Back in 2016, I had written a post with information on How to Use Amazon Categories to Increase your Rankings. It included an estimate of how many copies a book needs to sell to reach a certain rank on Amazon US. This has now been updated as follows:
The rest of the information on my post, however, is still very much applicable–and all-important–today. I’m copying it here so you don’t have to go back-and-forth. As a reminder, the original post was based on a great post on the subject by Jen Bresnick.
What is my Category?
When you look up a listing for a book on Amazon, scroll down past the reviews to the section titled “Look for similar items by category”. If you visit the page for Jen’s The Last Death of Tev Chrisini, for example, you’ll see this:
The book is listed under an increasingly specific series of categories, including epic fantasy and sword & sorcery. But anyone who has gone through the KDP publishing process knows that sword & sorcery isn’t a BISAC category, and you can’t select it from the list that looks like this:
Chris Naish’s Tip
Chris Naish recently came up with another tip concerning Amazon categories; one that bears repeating. Chris turns on its head the conventional wisdom that you need to select the best, most relevant categories for your book. Instead, he suggests you select EVERY relevant category for your book!
It’s a little-known secret that you can actually add your Kindle book to up to ten categories. Identify them in advance of your launch day and, as soon as the book is live, message KDP from the dashboard (the contact link is in tiny text at the bottom) and tell them to place you into the other eight categories you have identified. Use the exact category path in your request, like so:
Kindle Store > Kindle eBooks > Business & Money > Management & Leadership > Total Quality Management
Be sure to go to the deepest level possible as this will result in more eyes on your book, and a greater chance to rank highly in these deeper categories. This article will help with deep category selection.
This corroborates what author Sarah Potter pointed out, that you can email them at KDP and ask them to add some additional browsing categories. These won’t show up where the rankings are, but if you scroll down the page to “Look for similar items by category”, you’ll see them there. Sarah originally had three browsing categories at the bottom of her product page, but now has 8 on the UK site and 7 on the US one.
However, Chris also notes that it might be hit and miss with getting a rep who knows about it. You can also do it on Amazon UK, Germany etc. If, at first, you have no luck, just try them again until you get through to the right person. He actually had to tell the rep he was on with that it was possible and point out examples to him.
Dave Chesson’s Tips
The ultimate guide to Amazon categories, however, has been written by Dave Chesson, aka Kindlepreneur. You may remember Dave from my review of his Free AMS Tutorial and KDP Rocket. In his remarkably detailed, step-by-step guide, Secret Method to Choosing Amazon Book Categories in KDP, Dave explains:
- Exactly what categories can do for your book
- How to find the best categories to make you a bestseller
- Secret Kindle Categories and how to get them
- How to show up in 7 categories, not just 3
Dave has also updated KDP Rocket. Its new features include a way that will not only help you find good categories for your book, it will also tell you how many sales you’d need to be #1:
You can check out KDP Rocket here (affiliate link) or here (non-affiliate link).
A helpful guide
Finally, and to help you with categories, I’m including an MS Excel spreadsheet with all of Amazon’s book categories/subcategories, listed according to competitiveness: categories at the top are the easiest to break into. I apologize if some information is out-of-date; this is the most recent list I have. Also, and although the spreadsheet only includes data on Fiction categories, the information in this post also applies to Non-Fiction ones.
Great info! I have to block out a day to just sit down and do this. I’m determined! Favoriting!
Yay! So glad to hear that 🙂
Great article Nicholas – Love how you combined so much info on Categories – there are so many things to it.
Thank you for the inspiration, Dave 🙂
Thanks for the tips!
I hope you find them useful 🙂
Thanks for sharing this – It has been a continual mystery to me. Amazon has put me in Thriller in Paperback although I don’t think I belong. But maybe I can’t complain. In Kindle they have it more accurately in Women’s Fiction/Psychological. Also all the Customers who bought this item also bought – the books there seem to be all Romance (my book is not a romance) – except for a Sue Monk Kidd title When the Heart Waits – Spiritual Direction for LIfe’s Sacred Questions I have no idea, but my book is about a narcissistic sociopath and I suppose at the end of my story you would certainly want to stay clear of that energy!
You’re the third author to mention that Amazon changes categories at will!
so informative, great points!!
Thank you, Mihran 🙂
More great tips for those selling on Amazon. Useful and informative as always.
Best wishes, Pete.
Thank you, Pete! I’ve discovered a treasure trove of historical information on https://www.roughdiplomacy.com so I’ll soon
follow with a series that will be more interesting to non-authors 🙂
Always interesting, Nicholas. Author or not. 🙂
You’re too kind 🙂
Thank you so much for always giving such informative posts, Nicholas!! Much appreciated.
So glad you find my posts useful! Thank you 🙂