tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-41284881383303738272024-02-19T22:58:59.652-08:00Self-PublisherA blog about my personal experience of self-publishing/ print on demand. Will build through each stage of the process. No links to my book or sales outlets, purely offered as my experience.Self-Publisherhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15202753872249861184noreply@blogger.comBlogger11125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4128488138330373827.post-40456836815278551872013-02-12T16:33:00.000-08:002013-02-12T16:33:01.561-08:00My Gonzo Guide to Publishing to KindleThe first thing you need is an Amazon account. I just mean the bog standard buying stuff from Amazon type. I assume you've got one? Assuming that you have, go to <a href="https://kdp.amazon.com/self-publishing/signin">https://kdp.amazon.com/self-publishing/signin</a> and log in as you would normally to your Amazon a/c. I wasn't publishing under the same name on my Amazon a/c which caused me some problems, but if the Amazon a./c is the same as your writing name there won't be any problems.
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Logging in brings up a screen which looks like this (although without the book titles obviously, since it's my screen!) <br />
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You'd click on Add New Title bottom left. You get what's shown here -<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg4waeKUyQ-btq3JSHubc10_YOx8sPRcnEq3fEk7_PR8UZzckZGWWI_7uhzfGbAGB7U-KhE-fx7uMlScOK1vd977wAqaYjD5phH8tC7CG-J2riUV09rkl7A3XWffeig8p9fIExT1odvVhRd/s1600/Picture+2.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="377" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg4waeKUyQ-btq3JSHubc10_YOx8sPRcnEq3fEk7_PR8UZzckZGWWI_7uhzfGbAGB7U-KhE-fx7uMlScOK1vd977wAqaYjD5phH8tC7CG-J2riUV09rkl7A3XWffeig8p9fIExT1odvVhRd/s640/Picture+2.png" width="640" /></a></div>
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This is a 2-page screen from which you will enter everything necessary to publish your book, from the text itself, the cover design, through to the blurb and the price. it is fairly self-explanatory and if you have all your materials ready, takes no more than an hour. Then you wait about 24 hours and hey presto your book is live and available to buy.
The first thing on this page is about whether to opt into KDP Select which I'll leave until the end as it's probably the most confusing, though ultimately it's only about marketing.
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Step 1 - Title. Make sure you type exactly what the title is and that this matches the title as it appears on your cover. This is what will appear in all the search engines and Amazons own listings.
Is it part of a series? Just tick if it is and give the series name.
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The next two are optional and likely to be left blank as you are self-publishing.<br />
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Then comes Description. this is vital, cos it's the blurb that's going to appear to sell the book on your Amazon page. If you've got a print copy too, the two blurbs should probably be the same. Draft it out properly before you sit down to upload your book on kindle, otherwise it will hold things up.
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Book Contributors - Anyone with a role in your book that you want to credit. Cover Designer is a usual one. If you've got illustrations inside the book, then you ought to credit whoever did those.<br />
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ISBN - Amazon Kindle generates its own number which is not an ISBN, but rather one from its own system of classification. But if you're doing a print version, you'll have an ISBN number which would be entered here. But then that means you'll have to wait for the print version to be ready before you can upload to Kindle. Maybe just consider leaving it blank if you're keen to get the book out and re-edit these Amazon details when the print version is out.<br />
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Step 2- Verify your publishing rights. Tick this is not a public domain work. If you're not sure what this means, click on the blue <em>"what is this"</em> hyperlink. These hyperlinks are very helpful on the amazon kindle site.<br />
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Step 3 - Target your book:<br />
Add catergories - you get 2 of these. One is fiction, don't use a second unless it's a really appropriate fit.<br />
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Labels or tags. You get 7. Think SEO (search engine optimisation) and Amazon's own way of dividing the millions of titles they have from one another. Genre is important. Horror? Fantasy? It can be both. Then you've got 5 others. Any sub-genre? Is it a serial killer, or humour, or historical? You can say novel. You could even say Mongolia if that's where it's set and it's important to the book. When the book is finally published, check these tags are on your book's page, sometimes they fail to show up. Readers are encouraged to add labels or agree with yours. The genre labels are important for getting in the right charts.<br />
<strong>* I haven't uploaded a book since Amazon said they were doing away with tags, so I'm not too sure about the status of this stage of the publishing process. </strong><br />
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Step 4. Upload your book cover.
You must have a high-res thumbnail JPEG design for the cover. You don't need a back cover or a spine like you would for a print version. Simply click Browse For Image and from there click on your JPEG of the cover.
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Step 5 Upload your book File.
Before you upload, you have to choose whether to enable digital rights management. It's about the rights of your book when it comes to lending. Read their hyperlink guide to make up your own mind.
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And now we come to the book upload. You have to have the formatting all sorted before uploading, otherwise it gets very tedious and time consuming.
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I assume your book is in Word format. <br />
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<li>Kindle will translate the basic html behind <strong>bold,</strong><em> italics</em>, <u>underlining</u>, <strike>strike through</strike> so these are fine. </li>
<li>You can indent lines to open paragraphs. But do not use spaces between paragraphs, indent instead to distinguish a new paragraph (as with print books - take a look).</li>
<li>Do not under any circumstances use tabs, kindle will screw them up.</li>
<li>Don't do fancy fonts - Times New Roman 11 or 12 point is advised. Chapter headings can be larger, size 14. <strong>But remember the reader determines font size not you. </strong>You upload a very basic, stripped down format and the kindle software transforms it into the size-flexible text that appears on screen.</li>
<li>No page numbers on your document, because the pages will vary according to the text size the reader opts for.</li>
<li>Don't right Justify either for the same reason. </li>
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So if you're confident that any stylistic flourishes have been removed from your Word document, that you have every one of the extra page bits you need, like contents (if required), acknowledgements, dedication, index, any of these you deem necessary all in the same document and in the right order, you convert it into HTML code. The simple way to do this on a Mac is simply to save the Word document as a Web page - I assume it's similar on a PC.
What you'll get then is a continuous version of your book, (a file called MyNovel.html) and this is what you'll upload to Kindle and which kindle will convert into it's own programme. You might just want to check through this to make sure there's no odd looking spacings or weird looking bits where you hadn't stripped out the formatting in your original Word version, and which comes through once converted into html.<br />
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Click browse for book and then click on your html version of the book. Then click upload. You have to sit back while this happens, the time depends on the length of the book, but it's not too bad. While it's doing this, it offers you to continue on to page 2 of the process which is all about pricing and stuff. But when your book has finished uploading, <strong>you MUST MUST MUST view it in the preview option </strong>- either on screen or you can download it to a kindle-compatible viewer on your PC, like Calibre. You have to check through every page, because this is what will be available to the reader. You need to ensure the spacing in particular hasn't done anything odd. If it is, then you have to go back to your Word version, fix it there and then save it anew in HTML and reload the new HTML version. This is where it gets really tedious, so try and avoid it by having the formatting right in Word. It took me 3 flipping months with my debut novel to sort, but that's because my Word version was cobbled together from different versions of the book over the 9 years it took to complete it. All my books since then have been straight forward in this respect.<br />
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If you get in a tangle, the Amazon Kindle forums are pretty good for asking a technical question and getting an answer.
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Page 2 is about pricing in different countries, whether you opt for 35% or 70% royalty and make sure you have your bank details that you want the money paid into, unless you prefer them to send a cheque. <br />
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Royalty statements are viewable at any time on your Kindle account screen see below- just hit reports tab. <br />
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Royalties are paid 3 monthly, except from the US - you have to have $100 worth of royalties before they send you a cheque.
