Episode

He Sold 87 Copies—and Made $2.5M

Podcast
Behind the Book Cover
Published
Apr 7, 2026
Duration seconds
1566
Processing state
not_requested
Canonical source
https://share.transistor.fm/s/df9e7294
Audio
https://media.transistor.fm/df9e7294/3c2d5380.mp3
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/v1/public/podcasts/behind-the-book-cover-737349/episodes/he-sold-87-copies-and-made-2-5m
Markdown
/podcast/behind-the-book-cover-737349/he-sold-87-copies-and-made-2-5m.md

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Summary

If you're thinking about writing an authority building book, and I really hope you are, and you don't want to be counting pennies or checking your book sales all the time, you actually want a book that's going to change your life, I can tell you how. Just go to sevenfigurebooks.com. I'm not trying to capture your email or anything. You can just download this PDF that's going to tell you exactly how to turn an authority building book into revenue, speaking, authority, and no exaggeration, a whole new life. Alex Mandossian sold 87 copies of his book and made $2.5 million from it, which is either the best argument for publishing a book or the best argument against caring about sales numbers (or both). I've known Alex for years, and what makes him fun to talk to is that he'll just say the thing most authors won't admit: the book was never the product. It was the thing that got him in the room. He gave signed copies away on stages across six continents and every single one of his high-ticket consulting clients mentioned the book before they hired him. Not because it was a bestseller (600 copies sold, total, across two books) but because having it made him the guy who literally wrote the book on his thing. Alex calls a book a "credentializer," which is not a word, but it should be. He also has a collection of one-liners he calls Alexisms that are annoyingly quotable. We get into all of it — how he turned one book into years of content, why he thinks most authors completely misunderstand what a book is actually for and what happens when you stop chasing sales and start using your book as the best business card that's ever existed. In this episode: How 87 copies sold turned into $2.5 million in revenue (and why the math makes more sense than you think) Why every single high-ti…