You finished your book. 🥳
You spent months (maybe years!) on research, writing, rewriting, and agonizing over every chapter. And you’ve finally hit publish.
But then… nothing.
No flood of sales. No word-of-mouth wildfire. Just you, staring at a dashboard, wondering what went wrong.
You're not alone. I've spent the last several months interviewing authors about their publishing experience, and I keep hearing the same thing:
Marketing your book is harder than writing it.
One author told me he was completely disillusioned after launch. He'd assumed book sales would be strong. Then he learned the reality: less than 6% of traditionally published books sell 1,000 copies in their first year. His biggest regret? "I would have been far more aggressive building a large social media platform WHILE writing the book rather than waiting."
Another author published a gorgeous full-color book through Amazon's KDP. The printing cost? $18 per copy. "I'm not making any money!" he said. "I'm basically giving them away at the price point I'm having Amazon print them at."
A third author sold about 250 copies, then hit a wall. Marketing stalled. Not because he didn't care, but because the sheer effort of building a sales funnel the website, the email list, the ads — was overwhelming. He was blocked by the complexity and cost of the tools he was supposed to use.
Sound familiar?
The Paralysis Problem
It's not that authors don't want to market their books. It's that they don't know where to start … and every option feels like a trap.
One author — a guy who's built products, led teams, done impressive work in tech — told me point blank: "I really struggle with the email thing. Do I have multiple email lists or one email list? Do I just write a newsletter, or do I sell something? I've never been able to grow an email list. It's an embarrassing statement for me. I've had the damnedest time."
Another had 3,000 people on a newsletter and still couldn't figure out how to make it work. "Email newsletter is like the 'So What' test," he said. "3k people on there… what do I do with it? It wasn't monetizing."
Here’s the problem: the publishing industry expects authors to pour months or years into their book, but NOT expect anything in return.
One author I talked to said it best:
"The primary challenge is connecting marketing efforts directly to revenue. Without clear ROI, authors risk either wasting effort on ineffective activities or doing nothing due to uncertainty."
Wasting effort, or doing nothing. Those are the two options most authors see. And neither one is acceptable.
The System Is Broken
The deeper I dug, the more I realized this isn't an author problem. It's a system problem.
Publishers (yes, even the big ones!) have made it clear:
Marketing is the author's responsibility.
One author kept asking his publisher, "How many books do I need to sell? What does success look like?" Their answer was basically a shrug.
Another spent $8,000 a month on an outside PR agency. The ROI? Impossible to say, but not enough that they will sign on again.
Amazon and other retailers take 50-75% of every sale… and don't share a single piece of buyer data. You can sell 12,000 books in a year and have no idea who bought them. No emails. No names. No way to build a relationship with the people who loved your work.
One author summed up the whole industry in a sentence: "Growth and marketing seems to be the constraint for a lot of authors."
He's right. And it's been the constraint for too long.
There's a Better Way: The Lean Book Launch
At Damn Gravity, we've launched 13 titles and sold nearly 40,000 books, including 15,000 in 2025 (out best year yet!)
We've generated tens of millions of social media impressions, thousands of email subscribers, and dozens of media hits for our authors. Our best authors make $40+ per direct sale instead of $3 through Amazon. And they own the customer relationship.
And for the first time, I’ve captured our entire sales and marketing process in one place:
The Lean Book Launch: Build Demand Before You Need It — and Never Publish into the Void Again
The Lean Book Launch borrows its philosophy from the startup world: validate before you build, test before you ship, grow before you launch. It's broken into 6 phases:
Positioning — Find your book-market fit before you go too far
Beta Readers — Write with your audience, not for them
Build Your Audience — Start marketing on Day 1, not after the book is done
Direct Pre-Order — Sell direct, own the data, fund your print run
Launch — Create a word-of-mouth explosion, not a bestseller stunt
Growth — Scale through other people's audiences
This isn't advice to "post more on social media" or "build your personal brand." This is a step-by-step system with tools, templates, and checklists for every phase.
If you've ever finished a book and thought, "Now what?" … this is your answer.
It’s yours for free 👇
(P.S. If you use Notion, feel free to duplicate the book into your workspace)
All I ask in return:
If this ebook sparks questions, excitement, rage (because why didn’t I write this sooner?!) or confusion, reply to let me know!
If you found this valuable and you know another author in your life, send it to them to read.
Finally, if you haven’t done so, subscribe to my new newsletter all about book marketing and promotion:
Happy writing, happy promoting!
Cheers,
Ben
P.S., If someone sent you this post, subscribe to my newsletter, The Author Launch Guide, for more proven guidance on selling books and growing your audience.