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<strong>* I have heard that Amazon.com is willing to pay direct into UK banks, so this threshold may not remain in place. However, I haven't looked into this yet myself.</strong><br />
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Right, back to the opening question, whether to join KDP select or not. This is a service whereby you can promote your book with up to 5 days of free give aways (taken all at once or individually) and you get enrolled into a Kindle lending library. There are other benefits, you can gift copies of your book to reviewers. You have to decide if you want to do this or not. I've done it only for one of my books and that was for a global flash fiction promotion I was part of, otherwise I wouldn't have. I've blogged about my experience of promoting with free giveaways <strong><a href="http://self-publishinguser.blogspot.co.uk/2012/05/something-for-nothing.html">here</a></strong>: I don't think it works, but it does depend on the genre of the book. People find they get in the top 10 "Free Chart" for their genre on such giveaway days, but it doesn't last. If you do it, make sure you image capture the chart with your book in it!
And when you hit publish, that's it. 24 hours or so later you're book will be out & available to buy. Although there's often a further lag before people actually can buy it, so don't start telling your mates until you're sure it's actually there to buy. There are periods when Amazon is doing spring cleaning where the publishing thing takes 48 hours.Self-Publisherhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15202753872249861184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4128488138330373827.post-59444510503953834032012-05-19T03:59:00.001-07:002012-05-19T03:59:10.567-07:00Something For Nothing?A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To <strike>The Forum</strike> Marketing. I sold 150 times as many books last Wednesday than I usually do on Amazon Kindle. I say sold, maybe moved units might be more germane. For they were all free of charge to the, um purchaser.<br />
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I wasn't doing it as any promotion. The book, an anthology of flash fiction, has already been out for 9 months. The organiser of the inaugural flash fiction day asked if me and others would consider making our anthologies free as part of the events of the day and I said yes. Without imagining any consequence of just such a move, for I simply wanted to contribute to the day dedicated to promoting the profile of the flash fiction art.<br />
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I had to seek his advice as how to make one's book free, since I'd never done it before. First thing was I had to enter the book into KDP Select, which was something I'd also studiously avoided as I couldn't see its relevance to my work. After that the process was quick and easy, but I'd been advised that the timings of the 24 hours of your offer were taken from the US not the UK. I resolved that in order to ensure that the full scope of the 24 hours of National Flash Fiction Day were covered by the offer no matter where you were in the world (sorry Australasia, not sure if I covered you entirely), I actually set it up for two days, the 15th and 16th May.<br />
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So the offer went live sometime on the 15th May. I made not a single plug or announcement of the offer on the 15th, since to me it really concerned the 16th May's festivities. (I covered the 15th to ensure people in the Uk could get it for a full 24 hours of the 16th, being 5-7 hours ahead of the US). There was a link from National Flash Fiction Day's own website, but again it was trumpeting launch day of the 16th. And yet lo and behold lots of units moved on the 15th. Mainly in the USA it has to be said.<br />
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So what did that suggest to me? These purchasers could only have come by the book and the offer by trawling for that day's free books. Perhaps they did this every or most days at least. Perhaps they do it once in a blue moon when they need something to read and America being so large, this was the cohort who just happened to be looking on this day and in categories pertinent to my book. I wondered if those same people surfed on the 17th May, using their same search requirements of genre and the like, whether they would have bought the book for its modest price of $2.89.<br />
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Once the day of the 16th dawned, then the British take up of the offer started to catch up to the US one, though US sales continued to tick over. That was unsurprising since National Flash Fiction Day, though international, originated and centred in the UK. I even appeared in the upper reaches of the charts of Literary and short fiction on Amazon Kindle UK, which was nose-bleed territory for me. I'd never even bothered to consult them before. I was just below the likes of Victor Hugo which seemed fair enough to me.<br />
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That started me thinking about the whole question of promotion through freebies. My book appeared in the free chart and would no doubt disappear within 24 hours once the offer had ended. Therefore how much of a boost could that inject to its profile? I suppose if one were able to link it in to other things such as a press release, a video or live reading it might engender a bit more sustainability. But otherwise, nice as it was, I couldn't quite see the long-term benefit.<br />
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But then there is the greater boon of my work being introduced to 150 new readers. Even if only 5% of them were to read and review, that would represent an enormous and lasting boost to the book's profile on Amazon. But of course I have no way of knowing who these purchasers are to gently nudge them via social media. Particulalry those Americans who bought before the offer was advertised. I do have more idea of some who might have interacted through National Flash Fiction Day's site, plus of course my own endeavours via social media.<br />
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So what are the benefits to promotion from day long giveaways? Apart from getting your work into the hands of more readers, I'm not sure there are any useful ones. And while any writer welcomes more readers, I do wonder if the way of Amazon and Kindle shopping means there is a tranche of readers who maybe only want something for nothing?<br />
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In many ways I have no problem with that. Many of the stories in the anthology first appeared on my blog where they were therefore available for free. If a writer only writes to be read, then maybe we should give our work away for free (although there's still no guarantee that the book will reach an audience, though the evidence above suggests it probably will). But then what price art and artists in this? A writer is to make no money from their endeavour? Maybe that's how it is to be, a return to the days of the tribal storytellers around the campfire, entertaining their kinsfolk but maybe only for the price of their meal cooked on the spit.<br />
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We write because we love it right? That we choose to spend time at the keyboard rather than go out drinking with mates or seeing a movie. Do we expect to be remunerated for our time? I do think that art suffers when it is entirely drawn into a commercial nexus. That is when the main considerations have to be about commerce rather than artistic content. But maybe I'm deluding myself. Here's an <a href="http://self-publishinguser.blogspot.co.uk/2010/07/artistic-values.html">earlier post</a> on the issue of art and artists.<br />
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I'd love your responses to this as I'm genuinely rather baffled by the whole experience.<br />
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<br />Self-Publisherhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15202753872249861184noreply@blogger.com14tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4128488138330373827.post-55819730630475981592011-06-26T13:09:00.000-07:002011-06-26T13:55:26.712-07:00The Kindle AdventureI'd always been against e-readers. I'd regarded them as being about delivery systems and not content and as both my writing and personal preferences for reading are not about convenience or fitting in with a certain lifestyle, I took no interest in them.<br /><br />While I still don't possess an e-reader of my own, I have become converted to putting my own books out in e-format. I had always viewed, perhaps sentimentally, the book as an artefact. A solid, tangible thing, a collectible. Something that had a material substance in my bookshelves. I always viewed my own work as embodying everything about literature. That is it started with the cover and extended to the words inside as part of a whole experience. Some of my projects involve design and typographical elements and I was fairly certain their integrity could not as yet be preserved in e-reader format.<br /><br />So what has caused a change of heart and mind in me?<br /><br />1) Well the debut novel tracked on this blog has been out in print for 21 months now. I have been marketing it solidly for that time, but its natural cycle has probably come to an end. The kindle opportunity may allow it to have a new sales impetus, with a whole new e-reader market being opened up. A couple of Twitter folks have asked if it's in e-reader format and asked me to let them know if (and now when) it will be in e-form.