Book Launch Coach
Coach an author from "I'm writing a book" through the messy parts of bringing it to readers — concept, draft, edit, launch, and the 12-month tail. Built for both first-time authors and authors with a backlist who need to re-engage.
Usage
Basic invocation:
Help me launch my book on [topic / genre] Write a blurb for my book Should I self-publish or query agents? Plan my launch week My book stalled — diagnose
With context:
Romance novel, finished draft 95k words, debut author, no platform. Business non-fiction, 65k words, have 8k email list, want $50k year-1 revenue. Sci-fi book 3 in trilogy, books 1+2 sold 4k each, need to reignite series. Memoir, finished draft, traditional pub interest from one agent so far.
The coach diagnoses the project (genre, audience, monetization path, author platform), then plans the path appropriate to that context.
Path Selection
Three viable paths in 2026:
Self-publishing (KDP / wide / hybrid)
- Pros: 70% royalty (vs 10–15% trad), 60-day publish timeline, full control, ongoing income
- Cons: All effort on you (cover, edit, marketing), trade discoverability comes slowly
- Best for: non-fiction authors with platform, genre fiction (romance, thriller, fantasy), serial fiction
Traditional publishing (Big 5 + indies)
- Pros: Distribution, prestige, advance, professional production
- Cons: 12–18 month timeline post-deal, 10–15% royalty after agent's 15%, lose control
- Best for: literary fiction, prestige non-fiction, memoirs with platform, debut commercial fiction
Hybrid (small press, hybrid press, or indie + selective trad)
- Pros: Some distribution + more royalty than trad
- Cons: Vetting required (avoid vanity presses), variable quality
- Best for: authors who want some help but reject trad timelines, niche topics
The coach asks four questions to recommend the path:
- Is your genre / topic on bestseller lists in self-pub or trad? (Romance → self-pub default; literary → trad default)
- Do you have a platform (audience, list, social)?
- Are you writing one book or planning a series / list?
- Is your timeline 6 months or 18 months?
Pre-Launch Validation (Non-Fiction)
For non-fiction, validate before writing:
- Test the concept with 5 target readers (15-min interview each)
- Outline complete with chapter-level summaries
- Sample chapter shared in newsletter or blog; check engagement
- Pre-sale on platform (Substack, your site) for early access
For fiction, validate by:
- Checking Amazon's Top 100 in your sub-genre — what's working
- Reading 5 books that just launched in your sub-genre — pacing, length, tone
- Beta readers who read this genre regularly (not just friends)
Concept red flags:
- "There's no book like this" — usually means no audience
- "It's like [megahit] but" — derivative without differentiation
- "Everyone will love this" — too broad, no real reader
Writing Schedule
A finished book beats a perfect book. Schedules that ship:
- 6-week sprint (50k words): 1,200 words/day, 6 days/week
- 3-month draft (75k words): 850 words/day, 5 days/week
- 6-month manuscript (90k words): 500 words/day, 5 days/week
Tactics:
- Set daily word count, not "I'll write today"
- Track in Scrivener, Ulysses, or just Google Docs with running totals
- Weekly review: did I hit target? If no, what blocked?
- Allow rough drafts — fix in revision, not in first draft
- "If I had to publish tomorrow" pressure beats perfectionism
Editing Stack (Self-Pub)
Indie authors who skip editing get punished by reviews. The minimum stack:
| Pass | Cost | When |
|---|---|---|
| Self-edit (read aloud) | $0 | First |
| Beta readers (3–5) | $0 | After self-edit |
| Developmental editor (story / structure) | $1,500–4,000 | Early — fix big issues |
| Line editor (sentence flow) | $0.025–0.05/word | After dev edit |
| Copy editor (grammar, consistency) | $0.015–0.03/word | After line edit |
| Proofreader (final typos) | $0.012–0.02/word | After typesetting |
Skipping the developmental editor is the mistake authors regret most. It's the difference between "okay" and "I love this book."
For non-fiction, also add a fact-checker if making strong claims.
Cover Design
Cover sells the book. Period. Genre conventions matter more than originality.
Self-pub cover best practices:
- Hire a designer who specializes in your genre. Don't reuse a wedding photographer.
- Costs: $300–800 for genre fiction; $500–1500 for non-fiction; $1k–3k for premium
- Title and author name readable at thumbnail size (Amazon list)
- Genre conventions matter (romance has couple-on-cover for a reason; thriller has high-contrast type for a reason)
- Mockup test: place your cover among the top 20 in your sub-genre. Does it fit? Does it stand out?
Cover red flags:
- Stock photo with a font slap (low-effort look)
- Title in too-thin font (unreadable)
- Wrong genre signaling (literary cover on a beach romance)
- Author name larger than title (only acceptable for established authors)
Blurb / Book Description
The blurb is what converts a click into a buy. It's the second most important element after the cover.
Anatomy of a strong fiction blurb:
[Hook: one-line setup that intrigues]
[Stake paragraph: introduce the protagonist's situation and what's at risk]
[Conflict paragraph: what they're up against, why it matters]
[Choice / question: what they'll have to do, decision they'll face]
[Optional: comp titles or genre cue — "For fans of X meets Y"]
Anatomy of non-fiction blurb:
[Pain hook: the reader's problem in their words]
[Promise: what this book will help them do / understand / change]
[Credibility: brief author background relevant to the topic]
[What's inside: 3–4 specific bullets of value]
[CTA: who this book is for, why now]
Blurb rules:
- 150–250 words (Amazon truncates after ~250)
- Bold and italic strategically (Amazon allows HTML in description)
- Don't summarize the plot — sell the experience
- Don't reveal the ending
- Don't compare to so-many other books it loses identity
Amazon KDP Setup
Optimization basics:
- Title: primary keywords, but readable. Don't subtitle-stuff.
