Everyone wants to hit the New York Times bestseller list.
I’ve helped four books get there. And one of the most useful things I can tell you — from the inside of that experience — is that the list measures something much more specific than most people think. And for a significant number of authors, that specific thing is the wrong thing to optimise for.
What the NYT List Actually Measures
The New York Times bestseller list is not a measure of total sales, critical acclaim, or long-term influence. It’s a measure of sales velocity in specific retail channels in a specific week — primarily traditional booksellers and certain online retailers, weighted by geography and adjusted for bulk purchases.
A book can sell 100,000 copies in a year and never appear on the list if those sales are spread out over twelve months. A book can hit the list with 5,000 copies sold in the right week, through the right channels, with the right campaign behind it.
This is not a criticism of the list. It’s just an honest description of what it is.
What a Bestseller Campaign Actually Requires
A genuine New York Times bestseller campaign requires: a publishing deal with a major house (or a very sophisticated self-publishing setup with traditional distribution), coordinated pre-orders across tracked retail channels, a significant and engaged existing audience, a launch week PR campaign, and in most cases, a publicity team with established media relationships.
For traditionally published books, the publisher carries much of this infrastructure. For self-published or hybrid books, it falls entirely to the author — and it is expensive, time-consuming, and uncertain.
I’ve watched books with extraordinary content fail to hit the list because the campaign infrastructure wasn’t in place. I’ve watched books with thinner content hit the list because the campaign was executed brilliantly.
The list rewards campaign excellence. Sometimes that correlates with book excellence. Sometimes it doesn’t.
With a caveat, and it’s important: It’s an EDITORIAL LIST and not just a sales list. It’s been proven in court. So, campaign excellence is great and all but that alone may not get you the list.
Does It Actually Matter?
Here’s my honest answer: it depends entirely on what you’re trying to accomplish.
If you’re a public figure whose credibility is established partly by cultural markers — and the NYT list is one of those markers in your world — then yes, it matters. If you’re writing a book that will be evaluated by literary agents, major media, or an audience for whom the list is a meaningful signal, it matters.
If you’re a founder, executive, coach, or expert whose book is primarily a business tool — a lead generation asset, an authority marker, a speaking credential, a legacy document — the NYT list is probably not the right goal.
What matters more
For most business authors, these outcomes matter far more than list placement:
- The book reaching the specific readers who need it most
- The book driving qualified leads, speaking enquiries, and consulting conversations
- The book establishing you as the definitive voice in your category
- The book generating media coverage, podcast invitations, and stage opportunities
- The book outlasting the launch week and continuing to work for your business for years
None of these outcomes require a New York Times bestseller. All of them require a strategically written, well-positioned, properly launched book.
The Better Goal
Instead of asking ‘how do I hit the New York Times list?’, the better question is: what does success look like for this book in five years?
The answer to that question determines everything — the publishing path, the marketing strategy, the content, the positioning, and whether a bestseller campaign is actually worth pursuing.
In thirty years, the books I’m most proud of aren’t all on the list. They’re the ones that changed something. For the author. For the reader. For an industry.
That’s the goal worth building toward.
| The list rewards campaign excellence and ‘editorial choice’. Build for impact instead — and the authority will follow. |
____
Ready For More?
Traditional vs. Self-Publishing vs. Hybrid: Which Is Right for You in 2026?
How Much Does Ghostwriting Cost — And What Should I Actually Expect
What Happens After You Write Your Book? The Launch Strategy Most Authors Miss
| Want a clear-eyed conversation about what success actually looks like for your book? Book a free validation call. We’ll talk about your goals — list or no list — and build the right strategy from there. writewordmagic.com |