<br /><br />2) In addition, there has been one serious flaw I feel with my POD experience. I am unhappy with the reporting of sales by my POD publisher/printer. I know I have sold more than my sales statement through conversations with specific readers via social networking. They have sent me pictures of my own book. Of course I don't get this from every reader, and have no precise figure of actual sales, but for example I know the declared sales from America seems woefully under-reported. I have asked the publishers to look into the last 2 sales periods, but other than an acknowledgement of my query, have received nothing. It is not clear to me if the problem lies with the printers, or the publishers themselves. I am highly disatisfied with this aspect of the service, but they really have me over a barrel. I can't prove anything. I only have anecdotal evidence. It has in truth soured my taste for POD publishing. Comparing notes with a couple of other writers who use the same service, suggests I am not alone with this feeling.<br /><br />3) I still only ever received 1 of my 5 filmed book trailers. Taking receipt of any of the others would be a waste of time and money now. Unless, a kindle release could be timed to coincide with one or more of these new trailers. Mind you, there's no guarantee I'll still take receipt of any of them as finished... But it remains a tantalising possibility.<br /><br />4) The joy of a kindle release now, is that I can re-edit the novel. Through doing live readings, I have come to learn so much more about my book. Performing it live really shows you what works and what doesn't. If I stumble over something, what chance the reader grasping it? The writer may let go of a book at the end of the writing process, but the book may never be truly 'complete'. This affords me a wonderful advantage of tweaking bits here and there and hopefully improving them. This sort of thing happens all the time in new editions of non-fiction, but non-simultaneous editions and the ease of reuploading new kindle editions allows for this to happen in fiction.<br /><br />5) If that wasn't privilege enough, the kindle edition can also come out with new cover art work. The tree edition cover was something I'd had in my mind for two years before the book came out. The concept was refined and refined and the POD company got the gist of it in their two goes at rendering my brief, if not quite how I'd envisioned it. Yet it wasn't their shortcomings that engendered a new cover for the kindle. The fault is all mine. It just goes to show the vagaries of the creative process, but despite me settling so firmly on the original concept, lo and behold after the book was out a wholly different and far superior image came to mind. It emerged out of my video trailers, an image I storyboarded turned into something I realised could stand for the novel as a whole. Well the kindle version is going to afford me the opportunity to realise it. And though I'm going to post here separately on book cover art and e-readers, there can be a relief that the e-reader format does not require a back cover nor spine, thus making a new front cover more palatable.<br /><br />6) I haven't had anything new out in the market place for those 21 months. I've had plenty of flash fiction on my blog, but that is fixed in situ, not something that gets distributed to readers. As a writer in the market place, I have had no new impetus for nearly two years now. A debut, then seemingly nothing. Well the first idea is to collate and publish those flash fictions in e-reader format as an anthology. But I am first and foremost a novelist. I had three other novels completed. One simply can't lend itself to e-format at present because of a host of typrgraphical demands within it. One is a novella and I'm still editing that. But the third is ready to go and had been knocked back by publishers because of its inflammatory subject matter, that of homegrown suicide bombers. It seemed to me that it could perfectly be pitched on kindle and sink or swim under its own auspices as to whether it found a readership or not.<br /><br />So not only will I be bringing out my print novel in kindle format, but there will be a completely new novel and an anthology, all released at the same time. Is that overly-ambitious? At £1.50 and £1 download price, I don't believe it is. Were they 3 print editions simultaneously released at £7.99 then that could well be biting off more than I can chew.<br /><br />I'll let you know how the decision turns out as well as the process of actually converting my Word document to kindle and how easy or not that turns out to be.Self-Publisherhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15202753872249861184noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4128488138330373827.post-36268563940211651322010-07-26T03:18:00.001-07:002010-07-28T02:57:17.341-07:00It's Been A While... Theory versus practice of book marketingGosh 9 months already, like a pregnancy coming to term. Although this post has needed to be induced with all the other things going on. Where did the time go? Why, into marketing of course...<br /><br />But just like London buses, no posts here in an age, then 3 come along all at once. One is on <a href="http://self-publishinguser.blogspot.com/2010/07/twitter.html">Twitter</a> and the other on the <a href="http://self-publishinguser.blogspot.com/2010/07/artistic-values.html">value of artists</a> in society and how we approach pricing our work.<br /><br />Don't think I've been idling in all this time fair reader. In fact I've never been so busy writing in all my life. This blog is the one that has been pushed to the back of the queue, as every week I'm writing a new 1000 word piece of flash fiction, posting to the <a style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);" href="http://www.spectator.co.uk/arts-and-culture/touching-from-a-distance/6107703/introducing-touching-from-a-distance.thtml">"Spectator"</a> arts and culture blog, posting a book review to<span style="text-decoration: underline; color: rgb(255, 0, 0);"> Booksquawk </span>commenting on blog posts of others and other people's flash (see below), making goodness knows how many tweets through both my Twitter accounts and posting pieces on various parts of literary craft and the ever-changing literature market here, there and everywhere. Oh and to counterbalance all this virtual world activity, I've joined not one but two writers' groups just to re-engage with other writers in the flesh.<br /><br />Very stimulating, very thought-provoking, very indirect. For while these each are I believe, a worthwhile endeavour for its own sake and all loosely bracketed under my marketing campaign, they are very indirect forms of reaching potential customers. None of them involve the book itself, but offer more of me the person and hopefully people will be attracted to the book by osmosis. But it's hard to get any data to back that dynamic up. Take Twitter for example, you build up a virtual relationship with someone you come to consider as a friend. At what point in the relationship do you drop in "maybe you'd be interested in my book?" At any time it can seem a betrayal or a manipulation at best. Answer, I don't do it.<br /><br />Before I go on to examine some of these indirect marketing strategies, I'll present evidence of a direct one. I have a 20 page sample of the novel up at <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">BookBuzzr.com</span> To date, it's had 5700 views. Now if everyone of those views had turned into a sale, I would have smashed my own sales target. Of course they haven't and I've no real way of knowing how many sales have emerged from this source. So this direct form of marketing, successful in its own terms in that 5000+ views is a very acceptable figure, yet even this is probably not having a huge impact on sales of the book itself.<br /><br />So indirect forms of marketing, a sort of getting my name out there qua name rather than qua book, is likely to have less success even than that. There definitely seems to be a giant leap from someone liking what you have to say about the status of the "hero" in the early 21st century in a blog post somewhere, to them being moved to stump up money for your novel. It seems a bit more than theory leading them to chase down the practice.<br /><br />I think there seems a fundamental flaw to social networking marketing. Because so much quality product is online FOR FREE, the discerning surfer can get their fill of really good literature (or art or whatever they're interested in) without having to declare their credit card details. Freemium may just not work as a model when you are starting out as a neophyte producer. Once you've achieved Seth GODin like status, then you can seemingly charge the earth for your product, but how to make the jump from one to the other...<br /><br />Sometimes this glaring reality bugs the hell out of me, other times I don't care. There are other forms of validation. Take a Twitter hashtag community called <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">FridayFlash</span> Every Friday writers all over the globe post a new piece of flash fiction (1000 words or less) on their blog and tweet it with the hashtag Fridayflash. All the members of this community are thus alerted to each others' work and they read, comment and then re-tweet it to their own twitter followers. It's a great way to get your work read, to direct people to your blog. How many of such readers are not themselves writers? Probably very few. So it is a validation, but it is writers mainly talking to other writers. And thereby that reflects out wider when you are trying to pimp your book, it is mainly a message sent out to other writers, who as we all know are penniless!<br /><br />None of this really diverts me from my original business plan, my sales target and means of achieving it. It <span style="font-style: italic;">has</span> however made me extend the period devoted to marketing from 6 months to 18 months. If it achieves anything, it's going to be via a slow build is the one lesson I've learned. I've still to receive final edits of 4 of my 5 video readings for example, and they were shot in January. These delays always happen and you just have to allow for them. What it will enable is a fresh impetus when they do land on video file-sharing sites. So the way I look at it is as a happy adjunct of the marketing drive, I've also developed these rather joyous online relationships, not necessarily with customers or dedicated fans, but with a group of people who are just fantastic to know.