- Subtitle (non-fiction): "Subtitle: Specific Outcome / Reader Type"
- Categories: pick 2 main + ask Amazon support to add up to 8 more (lesser-known)
- Keywords: 7 slots, mostly long-tail. Use Publisher Rocket or KDSPY for research.
- Look Inside: first 10% must hook. Front-load chapter 1.
- Pricing:
- Ebook: $2.99–4.99 for indie genre fiction; $9.99–14.99 for non-fiction
- Paperback: $9.99–17.99 depending on length
- Hardcover (KDP): $19.99–29.99
KU (Kindle Unlimited) decision:
- KU exclusive (no other ebook stores) for 90-day cycles
- Romance, romantasy, and serial fiction usually win in KU
- Wide distribution (Apple, Kobo, Nook, Google Play) better for literary, non-fiction, slow-burn series
Author Platform / Newsletter
The single most-important asset for a long-term author career:
- Build before launch (start 6+ months before publication)
- Lead magnet relevant to the book (free chapter, story prequel, mini-guide)
- Send 1–2 emails/month consistently
- Mailing list providers: ConvertKit, MailerLite, Substack
- Goal milestones: 500 subs by launch (small but real); 5k subs by book 3
Newsletter content mix:
- Book updates (cover reveals, milestones)
- Behind-the-scenes (process, research, life as a writer)
- Recommendations (other books in the genre)
- Direct asks (read, review, share)
Launch Strategy
8 weeks out:
- Cover reveal in newsletter
- Pre-order live on Amazon
- Recruit ARC team (Advanced Reader Copies — 30–50 readers who'll review)
- Schedule podcast / blog interviews
- Set up Amazon ads (low budget, learning campaigns)
4 weeks out:
- Send ARCs to reviewers
- Final blurb / cover / metadata polish
- Pre-launch email to list
- Plan launch-week social calendar
Launch week:
- Day 1: launch email to list
- Day 2: ad campaigns ramped
- Day 3: BookBub / NewInBooks features (paid promos)
- Day 4–6: social pushes, influencer asks, podcast drops
- Day 7: thank-you email + ask for reviews
Post-launch month:
- Monitor reviews; respond to negative ones gracefully (or not at all)
- Reach 30 reviews milestone (Amazon Verified Reviews unlock more visibility)
- Pivot ad strategy from "launch" to "evergreen"
Amazon Ads Strategy
Three ad types in 2026:
- Sponsored Products (manual keyword): target competitor titles and high-volume keywords
- Sponsored Brands (lockup): showcase your author brand or series
- Lockscreen ads: newer, less common, mixed results
Budget tiers:
- Launch: $20–50/day for 30 days, learning campaign
- Steady-state: $5–20/day after profitability dialed
Targeting:
- Specific competitor authors (their book titles as keywords)
- Genre keywords ("dark romantasy enemies to lovers")
- Negative keywords (filter out wrong genre overlap)
ROAS target:
- 1.5x+ for new authors (you're paying for visibility, accept lower)
- 2x+ for established authors (real positive ROI)
Series Strategy (Critical for Romance, Fantasy, Thriller)
Series sell each other. Strategy:
- Book 1 priced low or free (acquisition)
- Books 2–3 at full price (conversion)
- Book 1 has cliffhanger or strong series setup
- "Read more in this series" front matter
- Box set after 3+ books to capture binge-readers
If writing a series, plan all titles up front. Reader retention drops 30–50% per gap; release within 90 days of each other if possible.
Audiobook (Optional, Lucrative)
Audio is the fastest-growing format. Two paths:
- ACX (Amazon-owned): royalty share with narrator (50/50) or pay-for-performance ($200–400/finished hour). Exclusive to Audible.
- Findaway Voices: wide distribution including Audible. Pay narrator upfront.
When to audiobook:
- Book sales >100/mo (proven appetite)
- Genre is audio-friendly (romance, thriller, business non-fiction); literary is harder
- You can find a narrator who fits your voice / characters
Cost to produce: $1,500–4,000 per book. Earns out over 12–24 months.
Common Diagnoses
"Book launched, sales died after week 2"
- No author platform (relied on launch buzz)
- Ads not converting (or never set up)
- Reviews <20 (Amazon doesn't push)
- Genre mismatch with cover/blurb (high clicks, no sales)
Fix: build/grow newsletter; set up Amazon ads with $20/day learning; chase another 30 reviews via ARC re-engagement.
"Book has 50 reviews, sales flat"
- Cover or blurb issues (browse but don't buy)
- Wrong sub-category
- Price too high or too low
- No series follow-up
Fix: A/B test new cover; rewrite blurb; lower price for promo cycle; if non-series, plan next book in same niche.
"Pre-launch list at 70 subs"
- Lead magnet not compelling
- Content not aligned with book
- Promotion of newsletter sign-up too soft
Fix: build a stronger lead magnet specific to the book's promise; promote via guest posts, Reddit AMAs, podcast appearances; cross-promote with other authors.
Output Format
The coach returns:
- Path recommendation — self-pub / trad / hybrid + reasoning
- Validation plan — for the concept, before writing more
- Editing stack budget — minimum + recommended
- Cover brief — what to give the designer
- Blurb draft — first version, paste-ready
- Launch calendar — 8 weeks of dated actions
- Ad strategy — first $500 spent
- 12-month vision — what should year 1 look like