Writing a book is a financial commitment.
Even if you aren't financing the costs yourself—as you would if you were self-publishing—you're spending thousands of hours creating something that might not sell. That time is not free—you could be spending it doing any number of other things that will be making you money.
That's why Kickstarter is such an appealing option to authors. You can get paid for your book while you're still writing it, removing some uncertainty from the process.
Our very own former Head of Author Marketing, Charlie Hoehn, ran a Kickstarter for his book Play for a Living: A Coffee-Table Book for Your Inner Genius that generated $35,936—over 3.5x his $10,000 goal.
After watching him and other authors successfully execute profitable Kickstarter campaigns, and after seeing even more authors crash and burn with their Kickstarters, we decided to put together this guide.
If you want to launch a Kickstarter to sell copies of your book—whether you've finished writing it or not—this is the place to start.
We're going to go through the most important lessons we've learned, the things that separate successes from failures, but first, we're going to break down exactly what a Kickstarter is.
A Kickstarter is not:
If you start a Kickstarter for your book, and you do not finish or publish your book, you have to refund all the money you raised.
Every person who "backs" your Kickstarter is buying a copy of your book. Just like any other retail experience, if you can't give them what they paid for, you have to give their money back.
Also, if you want to run a successful Kickstarter, you're going to have to hustle super hard. Raising $1,000,000 is incredibly difficult—though 2025 saw more million-dollar book campaigns than any previous year. Ali Hazelwood and Adriana Herrera's dystopian romance anthology After the End raised over $1 million, Matt Dinniman's Dungeon Crawler Carl special editions crossed seven figures, and Brandon Sanderson's 2022 campaign set the all-time record at $41.7 million. The publishing category overall raised more than $45 million in 2025—second only to Sanderson's historic campaign.
So, what is a Kickstarter good for?
A book Kickstarter is good for two things:
If you already have a book that you're writing or have finished writing, a Kickstarter can be a great way to quickly monetize your writing prior and build a fanbase.
If you want to do it well, you need to know these key lessons.
Why'd he do that?
Because launching a "successful" Kickstarter without knowing your number can actually lose you money—like the board game creator who raised over $70,000 and then lost his house trying to cover shipping costs.
So Charlie broke down every expense he would have to deal with:
Knowing exactly how much this campaign was going to cost him allowed him to set his prices at a margin that made him money. If you don't get these numbers ahead of time and assume everything will work out, you might end up losing money just to afford shipping out your book.
The reasoning for this is really simple.
On Kickstarter (unlike competitors like IndieGoGo), if you raise less than your goal, you don't get any of the money. It all goes back to the supporters.
Don't set your target for the ideal amount you'd like to raise. Instead, set it for the amount you'd need to raise to make the project worth doing. If $40,000 is all it takes for you to break even, then that's the amount you need to raise to make this book project not be a loss. Anything over that number is profit.
You also need to be confident you can raise half of your goal in the first few days of your launch. Kickstarter rewards early momentum, so successful campaigns build buzz weeks or even months before going live. The pre-launch email list you build will allow you to hit your Kickstarter funding goal on the very first day. Research shows that someone who puts down even a $1 deposit is 30 times more likely to buy than someone who only gives their email, making reservation funnels particularly effective.
Every Kickstarter has two periods where funding spikes:
It's remarkable how profound this effect is when you look at the numbers. For example, here's what happens: almost all of the funding comes either on the first day or on the last day. The people who buy it between those dates—so-called "casual buyers"—are very rare.
Offering a t-shirt in your cheaper packages is a classic example.
Let's say your second lowest package covers the cost of production and shipping your book, plus $20 extra. If you promise a t-shirt in that order, just the cost of shipping it internationally can eat your entire margin and lose your money.
In Charlie's Kickstarter, he didn't offer any physical bonuses beyond his book for packages that were under $250.
This doesn't mean his packages weren't awesome—they were loaded with high-value add-ons—but he didn't have to pay to physically ship them.
Get creative and think of high value, low-cost additions you can offer to backers for lower packages. Effective reward options include digital downloads as entry-level tiers, signed copies for mid-level backers, limited edition extras like art prints and stickers, premium tiers with personalized mentions, and bulk options for teachers and libraries.
One of the biggest trends in book Kickstarters today is premium hardcover editions with painted edges, foiling, and bonus art. These collector-grade books command higher pledge amounts and tap into readers' desire to own something truly special—not just another mass-market paperback.