<br /><br />The other direct form of selling is via live readings. I've done about 7 now, always in tandem with other writers rather than solo spots and thoroughly enjoyed each one. Sales have been skimpy, but again that''s secondary because the show has been the thing! I'll post my thoughts on doing live readings here next week.<br /><br />So that's the update. A lot of sound and fury for possibly scant return - we'll have to see the results of the royalty statement due in October which covers Jan-Jun of this year. But it's been a lot more fun than I'd anticipated. And as I said when I started this, I can have no one else to blame but myself if it doesn't work out. Just so long as I know I gave it my all.Self-Publisherhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15202753872249861184noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4128488138330373827.post-53109733717574195672010-07-20T16:16:00.000-07:002010-07-28T02:56:54.058-07:00Artistic Values -What Is The Value Of a Writer Today?<span style="font-family:courier new;">Okay I've been doing this self-marketing thing for 9 months now and I'm a little puzzled by the conclusions I'm drawing.<br /><br />Marketing online is a great way to make contact with readers, but not necessarily a terribly good way to sell to them. (I think it's greater strength lies in a post-purchase service, by which they can come back directly to you and dialogue about the book and their feelings about it which is invaluable).<br /><br />Why do I say it's a questionable way of selling product? I think because so much literature is available online. A canny reader can surf and trawl and find very good literature for free. The E-Bay hunting trove mentality is very much in evidence. By passing on your book, which they've probably sampled (for free as you've provided it as part of your marketing), it may not be any reflection on your writing, but on your pricing.<br /><br />Which begs the question, should all literature be free? That the freemium model is the only way to go to maximise the chances of your book being read. After all, you've taken down one of the two major barriers to it being read (the other being visibility, pointing people in its direction).<br /><br />Two contrary points of view arise from this. Firstly any writer just wants to have their books read don't they? So making them free must enhance the chances of a greater number of readers, as there is no economic impediment to them at least starting your book. But against this is that writers want to be paid for their artistic output. It takes anything from 6 months to years to write a full-length novel, a great investment of the individual and one for which he would hope to be partly reimbursed or rewarded for. The only way a freemium model could allow a smidgeon of recompense, is to have a sort of special edition, print version, maybe with some extras not otherwise available. This can be priced way above the current cost of a print book, as it is more of an artefact or piece of art in how it's to be regarded. Personally, I think this is unrealistic unless you are in the upper echelons of the literati, when your signature is akin to that of an artist's on a canvas. That is what inflates the value of the product. And just a brief note on the freemium model; something that is on offer online for free, tends to put the purchaser in a mindset that it's of no value, and therefore far less likely to buy a physical, priced version of the product. If you've got free tickets to a reading or panel discussion of a book, it's no loss if come the day you don't feel like going; wheres if you've paid for the tickets, you likely to be less disinclined.<br /><br />But such issues lead to a far wider question to my mind. What value do we place on our creative artists in this early part of the twenty-first century? We being society as a whole. With the market and technology seemingly determining most of the options for distribution and promotion as laid out above, seems like the artist possesses very little value today. We are maybe being reduced to offering a service for providing reading material, rather than producing an artistic work which has some value over and above the cost of printing and distribution as in days of old. Artists are tending towards functionaries and costermongers in the open ended online market, with no special regard by society for being able to reflect it back on itself. In the current economic climate, with so many vital public services being cutback, it is really impossible to argue for any elevation of the arts through subsidy or other protections to be sought from government treasuries.<br /><br />Am I wrong in seeing this as a decline in the status of artists? With the concomitant loss of creditable status within society, whereby we used to be able to reflect it back to itself? Does anyone still care what writers think? Have writers gleaned this and changed the nature of what they write? Going down populist, non-threatening paths as perceived to be market-friendly and therefore sustainable, of escapist literature such as "Twilight". Are writers unwittingly practising self-censorship as they try and reposition themselves within the market? Have authors lost confidence int their own abilities to wreak some sort of meaningful art, because it is becoming increasingly difficult for them to gain validation via a level of remuneration that acknowledges their worth to society?<br /><br />If we give it away for free, we may get more readers. But they may not gain or give back any value from the experience. There has to be some sort of premium to any work of art.<br /><br /><br /><br /></span>Self-Publisherhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15202753872249861184noreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4128488138330373827.post-89259528366783805832010-07-20T15:47:00.000-07:002010-07-28T02:54:07.270-07:00Twitter<span style="font-family:courier new;">Twitter has changed me. Changed the type of writer, the type of creative artist I see myself as. Of course I can't ascribe any blame or agency to Twitter, that I haven't allowed to happen to myself.<br /><br />Watch a conversation between just 2 people. How their sentences trail off, or veer wildly along a new train of thought. How they cut across one another. How they are punctuated with 'ums' and 'ers' as they gather and compose their thoughts. Twitter is not unlike this, in that the time to type means you are both lagging behind past conversational exchanges and cutting across new ones as they appear. Oh and it's unlikely to be restricted to just two parleyers. But because it demands a rapid response, you often don't have the luxury of time to compose and gather your thoughts. Then the 140 character automatic edit may further distort and deform your meaning. Nuances can be lost in something that comes over as declamatory. Twitter has no time for 'ums' and 'ers'.<br /><br />Okay, so how has Twitter changed the type of writer I am? Like any writer, I am a magpie always on the lookout for ideas. Anything from daily life may be noted down, filed for later sculpting in fictional form. But it would have been worked on, chewed over, cogitated upon at length. Yet now within the exigencies of Twitter, I have started to react immediately to things. It's certainly changed the way I watch television programmes or sporting events. Now I can be sat there, laptop poised, commenting and critiquing live to the broadcast. In doing so, I can't be giving it quite the same focus as were I just to be watching it untrammeled by any keyboarding? The impulse seems now to just jump in, to react instantly and offer an opinion. How wise is it to unleash unmediated thoughts? It certainly goes against the author's tendency to weigh up and reflect upon his material.<br /><br />Moreover, just what exactly is that persona of you that exists online and through Twitter? Does it represent 60% of the real you? 75%? 90%? All of you? The latter assumes we can ever even possess full self-knowledge. Whatever the percentage, it is the amount you choose to put out there of yourself. But it is still just a persona. You almost certainly reveal snapshots of the artist you. The workaday you for those who Tweet from the office. The leisure time you as you Tweet from a concert or the pub. But what about the family you? How much do you want to bring in of those nearest and dearest who themselves may have no online presence? Those who are never asked for their consent to be mentioned in your dispatches. Kids and spouses become part of our Twitter routines, if we judge it reflects well on us, or even badly so long as it is in a comic light. I don't know, if you're at a bus stop and a complete stranger gets out their wallet and shows you pictures of their children, is that significantly different from what we Tweeters do? Authors are often quizzed about how much of real people in their lives they put into their books and whether this presents them any problems of conscience. Well you can probably double that with regard to Twitter.<br /><br />Yet it always fundamentally comes back to the words. The 140 character bite-sized morsels. Those that no matter how directly, may be silently, subliminally imploring Tweeters to go visit your blog, go read your book, to see your words at their full value, given proper breathing space to articulate themselves. And in order to fulfill this dynamic, the demands upon the writer are now to have fresh words as often as possible for consumption. To keep getting people to come visit your blog or view a piece of flash fiction or a poem you've posted. So now I'm writing flash fiction on a weekly basis, when I'd never written one in my life before joining Twitter. If I keep up the pace of one new piece of flash for each week's fridayflash Twitter hashtag community, then that will entail 52,000 words written in the year, irrespective of other new slightly longer pieces I occasionally pen. Plus weekly blog posts and book reviews. In other words, easily the equivalent of a new novel, only I'm not actually engaged on any current work in progress.