KDP Beta Tests Digital Narration: A Game-Changer for Self-Published Authors
Discover how KDP's beta digital narration can save time and money for authors. Learn about similar services from Draft2Digital and Findaway Voices.
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KDP, Apple and GooglePlay Digital Voice Narration for Audiobooks
Added on 09/29/2024
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Speaker 1: Hey. Have you heard the news? KDP is beta testing digital narration. Draft2Digital has had that for a while. Findaway Voices is now distributing digital voice narration in limited reach. So this means you don't have to pay a narrator or be the narrator of your book to create an audiobook now. This is a really big time and energy savings if you have a book you want to put up an audiobook version for. So, if you want to learn more about how this will work, then this video is for you. Hey there, I'm Julie the Book Broad, founder of Book Launchers, a full-service self-publishing platform that helps you write, publish, and promote a nonfiction book to grow your brand and your business. And let me say, any way that you can put an audiobook into the world now is something you should seriously consider because that market is growing rapidly. And if you don't have an audiobook, you are missing out on some of the discoverability and potential readers or listeners. But narrating a book takes a lot of time. And then it takes a lot of editing and producing. And that's an investment of time and money. Now, let's be clear, I am still a fan of narrating your book yourself. You get your voice in the head of your ideal reader, which is quite likely your ideal client for your product, service, speaking, or whatever you're doing in the bigger picture around your book. You can also read your book and catch things that you may want to change or edit or tweak when you're narrating your audiobook. That said, if you are like me and you have a book that you haven't created an audiobook for, like my first book, More Than Cashflow, and you're wondering if this is a solution, well, it might be. I have a few questions that I don't actually have answers to yet, and I'm not totally jumping in on this just yet. But here's what I know right now, and this is literally changing every month. So make sure you're on the launch letter for the latest news. Go to booklaunchers.com forward slash newsletter. But for now, let's talk about the KDP beta program. In the fourth quarter of 2023, KDP started a beta program for authors to produce audiobook versions of their eBooks using virtual voice narration. This is also called synthetic speech, AI voice narration, robot voice, so many different things to say the same thing. A robot voice is reading your book. In that release, the stat jumped out at me of currently only 4% of titles self-published through KDP have an audiobook available. What? Can you say opportunity, my author friend? So the KDP program, you have to be invited into the beta program right now. But if you are, you can choose one of your eligible eBooks already on the KDP platform, then sample voices, preview the work, and customize the audiobook, and then publish. After publication, audiobooks will be live within 72 hours, they say, and will be distributed wherever Audible titles are sold. Now, prices can be set between $3.99 and $14.99, and authors will receive a 40% royalty. I assume this means Audible will set the price just like they do for natural voice submissions, but that wasn't totally clear to me. So all audiobooks will be clearly labeled as synthetic voice. And of course, we'll have a sample that readers can sample before they buy. This is really interesting. I am really excited about these developments, but I'm also not excited that Audible is going to take so much of the cut. Audible is not in it to make money for you. I guess it's better to make 40% on something you weren't going to create another way, or that would have cost you thousands to make. So it's extra money on a product you've already created. So it's not a bad thing, but 40% feels really light to me. Now, more recently, Findaway Voices has announced that you can create and distribute digital voice narration through Google Play. Basically, you have to create an LPF file and upload it to Findaway. So what is an LPF file, you ask? Well, I'm glad you did. I had to look it up. An LPF file is a file provided by Google Play Books when you download your digital voice narrated audiobook. It's a bit of a mouthful. LPF files generated before November 11th, 2023 will not work. So if you happen to have done this prior to that date, it will not work. But if you did that, you just have to log into Google Play Books and regenerate your LPF files. Then you can take that file and upload it to Findaway Voices by Spotify and woo, off you go. Well, you need your metadata, your price, and then you have to select the retailers that you can choose, or at this time that are allowed for digital voice narration. It's a pretty small list right now, but that is likely going to grow. But please note, you cannot edit the narrator's credit, and Findaway will automatically set this from Google Play along with the notation that it's a digital voice narration, which will go into your description. Digital voice narrated audiobooks are currently being accepted by select retail partners. You are able to choose which partners you want to sell with. Findaway Voices will then auto-assign an ISBN, which also brings up some questions for me because if you take an ASIN from Amazon and then you want to upload somewhere else, you're in a pickle. So I don't know what that's going to do if you, I mean, you can't take that file and upload it somewhere else anyway, so I don't know. But finally, the last one I want to mention is Draft2Digital, because it's not being left out of this. They've actually had digital narration with Apple Books for a while. Apple Books has speech synthesis, synthesis, synthesis, synthesis, speech synthesis. I know, but try and say it after saying it. Speech. Syn. Syn. Say it after speech. Speech synthesis. Show off. Speech synthesis. Okay. Apple Books has speech synthesis technology and will produce high quality audiobooks from an ebook file. If you have a book for sale on Apple Books directly or via Draft2Digital, you should be able to do this. And they say it's easy, but I've tried a couple of times to do it and well, it just keeps saying that I don't have an eligible book. So they say you can easily generate your audiobook with the help of Apple Books digital narration, but my books don't show up as eligible and it says it must be in a certain genre. So I haven't been able to test this for you. If you have been able to test it or done any of these, please comment in the comments below and let us all know what we need to know about it. In the meantime, I have cloned my voice with 11 Labs and we use it for the pickups in the narration of my book, Self, Promote and Succeed, which you can also grab the audio version of that, by the way, right here at selfpromoteandsucceed.com. I recorded the entire book myself, as you can watch, and I'll link that playlist into the description and at the end of this video. But instead of going back and recording the words I missed or mispronounced, my editor could use 11 Labs to replace those mistakes. It saved me half a day back in the studio and also saved my editor time and effort because he could fix it as he was editing. I can't wait until I can record the whole book in my voice with digital narration, but we're not there now. It's not allowed, although technically even with my cloned pickups, that's not allowed, but it was accepted because you can't tell what's human and what is digital. Listen and try. You won't be able to find them. That said, the cloning isn't quite good enough for a complete upload, but man, it's coming. And I can't wait for that day because I am excited about having an audio book in my voice without me having to spend three days in a studio. That is a dream come true. All right. What's new in digital narration since I shot the video? Or what do you know about it that I should add to an update? Oh, by the way, you can copyright protect this because it's still your material. Unlike if you generate a book using AI that you cannot copyright protect, but this is still your material. It's just a synthetic voice. It's not the same as AI generation. Just a little note there. All right, let's chat about all of this in the comments below. And of course, when you comment the day a video is released, you get entered to win some of our fabulous hashtag no boring book swag, or you could win physical copies of my books, all kinds of fun stuff. All right. So after you comment on this video, this one is a great one to watch on selling audio books direct to your listener, which by the way, has no restrictions on digital versus human, except what your listener will like. And this video is a good one for you to watch according to our friends at YouTube's algorithm. Click on over to one of them and say hi when you get there.

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