Kindle plus Clickbank?

12 replies
I currently have a book up on Clickbank, but I would like to put it on Kindle format, plus Nook, Sony and others.

How does that work if it's already going through CB? Can I still sell it for the high price point that CB allows? I though that most kindle offerings are about $10. Will something more expensive sell on kindle and other reader formats?

Am I violating any TOS by selling it on other platforms?

Thanks!
#clickbank #ebook reader #kindle
  • Profile picture of the author smallbusinessguy
    You can sell books on kindle by signing up and uploading your book on the Amazon Digital Text Platform site.

    You gain royalties with Amazon. You get 70% iof you are from the following place

    Austria
    Canada
    Germany
    Liechtenstein
    Luxembourg
    Switzerland
    United Kingdom (including Guernsey, Jersey, and Isle of Man)
    United States

    Else, you can only claim 35% royalty.

    They also require that you set pricing consistent with other retailers. I'm not sure if they are too particular about it though
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    • Profile picture of the author GameVoid
      Originally Posted by smallbusinessguy View Post

      They also require that you set pricing consistent with other retailers. I'm not sure if they are too particular about it though
      They are very particular about it. They have bots that go out and double check the price of your book on Amazon as it compares to other major ebook retailers. If you have a book for $5.99 on Amazon and $4.99 on Barnes and Noble, Amazon will find it and discount your book down to $4.99 automatically.

      The amazon price has to match the lowest available price for that format, period.
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  • Profile picture of the author Kecia
    With Kindle, you have to price competitively in order to make sales. A $47 ebook from Clickbank will not gain you $47 on Kindle. The highest you'd want to price is the book is $9.99 unless you want less royalty percentages.
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  • Profile picture of the author Ti
    I've heard a lot of poor responses from people who are marketing their eBooks on Amazon, simply because people generally pay $5-$9 for an eBook VS 37-57 that comes away on Clickbank.

    The reason is that an affiliate can prep the person for sale, making them really want to buy it, vs Amazon not having really that option.
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    • Profile picture of the author Heidi White
      Originally Posted by Ti View Post

      I've heard a lot of poor responses from people who are marketing their eBooks on Amazon, simply because people generally pay $5-$9 for an eBook VS 37-57 that comes away on Clickbank.

      The reason is that an affiliate can prep the person for sale, making them really want to buy it, vs Amazon not having really that option.
      On the other hand - I assume Amazon doesn't have the same 50% refund rate.
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      • Profile picture of the author Alexa Smith
        Banned
        Originally Posted by Heidi White View Post

        On the other hand - I assume Amazon doesn't have the same 50% refund rate.
        Neither does ClickBank.

        It's possible that an individual affiliate might temporarily have a 50% refund-rate for a ClickBank product, but a product that had that refund-rate across a range of affiliates would quickly be removed from the Marketplace by ClickBank, for the reasons explained here.
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  • Profile picture of the author JamesGw
    Can you get in trouble with clickbank / affiliates for offering it at a lower price point on Amazon? If I was going to do that, I'd probably rebrand it and change a few things up.
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    • Profile picture of the author Dietriffic
      Originally Posted by JamesGw View Post

      Can you get in trouble with clickbank / affiliates for offering it at a lower price point on Amazon? If I was going to do that, I'd probably rebrand it and change a few things up.
      I would imagine with a new title and mixing up the content, you could sell it as something completely different/complimentary.

      At the end of the day, everything written is something rewritten.

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  • Profile picture of the author Alexa Smith
    Banned
    Originally Posted by monkeytrousers View Post

    Am I violating any TOS by selling it on other platforms?
    Absolutely not.

    ClickBank is simply a retailer.

    It's entirely up to you whether you wish to sell your product anywhere else, and in what format, and at what price, and so on.

    However, in reality, few serious ClickBank affiliates are willing to promote products of vendors who have another, non-ClickBank sales page, for all the reasons explained in this thread.
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  • Profile picture of the author cashcow
    I dont know what your ebook is, but you might consider taking portions, like maybe chapters if it can be broken up that way sensibly and selling those for .99 on kindle, then in side the kindle book have the link to your regular product or your squeeze page.

    I'm not saying to give them something incomplete that leaves them hanging but somehow rework the chapters so each conveys a complete idea.

    Just a thought....

    Lee
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  • Profile picture of the author Dietriffic
    Sorry to hijack the thread a little, but why do I keep reading this nonsense about 50% refund rate on CB?

    Even if I didn't know anything about Clickbank, I'd know there would be no way it could continue running on a 50% refund rate.

    If half your products are being refunded, then what you're selling is junk and you're a fraud. People rarely get refunds for bad products, so it must be fraudulent. That's the only way so many would be motivated to get their money back.

    If half your affiliate sales are refunded, then either the product you're promoting is fraudulent (partly your fault as you should do your research), or your pre-selling is down right lies.

    Either way, you need to change the way you do business. The world doesn't need people like you.
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    • Profile picture of the author Alexa Smith
      Banned
      Originally Posted by Dietriffic View Post

      why do I keep reading this nonsense about 50% refund rate on CB?
      I think it's partly because you're more aware of ClickBank than of some other aspects of internet marketing, and therefore you notice it more. In the same way, I ask myself "why do I keep reading this nonsense about article marketing?", because - for example - I notice that very few people discussing duplicate content, article directories and so on understand what they are and how they work, and misinformation - for quite a variety of different reasons - is everywhere.

      Also, there are huge numbers of internet marketers who have "tried ClickBank" (all too often by promoting high gravity products with vendors' opt-ins on their sales pages), been entirely unsuccessful ("surprise surprise") and want something/someone to blame, so these typically slightly hysterical, entirely inaccurate and ill-thought-through views may tend to be the ones most often propagated and perpetuated.

      Originally Posted by Dietriffic View Post

      If half your products are being refunded, then what you're selling is junk and you're a fraud.
      And clearly ClickBank would be losing money on those, because their 7.5% cut wouldn't cover their transaction and administrative costs of producing all those refunds. As they do happily explain, openly, to people who want to ask them about it.
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