<br /><br />I blog opinion pieces and my take on literary theory, usually as guest posts on other blogs. Oh yes, I also review books - it's no longer sufficient just to read books for pleasure, now I feel the compunction to express my views on them publicly. All well and good, but from the noises I've had in regard to all this, I am just as likely to be 'spotted' and possibly offered an invitation to step up to the next level professionally, as a blogger or reviewer rather than as a novelist. None of which I've ever yearned to be or seen as a career path I'd take.<br /><br />While that may seem churlish, I've never been someone of the opinion that all writing of whatever form has to be a good thing if you see yourself as a writer. This is purely my personal view, I certainly don't hold that it must be so for all writers. For me, I don't want to be a jobbing writer, maybe earning a crust that enables me in my spare time to devote my energies to my fiction. For I am all too aware, that the nature of the beast is such, that to do justice to the necessary professional standards of blog or journalistic writing, entails such an investment of time in its proper craft, it inevitably erodes the mental energy left for one's own work. I'd far rather earn my crust in a completely unrelated field, leaving me the space to create in a whole different mental space.<br /><br />So I find myself writing more and in smaller chunks. I find myself being far less reflective and leaving my material far less worked on. I find myself possibly betraying confidences from people who have no means of redress. And I find myself writing opinion and review pieces and therefore consuming my own reading material in an entirely different way than from before. An interesting question comes when I finally draw a line under my current marketing campaign for the novel and decide it's time to return to starting a new long project. Will it coexist on Twitter along with me, or will it be written in seclusion from Tweep friends and fellow banterers? I don't yet know the answer to this, but I guess I'll let you know.<br /><br /></span>Self-Publisherhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15202753872249861184noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4128488138330373827.post-42463908405879343152009-10-14T15:02:00.001-07:002009-10-14T16:25:52.781-07:00I think I might have a book outOkay, it's a bit hopping around the time frame for all this, for which apologies, but as of tonight it's all got a bit vertiginous. Apparently my book is available online. No notification from Legends Press. No sign of my free copies. But it's up on Amazon with a delivery time of 3 weeks (!) so maybe it's not formally out quite yet, or as formally out as a POD can be. Nothing listed on Book Depository and Waterstones, the latter I'm not sure if it goes to, the former, well I was advised sometimes the feeds for titles to be added to lists can take a couple of weeks. Barnes & Noble have it as available within 24 hours, so maybe I'll crack America before home? Confused? Not as much as I am right now. New Generation Publishing, the partners in this enterprise with Legends Press, haven't even got it listed on their website as available to buy. Can't see the feed lag being an issue for them... Oh and the e-mail I fired to Tom Chalmers at Legends drew an "Out of the Office" reply... Not because it's just shy of midnight, but he's away until Monday, so this won't get cleared up anytime soon. It's not even worth asking a mate to order one from Amazon as a test run, since they wouldn't get it for 3 weeks. Singularly unimpressed. Mind you, the good news is that there is also one used copy for sale on Amazon. Impressive, unless it was a test copy, how can anyone have pre-owned it? I didn't look at the delivery time for that one.<br /><br />While I've been networking like crazy and building the mythical platform, I could - potentially - also have been linking to the book. I'm not actually sure. It has been my greatest frustration even before tonight, to do so much marketing groundwork, but have to hold it back because there is no book, with no website links to attach to it. Right now I am holding back on firing off the e-mails to friends, colleagues and other biddable folk, as I don't know if those orders can be fulfilled. They were always going to represent the first wave, but now it looks like it's all concertinaing together with the second wave of marketing to strangers.<br /><br />I decided from early on that I was going to be as businesslike and therefore emanate consummate professionalism throughout all my dealings with Legends Press. To my mind, that meant answering each email without delay, not bothering them unduly with lots of minor queries (finally collated into 1 e-mail last month, see below) and not really getting hung up on issues and making everything into a battle. The art of the possible has always been my motto. Two drafts of cover art, so be it. Another few weeks delay because of typesetting, well then I shouldn't have sent the original with all those typos then should I? That I never received a date for publication, must probably be because there is no formal release and the times vary when each online outlet has it up and listed. All I had was, an email affirming that it's gone off to the printers, which means the electronic version from which all POD copies will be cloned, plus my small order for 25 copies for touting around and marketing purposes. I just assumed the receipt of those would indicate that the book was 'out'. That I would get my copies before retail outlets listed it.<br /><br />In retrospect, being professional might actually entail not conducting all our business by email alone. Plus making sure I got what I demanded from the business dealings, without being arsey about it of course.<br /><br />Instead I restricted myself to an e-mail of minor clarification queries I had, reproduced below. As you can see, number 1 "<span style="font-weight: bold;">When can I expect to start selling my book?"</span> wasn't one of them.<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Firstly, which online outlets will have the book so I can let people know? When do they start listing the book?</span> - <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">Amazon, B&N, you know the usual. each one varies when it updates its list for new titles.<br /><br /><br /></span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">When and how do I need to post the 100 word blurb for Amazon?</span> <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">The Printers send it on. You can change it and we'll pass it on to them to send out. <span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">To date, Amazon has no blurb, though Barnes & Noble does. Shame the book's themes are so damned British.</span></span><br /><br /><br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">I had an email from New Generation encouraging me to get people to order through them. Should I direct people to them rather than Amazon or whoever else? Does it make a difference?<br /><span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">If you want, but makes no difference<br /><br /></span>Is it true that certain outlets may wait for 3 or 4 orders before requesting printing up to fill them? If so, I guess I may steer people to more instantaneous suppliers.</span> <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">Never heard of it before and makes no economic sense. <span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">yet could this be the reason behind Amazon's current stated delivery time of 3 weeks? Doesn't strike me as a time period worthy of the term Print On Demand?</span></span><br /><br /><br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Is there an upper limit to POD copies (a virtual print run as it were?) Or is it continuous as long as there are sales and I pay the annual fee to keep it listed?</span> <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">Pay to play (my summary not his words)</span><br /><br /><br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Do I have to lodge copies with copyright libraries? Or does Legends do that?</span> <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">That's one of my free 10 copies accounted for. <span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">(I am already a writer with a MS in the British Library - of a performed play and after fobbing them off that I needed to rewrite it into the final script we performed from, I gave up and sent them an unworked script copy with slide on binding. Nightmarish visions of that being less Heath Robinson than the current enterprise)</span></span>.<br /><br /><br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Sorry to ask again, but if I could have the cover art so I can begin work on the press release and the credits for the video readings.</span> <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">This has been sent, but only the front cover and I would like both. The back cover is more striking (note to self, this may also have been a tactical error)</span><br /><br /><br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Is there anything else I either ought to consider or actually be doing?</span> <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">see below.</span><br /><br />At no time have Legends or New Generation asked me for my marketing ideas. Their response to the last question was <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">"Will have a think of anything you could immediately be doing."</span> They must still be thinking. Possibly even sat on a beach somewhere. I think at this point I can safely advise any would-be UK self-published writer, to ask to be walked through the process from top to toe. Face to face meeting might be an added advantage.<br /><br />So there you have it - which is more than I can say for myself or the book. I did kind of blunder into this whole process, but had felt I'd made great strides towards making my target achievable. Right now it's merely a bit of a false start, but what damage really has been done? It's been up on Amazon a few days/weeks and no one's bought a copy that's all. Yes there are still issues I need addressing, but I haven't initiated any of my staged sales drives.