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-   -   Anyone ever sold e-books? (http://www.greenguysboard.com/board/showthread.php?t=47619)

SheepGuy 2008-06-23 12:52 AM

Anyone ever sold e-books?
 
I'm looking mostly for a mainstream cc processer, but any advice on marketing would be cool too ;)

Maj. Stress 2008-06-23 01:43 AM

You could use paypal. They accept most major credit cards.

dunc 2008-06-23 02:33 AM

I haven't sold them myself - but I have tried to push them as an affiliate.

These 2 places offer services to sell - and provide instant affiliates:

www.paydotcom.com

www.clickbank.com

Or just do as Maj. Stress said :)

JohnnyR 2008-06-23 11:30 AM

Sheepguy I believe signing up with ClickBank would be the way to go on this one...

If you're book's successful, other affiliates are going to pick it up and potentially bring you in way more income then you alone ever could.

docholly 2008-06-23 01:13 PM

I think you can also sell ebooks on both Ebay and Amazon.

SheepGuy 2008-06-23 07:22 PM

Thanks folks!
I thought of paypal right away but I sold some links through them almost a year ago and it took me months to get paid. They kept asking for proof of delivery for what boils down to be a bunch of electrons |huh
I will use them though, as well as Clickbank.
I didn't know Amazon sold e-books though and I hadn't thought of E-bay.

Thanks again!

bDok 2008-06-23 08:16 PM

Like people have already said I would look into clickbank as a way for sure.

ronnie 2008-06-24 06:10 AM

Paypal for instant cash. The other two are good and great for getting affiliates, but you do have to wait to get a check. Not that it matters to every one. There are also inexpensive ways to have affiliates sell your digital products through your own PP account.

I've only sold mine through PP, I like getting paid now...:)

themonk 2008-06-24 08:53 AM

yeah paypal is good ;)

emjay 2008-06-24 10:17 AM

I am looking for partners in this field (ie those with E books or information to sell)

Our global phone billing solution has total global billing reach and would be a good fit for content owners with low price-points - averge yield about $4 per password sold.

Hit me up on skype emjay1 if interested :-)

ronnie 2008-06-24 02:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by emjay (Post 407208)
I am looking for partners in this field (ie those with E books or information to sell)

Our global phone billing solution has total global billing reach and would be a good fit for content owners with low price-points - averge yield about $4 per password sold.

Hit me up on skype emjay1 if interested :-)

What does selling passwords have to do with e-books? Not like you need a password to buy an e-book. Also PP takes a small cut of the deal, sure you get a good chunk.

emjay 2008-06-24 02:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ronnie (Post 407250)
What does selling passwords have to do with e-books? Not like you need a password to buy an e-book. Also PP takes a small cut of the deal, sure you get a good chunk.

OK, say there was a surfer in say India who wanted to by the Ebook/Information, but has no credit card or paypal?

Saturnin 2008-06-25 01:10 PM

One of my more successful on-line ventures is selling ebooks. I chose specifically not to use PayPal, although that has probably cost me business. I do use CCBill, Amazon and Lulu.com though. (Helps that I own all the rights to the content.)

To be honest, selling on Amazon is kind of a pain, since things have to be reformatted every time you make an update or change.

I haven't had too much luck with affiliates, but general sales metrics are pretty good. (Don't quit your day job...)

As far as geography goes, I am surprised at where my traffic comes from (mainly US), as opposed to where I thought it might come from. To be honest, the credit card barrier is not a real concern to me, since my demographic usualy already has this. If they don't, I'll be happy to sell to them when they do.

As far as marketing goes, that one was a tough nut to crack. I had a lot of surfers, and interested people, but few sales. The content is unique... nothing else like it. So the trick was making the tour compelling. Once that was done, sales went up significantly. Now the trick is finding pockets of potential readers and buyers.

tigermom 2008-06-26 02:13 AM

I think Clickbank comes recommended by most mainstream affiliates. Never tried it as a publisher, but have sold my share of ebooks (still do) and they're a good product to sell in mainstream (you get paid quite a bit, it being an e-product).

bdld 2008-06-28 03:46 AM

you can use google checkout for processing as well, rates are lower than paypals.

Saturnin 2008-06-29 04:12 PM

Any ideas about how Google Checkout and PayPal rate with customers? (One have a better rep than the other? I did a short survey and Google Checkout seemed to have the better name...)

ronnie 2008-07-08 12:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Saturnin (Post 407800)
Any ideas about how Google Checkout and PayPal rate with customers? (One have a better rep than the other? I did a short survey and Google Checkout seemed to have the better name...)

I wouldn't be surprised if people liked Google more than paypal, and ebay hasn't been helping the image with the way they've been promoting the processor.

Although, the HUGE difference is, how many surfers already have a PP account compared to how many have a Google checkout account. Too much to pass up in my book...:)


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