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Smashwords Adds Affiliate Marketing Program for eBooks

By David Weir | May 26, 2009

In a move that infuriated many its marketing associates earlier this year, Amazon removed the Kindle from its marketing affiliate program.  That means that affiliates who are driving eBook traffic to Amazon are not getting any financial reward for their efforts.

But entrepreneurs love a void, so today eBook publisher Smashwords announced its own program, which allows authors and others to earn commissions of 11 percent or more by linking to the eBook company’s growing list of 1,400 titles.

“This is our small attempt to fill a portion of that void,” CEO Mark Coker told me in an email from New York, where he speaking at a conference.

In an accompanying press release, he elaborated: “The Smashwords Affiliate Marketing Program will help authors and publishers expand their digital shelf space while providing affiliate marketers the opportunity to profit from the rapid rise of electronic books.”

Now, Smashwords is a small player in a crowded field, but one to reason to keep an eye on it and the other emerging eBook publishers is the explosive growth rate of digital books, as documented by the Association of American Publishers. Over the past six years, according to the AAP, eBooks have been growing at a compound annual growth rate of 58 percent, while the overall industry’s growth rate stagnated, at 1.6 percent per year.

One feature of the Smashwords affiliates program is that authors and publishers can “juice” the commission their associates earn in order to incentivize the viral marketing of their eBooks. It’s possible, for instance, to allow associates to earn much more than the baseline 11 percent, all the way up to 81.5 percent.

Meanwhile, Amazon’s introduction of improved models of the Kindle in recent months appears to be triggering a tipping point in eBook adoption. Currently, there are nine platforms for publishing eBooks, most open-source, although Amazon continues to adhere to a proprietary technology for pubishing on the Kindle.

In addition to serving as a BNET Media analyst/blogger, David Weir is a veteran journalist and the author of several books. Weir is a co-founder and vice-president of the Center for Investigative Reporting, as well as an editorial board member of The Nation.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Sony embraces small publishers and unknown authors on Sony Reader eBook store

    VentureBeat - 54 days 10 hours 7 minutes ago

    The shift toward digital books is helping small fry authors and publishers to get in front of wider audiences than ever before. That trend is being reinforced today as Smashwords is announcing that it has a distribution agreement to get its books published on Sony new eBook portal. Smashwords lets authors publish their books in online formats...

  • Plastic Logic signs up AT&T for wireless e-book service

    Strategy Eye - 123 days 12 hours 23 minutes ago

    AT&T will provide the wireless connection for Plastic Logic’s new e-book reader, which is due for release early next year. The US mobile operator will join Barnes & Noble as a partner in the e-book project, which will rival Amazon’s popular Kindle system. Earlier this week, Barnes & Noble said its new e-book store would be...

  • Kindle for PC: Try E-Books without Buying an E-Reader

    PC World - 11 days 8 hours 8 minutes ago

    Amazon releases Kindle for PC, Windows software for reading Kindle e-books on a PC â?? a Mac version is coming soon

  • Verizon and Best Buy back iRex e-reader

    Strategy Eye - 60 days 10 hours 52 minutes ago

    US mobile operator Verizon is teaming up with iRex to offer mobile e-book downloads for the new iRex DR800SG e-reader, a challenger to Amazon's Kindle. Verizon’s involvement marks the US mobile operator’s first foray into providing services for the e-book market. It means that the top three US operators are now all engaged in...

  • Amazon buys iPhone e-reader app

    Strategy Eye - 208 days 14 hours 25 minutes ago

    Amazon has paid an undisclosed sum to acquire Lexcycle, the maker of free iPhone e-book app, Stanza. The move shows a clear effort from the online retailer to corner the e-book market. The firm already makes the world’s bestselling e-book reader, the Kindle, and recently launched its own e-reader app for Apple's iPhone and iPod Touch. Amazon...

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