<br /><br />Some of the pitfalls and pratfalls I've encountered may just be avoidable if you're reading this and trying to weigh up going down the self/indie/POD process. In the next post I'll give you the pros and cons of self/indie/POD as I've elicited the arguments from both sides from a combing of the web for people's views on the issue. Oh and I did say I'd tell you what I'd settled on for describing exactly what way I'm being published. I'm plumping for independently published. While it does still contain a suggestion of a small independent publisher having chosen me, rather than vice versa, I like the associations with the punk rock DIY ethic from the late 1970's. POD is factual and uninvolving as a description, while self-publishing conjures up to my mind me sat there in my bedroom desktop and binding glue to hand. More fanzine than printed book, so I guess I can only take the punk rock DIY ethos so far. But for all this, I think it quite indicative that the expansion of self-publishing hasn't really afforded time to give itself a proper name.<br /><br />Final newsflash. The other Marc Nash, the lower League professional footballer, has according to reports on the Internet, had to retire from his chosen career through injury. The way should be clear for me to ascend up the search engine listings now. I just hope I'm not permanently crocked so as to have to give up my dream vocation like him.Self-Publisherhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15202753872249861184noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4128488138330373827.post-81685752249801575592009-10-09T11:58:00.000-07:002009-10-09T14:18:52.118-07:00The Gonzo Guide to MarketingSo marketing. Techniques to build a platform that isn't a gibbet...<br /><br />As said, one half-hearted blog and some posturing on peer review online communities wasn't really going to cut it in drumming up much interest. Okay, the video promos were in pre-pre production, but that was about the size of it so far.<br /><br />Step 1 courtesy of the wonderfully informative Dan Holloway @agnieszkasshoes on <span style="font-style: italic;">Twitter</span>, website<a href="http://agnieszkasshoes.blogspot.com/"> http://agnieszkasshoes.blogspot.com</a>. In one of his many product tested and recommended columns, Dan spotlighted bookbuzzr.com, <a href="http://www.freado.com/">http://www.freado.com/</a>. A free service in which you can display all or as much of a sample of your book as you chose, in a form where readers can have the virtual experience of turning pages like a real book. So superior to uploading inflexible Word documents for your MS. You can upload your ISBN number and copywright it on site. You can post links to websites, YouTube and a link will add you to bookbuzzr.com's marketing tweeting, though having just joined Twitter haven't caught my name in their despatches yet. You can follow the number of readers both statistically and plotted on one of those easy on the eye graphs. Readers can leave comments or become fans. Did I mention all this is FREE?!<br /><br />Step2 build a website. Meh. Made the decision I was going to devote the website wholly to the novel. It would tie in directly with posts expanding on specific themes or sources solely to do with the book. My more instantaneous and responsive posts would be made on my blog (see below). Now I will admit to a real dislike to opening up my thought processes behind the decisions that went in to the writing of the novel. To me these are the scaffolding that holds up the edifice while it is being constructed, but which comes down once the edifice is up and complete. I don't think they are inherently interesting in themselves, especially if you haven't read the book when they must seem impenetrable. If you're doing a reading and a Q&A to an audience some of whom will have read the book, then it is a different matter. But the website is intended as the first point of call for people to get information about the book which may or may not influence them to buying it.<br /><br />So instead, after the fairly straightforward intro and plug stuff, I write more about some of the themes in the book in a wider context that the book couldn't really go into. Some of it still related to the craft, such as how I came by the character's names and a wider consideration of naming in literature, but some range over the incendiary themes in the novel (the novel swipes at British culture in the 'Noughties'). For example, binge drinking is an ever present in the novel, so on the website I give the subject a fuller and more rounded consideration than the Cyclopean view represented by my main character. I can opt to do several of these sorts of spotlights, since there are a myriad of such themes throughout the book. The website is still under construction.<br /><br />Step3 <span style="font-style: italic;">Twitter</span>. I'd held off both <span style="font-style: italic;">Twitter & Facebook</span> as something for the kids. As a writer devoted to the word, I couldn't begin to imagine myself firing off 140 character bulletins and making any legible sense. A very sassy and sussed writer friend, Deborah Riley-Magnus threw down the Twitter gauntlet <a href="http://rileymagnus.wordpress.com/">http://rileymagnus.wordpress.com/</a> (and her wonderful new writer's showcase site <a href="http://whispersofthemuse.org/">http://whispersofthemuse.org/</a>) and some personal hectoring on her part, saw my will weaken. A conversation with a techie non-writer friend of mine, who consumes his literature by podcast, planted the notion that I could Twitter as my fictional character which intrigued me. The ever trenchantly wonderful Nicola Morgan on her blog <a href="http://helpineedapublisher.blogspot.com/">http://helpineedapublisher.blogspot.com/</a> sheared the last frayed threads of my resistance and I signed up. Initially I just had one Twitter account in my heroine's name and character, but while I could range freely over 'what she was up to right now', I was struggling to maintain real time and real people communication. So I signed up for a second account as the writer behind her.<br /><br />As of today, I have been on Twitter 13 days. The amount of information I have got from being pointed at people's blogs is huge. I have entered the various debates I've come across that are pertinent within the writing community. In doing so my desultory blog has taken on a new lease of life as I find myself writing every other day or so and posting. I am conducting my own internal debate online through my blog. So many aspects of marketing and self-publishing I'd never even thought about are now whirling around my head. The use of video not as marketing but as part of the literary 'text' itself (through 'vooks') being one of them for example. Thanks to the wonderful pioneer @namenick and innovative @revolucion0 on <span style="font-style: italic;">Twitter</span> for igniting my appreciation of the possibilities. Namenick's blog can be found <a href="http://www.passwordincorrect.com/">http://www.passwordincorrect.com</a> and revolucion0 <a href="http://www.29jobsandamillionlies.blogspot.com/">http://www.29JobsandaMillionLies.blogspot.com/</a>for her WIP and <a href="http://dontpublishme.blogspot.com/">http://dontpublishme.blogspot.com/</a>for the craft.<br /><br />But apart from the information available and the steers towards them from other people, the increase in traffic to my blog and <span style="font-style: italic;">bookbuzzr.com</span> sample are incredible. Now these may drop off, but in 13 days I have tripled the visits to the <span style="font-style: italic;">bookbuzzr</span> sample of my novel. Of course they might not read more than a sentence, but even so a hardened old technophobic cynic like myself is suitably impressed.<br /><br />Also the instantaneity of <span style="font-style: italic;">Twitter</span> is amazing. Spotted an Open Mic possibility last Sunday. 24 hours later I was doing a public reading. Saw a call for 10 line flash fiction in the US, by the time I was going to bed I was published online on their site. Am currently engaged with another author I'd never even met 10 days ago in an interactive writing project online. I had sworn to myself that I would write nothing new for the 6 months I was giving over to publishing and marketing the novel. In the last 7 days I've never written so much new stuff, albeit not all of it creative fiction. These new media demand you to pick up your own pace. I readily admit you need to invest a lot of time in order to maintain a presence in all these social media and that this week I have been privileged to be on leave from work and have been able to apply myself fully. This will inevitably drop off when I return to my day job next week. There is also a valid consideration that an unpublished writer pontification on their blog might be somewhat on the self-indulgent side. All I can say is that reading other writers' blogs, not all of whom are professional, has given me lots to cogitate on and evaluate my approach to the whole panoply of what writing involves. If you do post thought-provoking peices, it augurs well for attracting more people to your platform. I aim to be shooting my first video, not of a reading, but of a consideration of craft this weekend. Just waiting for some props to arrive through <span style="font-style: italic;">Amazon</span> to illustrate the argument on video...<br /><br />The quality of the information, the intensity of the interactions, the constant refreshing of one's own visibility, represent a huge step up from the polite shadow boxing that are online peer review sites such as <span style="font-style: italic;">YWO</span> and <span style="font-style: italic;">Authonomy</span>. It represents a step up in class, to playing with the big boys, the professionals and the semi-professionals, as against the hobbyists of the writing communities.<br /><br />Oh and did I mention, all the above are FREE to the user. There are no economic barriers to entry.