If youāre an indie author long enough, you start to notice the odd messages trickling into your inbox. Some claim to be fans. Others present themselves as fellow authors who ājust wanted to connect.ā At first, it feels flattering. A fan who loves your work? A peer who wants to talk shop? What writer doesnāt want that? But scratch the surface, and the truth reveals itself: they arenāt fans, and they arenāt fellow authors. More often than not, theyāre scammers ā and increasingly, their messages read like they were churned out by ChatGPT or some other AI. The indie author world is a precarious balance between hope and hustle. Every new fan, every peer who reaches out, is a potential milestone, a small win in the lonely grind of self-publishing. Scammers know this, and they exploit it. They rely on the desire for validation, the natural instinct to respond to someone who seems interested, and the habit of answering polite questions. Thatās the trap: the first message looks harmless, even flattering, and it lulls you into a sense of trust before the scam reveals itself.
On the fan side, the scam typically starts with vague flattery. Theyāll say they ājust finished your bookā or ācanāt wait to read your next one.ā Sometimes they awkwardly drop the title into the message to sound convincing. But hereās the first red flag: the numbers. Indie authors know our sales dashboards inside and out. If nobody bought the book, nobody read it. Any claim otherwise is a lie, and the more they emphasize it, the more desperate it feels to convince themselves ā and you ā that itās true. These fake fans count on the hope and excitement of the author, hoping that youāll ignore the glaring evidence in your own analytics.
Then comes the link request. āCan you send me the Amazon link?ā Motherfucker, if you actually read the book like you claim, you already had the link. Thatās how you bought it. Asking for it proves they didnāt read anything. Sure, the link itself is harmless ā anyone can Google it ā but the act of asking is never about the link. Itās about engagement, a foothold into your attention. Once they know youāll reply, the next stage of the con begins. Sometimes itās a push for āmarketing servicesā that are pure smoke and mirrors. Sometimes itās a pay-to-play anthology, or a supposedly exclusive opportunity that costs money to access. Other times, they just want to grab your link to prop up a fake persona online, pointing to it as āproofā that theyāre a real author or fan. The scam isnāt in the link ā itās in your interaction, your trust, and your attention.
What makes this even creepier is the AI flavor. These emails donāt just look fake ā they read fake. Awkward phrasing, stiff politeness, repeated sentence structures, generic praise that could apply to any book anywhere. Theyāre lifeless, as though a bot spat them out from a prompt like āwrite a flattering fan email to an indie author.ā Real fans donāt sound like ChatGPT circa 2022 trying to sound human. Real authors donāt write āDear Esteemed Writer, your literary contributions are deeply appreciatedā as a first cold email. That robotic tone, the absence of nuance, the lack of specificity ā itās all screaming that no real human sat down and wrote this with genuine interest. Scammers leverage AI to churn these out en masse, meaning your inbox could be getting dozens of these false engagements without ever costing them anything.
Then thereās the āfellow authorā scam, which is deceptively tricky because author-to-author connections are normal. They start with generic compliments: āI love your style,ā or āYour work really spoke to me.ā Sometimes they try to appear established, or they even name-drop a well-known author identity to lend credibility. Then they pivot to questions about your process, your genre, or they request your book link. The mismatch is glaring. If they were truly a peer who had looked you up, they would know what genres you write. They would know about the multiple forms youāve published in ā poetry, short stories, and novels across different genres. Instead, they ask questions anyone could answer after five seconds of Googling. Big-name authors donāt cold-message indie writers out of nowhere, so when someone claims otherwise, alarm bells should ring. And if their phrasing is stiff, overly formal, or repetitive, itās almost certainly AI-assisted.
Big-name authors donāt cold-message unknown indie writers out of nowhere, period. They have agents, publicists, and entire teams managing their communications, fan interactions, and professional outreach. Every email, every social media message, every collaboration offer is filtered, scheduled, and deliberate. Theyāre focused on massive projects, brand strategy, tours, and managing their existing readership. The likelihood that a bestselling author, with thousands of readers and a packed schedule, would randomly stumble across an unknown indie authorās work and personally reach out is effectively zero. If someone claiming to be a āwell-known authorā lands in your inbox asking for your book link or details about your process, itās almost certainly a scam. They canāt possibly be operating like that ā it defies the entire infrastructure and workflow of how professional authors manage their careers. Scammers exploit the possibility that indie authors might hope for such a connection, dangling the idea of legitimacy, but the reality is clear: big names simply donāt do cold, random outreach to unknown writers.
On top of that, big-name authors usually have traditional publishers, or if theyāre indie, theyāre so established they essentially run their own company. They have a brand, an image, and a carefully cultivated reputation. Doing anything suspicious ā like cold-emailing unknown writers out of the blue ā would risk all of that, and no professional author with something to protect is going to take that gamble. Their careers are built on trust, visibility, and credibility, and engaging in shady behavior would undermine years of work. And hereās the kicker: most big-name authors, whether traditionally published or self-published, include warnings on their official websites. If someone contacts you claiming to be them, thereās usually a statement clarifying that any outreach outside official channels is fraudulent. A quick check on their site can save you from falling for these impersonation scams. Reputation, branding, and clarity are everything for a major author, and thatās why these cold, unsolicited āfriendly authorā emails are almost never legitimate.
