Resources for Writing–
Hooked on Amazon? Try TitleZ

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Are you an author, editor or publisher who constantly checks the sales rankings of titles on Amazon? If so, you’ll probably get a kick out of Title Z.

TitleZ allows you to retrieve historic and current sales rankings for many of the books on Amazon, so you can see how a title has performed over time. You can search for titles by keyword, book title, author’s name or publisher. Once you have a list of titles, you can select the ones you want to compare side-by-side.

TitleZ is in beta, which means they’re still working on it, and it does seem to have a few bugs as well as hits and misses. I entered my latest novel, Can’t Get Enough, and learned that its lowest ranking ever on Amazon was 645. The highest ranking was . . . well, we won’t go there.

However, TitleZ had no historical rankings for P.G. County, the prequel to Can’t Get Enough, or for You Only Get Better, a recent fiction anthology I participated in with two other authors. Oddly, it did have historical rankings for my first and second novels, Sisters and Lovers and Big Girls Don’t Cry. But they were both published before Amazon came along, so the historical rankings can only go back to when Amazon began to keep track of rankings. Of course, if Amazon had been ranking books back when Sisters and Lovers and Big Girls Don’t Cry were first published, we all know both novels would have ranked at like number 1 or 2. Right? Right.

I can’t say how accurate the information on TitleZ is, however, when I compared rankings on TitleZ with what is listed on Amazon, TitleZ was right on the money.

At any rate, it’s fun to spend a bit of time checking out various titles even now, and the site could be helpful if you need to research the current success of titles in a genre on Amazon, such as chick lit or mysteries, or to compare titles side-by-side.

But I think if TitleZ is ever going to be really useful in the publishing industry, it’s going to have to be far more thorough in terms of the titles it supports. Right now, it appears that the developers may have even abandoned the site. Although the Amazon title ranking data appears to be up-to-date, the Book News section on TitleZ, which includes links to publishing industry articles around the web, hasn’t been updated since 2006.

Hopefully, the lag is temporary—like an attempt to raise funds to take it to the next level or something—because TitleZ has real potential as a tool for authors and publishers who are hooked on Amazon. And there are many of us.

TitleZ for authors and publishers

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