<br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Bookbuzzr</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Blogspot</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Weebly</span> (website)<br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Twitter</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">YouTube<br /><br /></span>There is no excuse. Not even being a technoninny like me. The above are all simple enough to engage. I've set most of them up within the last 2 weeks, so there are not even huge time implications. I'm sure there are far superior versions for websites and the like, but I'll leave those for you to hunt down. These were navigable by me and job's a good'un as they say oop North.<br /><br />Next post back to Legends Press progress reportSelf-Publisherhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15202753872249861184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4128488138330373827.post-91846075465967858862009-10-01T16:45:00.001-07:002009-10-03T07:21:12.598-07:00Typesetting, Typos & TriptychsWhy is the word 'ectoplasm' in the last post's title? Well, at that stage, all I had done was send my <span style="font-style: italic;">Word</span> document MS through the ether. In my head no transformation of it into a book had taken place. There was as yet nothing to show for it. Now this wasn't a problem for me. This isn't an exercise in vanity publishing. I'm not interested in only selling it to friends and family. It's not that sort of book. If Auntie's easily offended ... So it's not about them doing me a favour, since I have to reach a wider audience. If I can build a fanbase and prove that I can move units under my own steam, then rightly or wrongly I perceive I have a shot of gaining a couple of rungs on the professional ladder.<br /><br />The calculations involved? Well I'm guessing here, since there are no figures that I know of, but I reckon the odds of going sufficiently viral to attract the attention of the profession, are no better or worse than the odds of your unsolicited MS being accepted through the conventional postal submission to agents and publishers. I'm not changing the odds, I am just taking more responsibility over the process. I am putting my money where my mouth is just as I had when writing plays. Having to stand or fall by your own efforts, concentrates the mind wonderfully.<br /><br />And returning to 'ectoplasm'? This whole venture has nothing to do with realising any dream about having a hard copy published work of my own. One I can touch and hold and put on my bookshelf with my name on the spine winking out at me. It's about unplugging the logjam and getting a career underway. The book itself will return to dust if it doesn't open up a few new avenues. I won't feel any pride in handling my own copy, but even if I fail in my adventure, I hope to feel pride in the efforts I undertook to try and make things happen. In such a scenario, the book will be a symbol of that effort. But I hope it won't come to that.<br /><br />So until it hits my target, it's ectoplasm. The secundines of ghostly presence. What is the target? I've heard the average sales figure for self-publishing is 75 copies. (Suggests to me that they weren't able to sell beyond about one and a half degrees of separation). Discussions on forums seem to suggest that if you can secure 2000 sales, it ought to demonstrate to the publishing industry that you are a writer who can sell units of product that they deal in. My target is somewhere between the 2, but closer to the 2000 than the 75 on the assumption that the consensus is likely to be in the right area. Even then will a publishing professional come a calling? Well, let's not toddle before we can crawl...<br /><br />That first e-mail back from <span style="font-style: italic;">Legends Press</span>. Mid July. Now I read about 50 new books a year. I should be fairly familiar with what a book looks like inside. But I was such a greenhorn that on receipt of a PDF of my typeset MS, it was a shock to see it laid out. In <span style="font-style: italic;">Word</span>, you're concerned with things like line spacing and indents. Now the typeset version looked like, well, a proper book. No spaces between lines. Every new paragraph indented. Every line of dialogue indented at the beginning. Even the speech marks seemed to have a greater solidity than those you get in <span style="font-style: italic;">Word</span>. If I had been 'living the dream' of being first time published, my idiotic shock at the transformation between MS & typeset book would have prevented me basking in the glory of it anyway. Oh and the second pagination cull naturally occurred at this typesetting phase. The whole thing was down to 189 pages, as compared with the 276 of the <span style="font-style: italic;">Word</span> version. Never mind the quantity, feel the width...<br /><br />Tom Chalmers suggested I read through and check I was happy with it. Another weekend filled with line by line scrutiny, this time of an alien looking version of my own words. I found 15 fairly minor typesetting errors, ranging from a set of speech marks pointing the wrong way and a double indentation of lines within dialogue, to a rather more serious spacing issue; I'd ended each chapter with a page break on which I'd given various recipes for cocktails. The typesetters had run these straight on from the end of the chapter, so they no longer served as a spacer and in some cases went over 2 different pages. I popped all these down in an e-mail in readiness for <span style="font-style: italic;">Legends</span>.<br /><br />But the bulk of that e-mail was filled with other errors. Typos rather than typesetting. A humiliating list of (count 'em) 87 mispelled words that had evaded all my various line edits. 'Accommodate' and 'miniature' were spelled wrong every time they appeared in the text. 'Philosopher' and 'alcohol' both were missing one of their 'o's'. I spelled 'epiphany' wrong which about sums up my chagrin at confronting this. Virtual tail between my legs, I added them to the body of the e-mail sent back to <span style="font-style: italic;">Legends</span>.<br /><br />So now it had to go back to the typesetters to put these mistakes right. Meanwhile I was asked for my cover brief. It was only through parleying on forums that it occurred to me that I would have to come up with both a front and back cover design. (Greenhorn goes moo!) The spine too. I had an image for the front cover for well over a year, so putting together the brief for that was fairly simple. The back cover, the one that has to leave space for the blurb, was a more recent revelation. One that arose from serendipity, seeing as most online peer review sites prompt you for some artwork when you upload part or all of your book. I basically found an image on<span style="font-style: italic;"> Google Images</span> and used that for the site. Now I could develop it to my desire and offer it as the brief for other to execute to my spec. So I didn't have to spend too much time compiling that particular e-mail to <span style="font-style: italic;">Legends</span>.<br /><br />I have no art skills whatsoever. Long before I went down the self-pub route, I had dabbled with approaching a couple of online writers with design experience in order to do some artwork, but which came to nothing. I believe some of the <span style="font-style: italic;">Legends</span> packages allow you to provide your own artwork to the published product, but I think you had better contact them and ensure exactly what format they require the artwork to be presented. Each self-publisher seems to have its own approach to cover art and as intimated earlier, the cover art seems to represent the biggest variation between each of the Companies in this field. Presumably if you provide your own art work, there are savings in the cost of the package to be made. But you do need to do your research very carefully.<br /><br />I was asked for the blurb about a week later. 100 words for the back cover. Or <span style="font-style: italic;">Legends</span> offered to do it for me. Which was interesting as they'd never given me any indication that they'd read my book. Certainly never commented on the MS itself. Now I was in two minds about the blurb. Imagine the scene - I'm sure you have countless times yourselves - potential customer browsing in the book shop. Picks yours from the shelf, intriguing title. Spins to back cover for the blurb - CLOSE THE DEAL, CLOSE THE DEAL! Of course they may dip inside the text to get a squint of your style. But that blurb has to get them there or to the checkout. I had two blurbs in mind. One was fairly straight, about the two characters and the dilemmas they found themselves confronting within the novel. The other was a far more punchy, in your face roster of the cultural points of the novel. Ie a marmite love it or hate it reaching out to clue potential readers, 'if you're into this, you'll love my book' appeal. I sent both options off to Legends and nine days later Tom emailed back saying he favoured the former which I was happy to go with. The blurb would also double up for the listings with <span style="font-style: italic;">Amazon</span> and the like which the POD printers were responsible for lodging. I did have the option of writing an alterantive blurb which <span style="font-style: italic;">Legends</span> would forward to the printers to send out. At present I've desisted from changing, but I might review that decision. I might offer the marmitey one yet.<br /><br />So text back at the typesetters. Cover brief with the designers. Blurb signed off on. All these processes well underway and Tom informed me he was away for a week on leave. Okay then, in the hiatus, time to turn thoughts towards marketing...Self-Publisherhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15202753872249861184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4128488138330373827.post-47593099171775319752009-10-01T09:03:00.000-07:002009-10-01T16:50:45.968-07:00Ectoplasm, Storm Lull and WaitingThe money had left my bank account, the contract signed, I was now committed to self-publishing. Hang on a moment, I'm not an imprint or a press. Okay then, I'm having my book published, but not in a way most people understand it to mean. I haven't been scouted and signed any book deal. I'm paying a publisher to provide a publishing service. This nomenculture is proving a touch tricky. But I'll need to work out what I'm going to call it when the time comes. I'll let you know what I settled on, via somebody else's blog, further along the journey when we catch up to real time.