If you're trying to sell a book, something people have seen millions of before, you better make it pretty damn appealing. And nothing is more appealing than a great video.
John Lee Dumas raised $453,803 for his book, The Freedom Journal, which promises to help you achieve whatever the #1 goal in your life is in 100 days. A big part of his success can be chalked up to a great video.
The video does several things well:
This is nothing new in the book world. Authors have always benefitted from high-quality book trailers. One of the most famous examples is Tim Ferriss' trailer for The 4 Hour Chef, which is the most viewed trailer for a nonfiction book of all time and helped propel the book to bestseller status.
But it's more than just video.
Good Kickstarter campaigns also feature still-image excerpts from the book, compelling sales copy, and are laid out well top-to-bottom.
Unless you have a design background, working with a professional is the best way to do this.
Most people have never backed a Kickstarter before. They don't know what it really means to back a project or how Kickstarter works. In your video, you need to explain:
The last point is especially important.
Oftentimes, you'll have to limit shipping to certain countries. If you have readers in those countries who want to buy your book, but can't do it through Kickstarter, you have to give them an option.
The Aviary Cocktail Book's Kickstarter is one of the most well-funded book campaigns ever. Because they cannot offer their book to most countries through Kickstarter due to shipping costs, they give international customers an easy way to preorder their book.
This is wrong.
Generally speaking, email is over three times as likely to convince someone to spend money compared to social media.
On top of this, it's really rare that a book on Kickstarter goes viral.
People tend to share physical products—especially tabletop games, for some reason—on social media far more than any other Kickstarters. Tabletop games like Conan, for example, are 9.6 times more likely to go viral.
People with millions of followers shared Charlie's Kickstarter, which generated some funding for him, but around 90% of his funds were raised through emailing his network.
Not through major media placements, Facebook advertising, or some crazy PR stunt—basic email to people he already knew.
One month before Charlie's Kickstarter launched, he reached out to his network. His message was simple:
Once someone has openly stated intent, they are far more likely to actually convert. The bulk of Charlie's initial traction came from this one email blast.
In our guide to launching an Amazon bestseller, we broke down step-by-step how you can export the email addresses of every LinkedIn connection you have, and then email them in bulk.
For example, Charlie's book was specifically for people dealing with anxiety. While his campaign was running, another campaign aimed at helping people with anxiety was also running.
So Charlie reached out to John Florentino, inventor of Gravity, with a pitch to cross-promote.
Obviously, Charlie was offering a ton of value. John took him up on it, and as a result, they were both able to benefit each other by promoting their non-competitive, but overlapping products to their respective audiences.
Daily engagement keeps your project visible and builds excitement throughout the campaign. Post updates with new artwork, share milestone celebrations, and thank your backers publicly. This continuous engagement has become even more critical as the publishing category has grown more competitive.
Who on Kickstarter is running a project that dovetails with yours? Figure out who those people are, and how you can collaborate with them to reach more backers.
People can see how successful you were, but can't engage with you now.
That's not ideal. You want the momentum from your successful Kickstarter to carry over into book sales for years.
The easiest way to do this is to change your page after the campaign ends, like Rafael Araujo did.
As soon as you land on his Kickstarter page—one of the most successful book Kickstarters ever—you see that this book was so good 8,297 people ordered it just through Kickstarter.
You're also able to pre-order through Amazon by simply clicking the button that Rafael added to the center of his page when his campaign ended.
His book's Amazon listing currently has over 275 reviews, almost all of which are 5-star, meaning his Kickstarter page is still driving book sales today.
By turning on Late Pledges, you can continue to make sales after your campaign ends. One successful campaign raised an additional $68,772 after ending at $595,442. Don't leave this money on the table—enable Late Pledges and promote them through your email list and social media.
Additionally, reminding backers they can change their pledge level can result in upgrades to higher reward tiers. In one campaign, eight backers upgraded after a simple reminder email, adding nearly $300 in extra funding.
Best Time to Launch:
You should be going on podcasts, writing articles that speak to your audience, being featured in major publications, possibly even doing speaking gigs.
If you're ready to start charting your book marketing course, contact us at Scribe Media. Even if we don't work together, we love helping authors in any way we can.
Book Kickstarters are no longer just for established authors with massive followings. With the right strategy, preparation, and execution, authors at all levels can successfully fund their books and build devoted reader communities.