![]() The important thing here is that the foreword is NOT written by the Author, but by someone else. If you’re not sure about the difference between the preface, foreword, and introduction of a non-fiction book, you can read my post on that. The question isn’t how famous they are in general, but how recognizable they are to your target audience-and whether people might search for the name. If your book has a foreword that was written by someone notable, add it here so your book will be associated with them. That said, if your editor happens to be famous enough that people might type their name into Amazon’s search bar, you can add it here to capture those searches. EditorĪ book’s editor isn’t usually credited in the metadata unless the book is a compilation of essays and articles by different people, so most non-fiction Authors can ignore this one. Use the dropdown box to choose Author and enter the next Author’s name. For Amazon’s search engine, that’s very important. If your book has more than one Author, use a different line for each one. Contributors AuthorĮntering your Author name is obvious. Don’t enter both names in the primary author box-you should each have your own author bio, and you should each be searchable separately. If you have a co-author, enter that name under contributors (the next section). This is your name-we don’t recommend using a pen name for your non-fiction book. It’s so important that I wrote a whole post on drafting the perfect non-fiction subtitle. Doing that one thing will set you leagues ahead of most Authors. It needs to be optimized for Amazon’s search engine (SEO). So your subtitle needs to do more than explain your book to potential readers. And it’s the largest when it comes to where people go when they’re shopping. If you count YouTube as part of Google, Amazon is now the second-largest search engine in the world. ![]() It’s choosing a subtitle that takes some time. Here, again, entering your subtitle is simple. If you want some help with that, I wrote a whole post on creating the perfect title for your non-fiction book. Make sure your title really hooks your readers. But the main reason behind editing your metadata is to grab readers’ attention and make your book easy to find. I’ll walk you through the most important metadata fields for non-fiction Authors.Įntering your title is self-explanatory. If you’re already more or less familiar with KDP, choose the Edit eBook Details link in your KDP dashboard. It includes screenshots to help you learn your way around. ![]() If you’re just getting started with the KDP system, go check out my complete step-by-step guide to publishing your book on Amazon. This helps Amazon’s search engine show your book to the people who are most likely to buy it. You might have already done that when you published your ebook, but most new Authors don’t fully understand the data they’re being asked for-at least not the first time they do it.įortunately, you can edit metadata in the catalog any time you want (using the same KDP dashboard). is because it has one of the most complex and powerful metadata catalog systems in the world.Īuthors who self-publish through Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing (KDP) can add metadata directly into the system through the KDP dashboard. One of the main reasons Amazon is the biggest ebook retailer in the U.S. But getting it right in retail stores is far more important. Then I’ll walk you through how to change it inside your ebook. The bottom line is that you need to make sure your metadata is right in both places:Įach retailer has its own system for doing that, but because Amazon is the by far the largest ebook retailer in the U.S., I’m going to walk you through changing your metadata information specifically in the Amazon KDP system. It adds things like your book’s description, an author bio, and other marketing copy to help readers find your book. Retailers have a separate system for entering your metadata directly into their catalog. To change that metadata, you have to change the ebook.īut metadata also appears in catalogs, like Amazon, where people can buy your book. This ensures your book will display correctly in an ebook reader.įor example, a Kindle device can sort your book correctly in a reader’s library by your Author name or by your book’s title, because it sees that information in your metadata. Some of that data is included inside the ebook itself using special ebook coding. ![]() It includes things like the title, your Author name, the ebook’s ISBN, the date it was published, and so on. Ebook metadata is all the data about your book.
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