Several months ago, I succeeded in loading four titles (two mysteries, one non-fiction and one short story) onto the Smashwords.com database (here’s how). Step 1 to my ultimate goal of having my ebooks available on Amazon.com.

Mobipocket.com Logo
Step 2 was to use Mobipocket.com (owned by Amazon.com) as my way through the back door into the huge online bookseller. After some internet research, I had learned that you could upload ebooks onto Mobipocket and by extension, eventually into Amazon, and you didn’t need Amazon’s trifecta of account information. You only needed two bits of key information: a bank account in the United States and a United States tax number. You didn’t need a US mailing address.
So I went for it. After some searching, I discovered that one Canadian major bank has a US version, based in Florida. A few phone calls, two meetings at my local branch and three weeks of impatient waiting later, one key bit was accomplished.
I must admit I was intimidated about applying for a US tax number. That meant calling the Internal Revenue Service. Yikes! But I pushed through, figuring I would only run into trouble if I made money. And if I made money, it’d be worth it.
Amazon requires one of two types of tax numbers: a Tax ID number or an Employer ID number. The former is really hard to get; the latter a relative breeze, which I learned with the assistance of a kind and helpful IRS employee.
So, armed with my bits of info, I set up my Mobipocket publisher account. I then spent hours and learned how to format, submit, preview, fix errors and finally re-upload my properly formatted files to their ebook base. A couple of weeks later, my three ebooks were up, live on Mobipocket and ready to be distributed to the Kindle Store when an email arrived from Amazon: the giant online retailer was no longer allowing the migration of ebooks from Mobipocket to Amazon.
I was angry and frustrated to say the least. My inquiring emails went unanswered and the online Mobipocket forum buzzed from furious publishers and authors from around the world. It didn’t matter. The doors to the Kindle Store were closed once again.
Now, I was going to outline the steps to publishing on Mobipocket.com since it’s a worthwhile retailer even without the Amazon Kindle Store link BUT this is now redundant since Amazon has just closed all access saying:
Effective September 2009, we will no longer open new accounts for publishers to sell titles through the Kindle Store or MobiPocket.com. If you have an existing account, there will be no change and you can continue to upload and sell titles using Ebookbase. New publishers with a US address and bank account can sign up to sell ebooks in the Kindle store via our self-service publishing channel at mobipocket.com.
Go figure. The above comment isn’t entirely accurate, because you need the third piece of account information: the dreaded US mailing address.
So, for those of you wishing to publish on Mobipocket.com, fuugghettabout it. That avenue is dead to you.
You can, however, publish ebooks to be read on Apple’s cool iPhone (via iTunes.com) and on shortcovers.com, Canadian bookseller Indigo’s nifty new site.
And that I will explain to you…later.
Tags: amazon, ebook, Electronic / Digital Publishing, itunes, kindle, mobipocket