Search Content


Content Categories



For Bloggers: How to Distribute Your Blog through Amazon Kindle Store

If you have a blog, learn how to get your blog listed on the Amazon Kindle Store so that people can subscribe to your blog content and read it on their Kindle wireless e-book reader.

kindle-blog

Amazon charges a monthly fee (around $1) per blog subscription but does offer some benefits in return. For example, Kindle subscribers are always provided with full blog articles (not excerpts) and second, Kindle will always download the entire blog content (similar to prefetching in FeedDemon) so subscribers can read blogs even while offline.

How to Get Your Blog on Amazon Kindle

Almost all famous blogs are available for subscription through Amazon Kindle but if you are just a small publisher and like to get your own blog listed on the Kindle store, here’s what you may do:

Step 1: If your current RSS feed includes advertising (like AdSense for Feeds) or you offer only partial feeds, create a new feed for your blog that is both full-text and ad-free.

Step 2: Go to Amazon.com and fill their interest form. This is the official approach but Amazon says they have a huge backlog so you never know how long will it take for Amazon to approve your blog for the Kindle store.

Step 3: Other than the official Amazon channel, you may also want to partner with Newstex. Become a content provider at Newstex by filling this form and they’ll directly work with Amazon to get your blog listed on the Kindle store.

That’s how Digital Inspiration got into the Kindle store. There’s no listing fees and Amazon will pay you 30% of the revenue per Kindle user who subscribes to your blog.

Related hack: Buy Books and Magazines for Kindle outside US

For Bloggers: How to Distribute Your Blog through Amazon Kindle Store - Digital Inspiration


Related Social CRM Articles

Google May Get RSS Feeds via Google Alerts


It is possible that Google may add rss feeds for web search results. They already provide feeds for News and Blogs search results. I was reading this story in WSJ by Katherine Boehret where she compares the various "email alert" services available...

Read more about Google May Get RSS Feeds via Google Alerts...

For Technology Decision-Making, Who's in Charge?


It used to be that the people who bought technology and equipment for contact centers were professionals in the art of running those centers -- they were people with some kind of direct telecom or operations experience. Those days are long gone....

Read more about For Technology Decision-Making, Who's in Charge?...