Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
What is this?
Less
More

Owned by Al

AI Story Crafters

90 members • Free

Learn to create short, inspiring ebooks with AI—from children’s moral tales to adult fiction—complete with illustrations, storytelling tips.

Memberships

Book Design Like a Pro

273 members • Free

BookVillage - Amazon Reviews

146 members • Free

The $10K MRR BluePrint

479 members • $49

AI BookPreneurs (FREE)

1.6k members • Free

Kidlit Author Growth Academy

862 members • Free

Self Publishers Unite!

474 members • Free

PublishingOS (Free)

11k members • Free

KDP Publishing

900 members • Free

26 contributions to KDP Publishing
3 Ways to Get More Book Reviews
If your book isn’t getting reviews yet… It’s going to be really hard to get consistent sales. Reviews are what build trust, and trust is what gets people to actually click “buy.” In this video, I walk through what’s actually working right now, from launch strategies to simple tweaks inside your book to one method that makes getting reviews way easier (and most authors aren’t even using it yet). 1. The Book Launch Method - Giving early readers your manuscript 2. QR Codes - Using QR codes driving users back to your review page 3. Bookvillage - @Adriano Ferrigno has a book review platform designed to help authors get book reviews in a way that is Amazon-compliant to get VERIFIED PAID REVIEWS! If getting reviews has been a struggle for you, you’ll definitely want to watch this one. You can get a BOOK VILLAGE account here, and for a limited time, you're getting a 30-day free trial AND a 25% discount. After you watch, let me know—which strategy are you going to try first?
2 likes • 6d
How do you place a QR code in your book to refer back to your book review page if the manuscript is already published?
1 like • 6d
@Krista Brea Ok. I realized that. I just thought you were referring to another method like maybe linking to your book series. Maybe you should explain that in your original post?
Feature FRIDAY - Share Your Stuff!
It’s time to put yourself out there. Share whatever you’re working on or proud of right now. This community is full of creators, authors, and entrepreneurs, and sometimes the best thing we can do is help each other get a little more visibility. 💡 IDEAS ON WHAT YOU COULD SHARE: • Yourself and what you do • Your Skool community • A book you're writing or recently published • A project you're building • A shoutout to another member • A video, post, or resource • Affiliate links (yes, those are allowed) The goal is simple: help our members get seen. Just one request so this stays valuable for everyone. 👉 1 RULE: If you share something, please also leave a thoughtful or helpful comment on someone else’s post. Support goes both ways, and when we all participate, the whole community benefits. Now let’s see what everyone is building 👇
Feature FRIDAY - Share Your Stuff!
7 likes • 9d
Here's a book I will soon be publishing. "Theo's Whoopie Cushion Shenanigans"
1 like • 8d
@Elara Stroud KDP - if I can overcome the hassles with them about my covers.
A little promo video for one of my books.
"Dr. Quack's Adventures" will be my brand and here he is in an image and a video. What do you think?
A little promo video for one of my books.
1 like • 10d
@Krista Brea Never saw chucky before but there are some similarities. What do you think about using this as a brand?
How Long Should Your Book Be? 📚
This is one of the most common questions I get, the answer is… it depends on your topic. For most nonfiction books, a solid range is 20,000–50,000 words. That’s usually enough to clearly teach something, solve a problem, or guide your reader to a specific result. But here’s the key 👇Longer does NOT always mean better. I’ve seen shorter books perform really well because they are: - Focused - Easy to consume - Straight to the point If your book delivers a clear transformation or solves a specific problem, people will buy it...regardless of length. That said, there’s a business side to this too… 💡 More pages = higher printing costs Which means your royalties can get squeezed if you're not paying attention. 👉 If you want to run the numbers yourself, you can use Amazon’s calculator here: https://kdp.amazon.com/en_US/royalty-calculator PRO TIP: During formatting, you can strategically adjust things like: - Font size - Line spacing - Margins This can help reduce page count (and printing costs) while still keeping your book clean and professional. At the end of the day, don’t focus on hitting a specific word count—focus on delivering value. That’s what actually sells books 💰
How Long Should Your Book Be? 📚
2 likes • 11d
@Fabrice Boulben Try this: 1. Give ai your topic with an explanation. Also suggest style and guidance (whatever that means to you). 2. Ask ai to write an outline for your book that has 10 (or whatever you want) chapters and 5 subtopics for each. 3. Take the outline chapter by chapter and ask ai to expand on each topic with detail up to "X" # of words each. one chapter and topics at a time. 4. review and edit it - ask ai to make any changes or additions you want. 5. If it is to be illustrated, ask ai to create an image for the chapter or any of the subtopics in the style you tell it. You can guess at the # of chapters and subtopics based on the complexity of the subject. If each subtopic would have 400 words with 12 words to a line and about 32 lines per page (depends on size of book) than each would be a little over one page. total words= 400x5=2,000 x 10 = 20,000 #pages - about 60 just for the content. A little rough but hopefully you get the idea.
1-10 of 26
Al Anderson
4
33points to level up
@al-anderson-3117
Story crafter and teacher of using AI to create short children's stories and adult intrigues. Serial entrepreneur and still learning new things!

Active 1h ago
Joined Feb 11, 2026
Powered by