You released a box set. It outsold book one. That is the wrong outcome.
The misdiagnosisThe misdiagnosis is that the box set is the new offer.
The real diagnosisThe box set is a discovery tool. Done right, it pulls new readers in cheap, who then buy your other books at full price. Done wrong, it replaces full-price sales of book one.
Box Set Math
| Move | Effect | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Box set at 50% of sum | Discovery + entry | Cheap enough to risk |
| Drop alongside new book | Funnel into latest | Captures both audiences |
| Six-week price hold then return to full | Buzz, then preserve dignity | Avoids permanent discount |
| Drop just before holiday | Gift signal | Reader buys for someone else |
Three Box Set Strategy Don'ts
- Don't make it permanently cheap. It eats book one.
- Don't release until book three. Two-book sets sell less.
- Don't drop without a newsletter and a partner cross-promo.
The box set is the door. The full-price catalog is the house.
Time the drop. Hold the price for a window. Return to full. Repeat next year.
The dare (not assignment)If you have three books in a series, plan a box set drop for the next launch window. Map the six-week math.
Image promptA small wrapped box on a desk with a thin ribbon. Painterly. Cream and pink. No people.
— The Book Maven
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