Once you engage, the scam script evolves. Suddenly thereās a ācanāt miss opportunityā or a āserviceā you need to pay for. Sometimes theyāll build just enough rapport to seem like a colleague, or like a fellow fan, before asking for money, favors, or information. Theyāre exploiting one of the most human tendencies indie authors have: the hunger for validation. We want someone, anyone, to read our work, to appreciate it, to recognize it. These scammers feed that desire just enough to lower your guard while keeping their intentions opaque.
Whatās particularly insidious is how these scams have evolved. Theyāre not the clumsy āNigerian princeā type emails anymore. Theyāre subtle, flattering, and personalized in ways that can almost trick the mind. They come with AI-assisted prose that mimics politeness and excitement, dropping book titles or generic genre mentions to look credible. Some even try to appear socially savvy, referencing supposed fan communities or indie networks. Itās all surface-level sugar, with no substance behind it. The difference between a real fan or author and a scammer is the receipts. Real engagement comes with proof: a purchase, specific feedback about plot or character, awareness of your multiple works. Fake engagement comes with empty flattery and repetitive, robotic sentences.
Indie authors are uniquely vulnerable because our world thrives on small wins. Every new email that hints at admiration can feel monumental. Scammers exploit this by creating messages that superficially look authentic. The AI aspect amplifies this: hundreds of messages can be generated cheaply and quickly, meaning the scammerās operation scales without risk or investment. You, the author, are the variable they test repeatedly. You respond? Great, they continue. You ignore? They move on to the next target.
The patterns are easy to spot once you know what to look for. Genuine fans donāt ask what genre you write ā they already know. They donāt pretend to have read your book without proof, and they donāt ask for your link after claiming to have purchased it. Real fellow authors donāt send template-style praise. They reference details, stylistic choices, or community context. Big-name authors arenāt going to cold-DM indie writers. When something in your inbox reads like a mix of empty flattery, generic phrases, awkward syntax, and robotic politeness, itās almost certainly a scam. And if you press for specifics, the silence that follows is the loudest confirmation youāll ever need.
Itās exhausting, but awareness is the best defense. Trust your numbers. Check your sales dashboards. Flattery without detail is manipulation, not admiration. Question every request for a link or a process explanation. And if anything seems off, donāt engage. Scammers feed on hope, politeness, and the desire for recognition. They rely on the fact that indie authors will give them the benefit of the doubt. Donāt.
Because at the end of the day, scammers can pretend all they want, but they canāt fake the truth. We see the sales. We track the shares. We know when someone is lying. We know when a āfanā didnāt actually buy the book and when a āfellow authorā is parroting generics instead of giving insight. And the more we call this out, the harder it gets for them to succeed.
Never underestimate the power of your dashboard. Whatever platform youāre using ā Amazon KDP, Lulu, IngramSpark, or another print-on-demand service ā your sales numbers are your truth serum. They donāt lie, they donāt flinch, and they donāt play games. If no one bought your book, then no one actually read it. That simple fact is a litmus test for spotting fake fan messages or shallow āauthor peers.ā Any claim otherwise should set off alarm bells. And yes, even if somehow these people actually read your work without buying it ā pirated copies, PDFs floating around, or illegal downloads ā thatās still a problem. Theyāre circumventing your rights as the creator, and that engagement is meaningless for your growth, royalties, or long-term success. Trust your dashboard. Let the numbers speak louder than flattery. In the world of indie publishing, your metrics are more than just numbers ā theyāre your reality check.
Even if someone actually goes so far as to buy your book, that doesnāt automatically make them a genuine fan or trustworthy contact. Sure, a sale helps your numbers, but if the person is engaging in shady behavior ā sending spammy, scammy, or suspicious messages ā that purchased copy can be used for purposes you donāt intend. They might be trying to build credibility to manipulate you, impersonate you, or leverage your work in some way that benefits them, not you. A single sale doesnāt erase red flags; engagement, context, and intent matter far more than the click that shows up in your dashboard. In other words, even when they buy, stay vigilant ā the numbers tell part of the story, but their behavior tells the rest.
Next time someone asks for your link or says they ālovedā your book without ever buying it, pause. Examine the language. Look for robotic phrasing. Compare it to your dashboard. Check for proof. Nine times out of ten, the person isnāt a fan or a peer ā theyāre a scammer wearing a mask, sometimes powered by AI, hoping to exploit your trust and desire for validation. Donāt give them your time. Donāt give them your energy. Reserve both for the readers and writers who genuinely care, the people who show up, without needing to fake it. The scams are real, but so is your awareness. The truth is always in the receipts. up, without needing to fake it.

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