need a pseudonym?**
No, but some genres benefit from it.
Use a pseudonym if:
– You write multiple genres and want to separate them
– You write romance or erotica and want privacy
– You want to start fresh with a new pen name for branding reasons
– You write sensitive content and prefer separation
Use your real name if:
– You’re building a personal brand
– You write non-fiction where your real identity adds credibility
– You want readers to find all your work under one name
– You’re not concerned with privacy
There’s no right answer. Choose what makes sense for your situation.
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