<br /><br />The first step was easy to figure out. <span style="font-style: italic;">Legends Press</span> had asked for the MS in electronic form so they could send it to the typesetters. A realisation that what I sent them would be the finished print version, sent me off into a final, final line edit (part 74). Found a few errors, but nothing too sinister. And importantly, despite being jaded by having read over it so many times, the book still seemed fresh and alive with its initial energy to me. But then enter my first anxiety. What format to send the MS? Hard copy submissions to agents specify line spacing and one-sided pages, but they tend to leave font choice and size to the writer. Although the MS would be reset by typesetters, still there were probably in-house standards they called for in the presentation of the MS. As I had undertaken the task over a long Bank Holiday weekend, I wouldn't be able to raise <span style="font-style: italic;">Legends</span> to ask them. No panic, I went on to a forum at <span style="font-style: italic;">You Write On.com</span> and conducted a straw poll of my fellow writers. <span style="font-style: italic;">Times New Roman</span> 11 or 12 point was the consensus and I duly converted my <span style="font-style: italic;">helvetica</span> and saw the pagination drop by about 30 pages. This was the first crash diet of two that the demands of printing brings about to your text. But it's nothing compared to the second one, more of which anon.<br /><br />Sent e-mail with attached MS and then sat back. I'm told mainstream publishing can take between 18 and 24 months, with the advance book lists and printing turnaround times. Self-publishing varies, but the prospect of 10-12 weeks by comparison makes it seem very immediate. Still, what to do next? Idle hands make for the devil's work. The devil's work huh...? Must mean marketing. Now I knew absolutely nothing about marketing. For years I had regarded myself as 'an artiste daaaarling', someone who could not possibly dirty his hands with corrupting commercial concerns. Well I knew as I was now solely responsible for sales, that attitude could no longer be maintained.<br /><br />Now we're forever being urged in this brave new world of communications, to network socially. Where once we used to got to do's and events and try and work the room, now we can do it all hiding behind an avatar and a name that wouldn't look out of place across a CB channel. I have a blog other than this one. Calling it a blog is a bit of a misnomer really. Spasmodically I posted completely uncontextualised bits of my work. From different novels. Not in any order. Occasionally I commented on some news story that caught my eye. But other than that I couldn't really see the point. The reason I write fiction is cos I can't be doing with keeping a journal, so why would I start one online? Nor did I want to detail my creative process that led me to the final text as appeared up on the blog. That was too much navel gazing to my mind. Obviously this blog suggests I have had a bit of a damascus conversion. Again, all in good time we'll get to that.<br /><br />Okay, a half-hearted blog read by about 4 people wasn't really going to scoop the sales. Back to the forum bush telegraph. Someone posted something about <span style="font-style: italic;">YouTube</span>. I went to take a squint, having studiously avoided all things grainy, downloaded from TV adverts and <span style="font-style: italic;">Pop Idol</span>. First exemplar was a children's book author (all these examples are from self-published authors). He voicedover his book, while all that you had to look on screen was the front cover and one other picture presumably from inside. Second was a high production value vid composed of animated stills, publicising a historical novel about the Romans. So there were Roman Busts revolving and flames burning and a musical soundtrack. Striking, but amazingly the writer didn't give a sample of the writing either on screen in print, or voiced over. A third was a writer sat in his bedroom reading from a MS in hand (I have seen a proper published author do exactly the same on Amazon).<br /><br />Therefore what conclusions can be drawn? Firstly, remember this is the <span style="font-style: italic;">YouTube</span> generation. They consume their visual content (and their music for that matter) very differently to our generations. That is, paunchy middle aged blokes reading from hand, a book cover that doesn't move and a repeated and somewhat contextless set of animations floating in mid screen, do not make for exciting viewing. IMhO, you have to give them the equivalent of what a pop video gives to the song it is made to promote. The Roman even neglected the 'pop song' it was supposed to promote sales of, by not having a sample of the text. So conclusion 1, it has to be visual, you have to give the viewer something to look at that complements and augments the words. Conclusion 2, one I chose to ignore intially, is that you can't make it too long. Apart from the fact that <span style="font-style: italic;">YouTube</span> limit you to 10 minutes a video anyway, vocalised words without the viewer having the text in their hand are quite hard to pick up in their entirety. Missing words might fracture the narrative sense and lose your audience to go back to Susan Doyle. So don't over do the length of what you put on your vid. And remember, the words are what you are trying to sell. The rest are there to entice the viewer and draw them into listening to the words.<br /><br />I needed to experiment never having been a video star before. I chose 5 various bits of text that were from works other than the novel itself. Some were short stories, some were snippets from other novels. One was a poem. Having an applemac, I had a built-in camera mounted in the laptop's lid. Okay, so what to do visually? Something that might make it stand out from the crowd. I decided on covering up my identity, be it balaclava, hoody, bandages or a stocking over my head. Each had a justification within the piece I was reading, but I was mainly after linking them thematically on YouTube; ie that nutter reading out literature with his face all covered up. I called the series "Guerilla Literature" and away I went. Each one was filmed in a single take as I had no means of editing beyond the opening and closing. I didn't want the MS in hand while I was reading, so I had it in the bottom corner of the screen, which means if you look closely my eyes aren't to camera, but squinting off to the left. Additionally, there is the slightest of pauses as I scroll through the MS and have to refocus. Also I had to be fairly close to the camera, since I am short-sighted and the various head coverings meant my glasses didn't sit flush on my face. Ah the technical problems to be overcome!<br /><br />So, 20 minutes to prepare the script visually with colour-coded prompts for me acting it out and positioning it on the mac so I could still operate <span style="font-style: italic;">imovie.</span> 10 minutes to sort out facial costume and maybe an appropriate slogan T-shirt. 10 minutes with the camera rolling. 15 minutes to play back and crop the lead in and lead out. About 4 bloody hours uploading to <span style="font-style: italic;">YouTube</span>. But that was it. That's all it took. Suddenly I'm a film-maker, doing a video a week, it was that simple. I've garnered about 575 views across the various vids, which is a lot more than reads they may have got on the peer review online writing sites. Not exactly viral, but a decent enough bedrock.<br /><br />Next I started to trawl through the novel itself to decide which bits to commit to vids. This time I knew I would seek to engage <span style="font-style: italic;">YouTube's</span> visual language more directly. No blokes reading to camera (nor just to the left of it). I would get a professional actress to voiceover. She wouldn't therefore have to learn the text since she would be off screen. And each piece would be storyboarded for hand manipulated props that would tell a visual story just like a pop video. Since I would be manipulating the props, I needed someone to film it for me. So that's 2 people I'm committed to paying for their time. As of today, I think I've at least sorted the cameraman, but it's taken an inordinate amount of time and I'm behind schedule. I kind of think it doesn't matter, since the initial release of the book will be me badgering friends and family via personal e-mail and trying to get some press by sending out free copies with press releases. The <span style="font-style: italic;">YouTube</span> campaign can come as a second wave. I've scoured flea markets and <span style="font-style: italic;">e-bay</span> for the props. Having resisted joining up to <span style="font-style: italic;">e-bay</span> until the book forced my hand, I proceeded to have a flame war with a<span style="font-style: italic;"> </span>seller for supplying me the wrong thing. We were arguing about £8 worth of goods.<br /><br />So if you know where I can get an imitation gingham tablecloth made from paper, or some realistic but not real butterflies that I can mount on corks, I'd be very grateful. Now I have to get hold of my actress. Shouldn't be too hard seeing as I used to be a playwright.<br /><br />Oh look, an e-mail from <span style="font-style: italic;">Legends Press</span> (by now it's July). On Saturday I'll tell you what it contained.Self-Publisherhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15202753872249861184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4128488138330373827.post-33435789769989583602009-09-30T08:56:00.000-07:002009-09-30T15:20:35.176-07:00How the hell did I end up here?My name is Marc Nash. If you google the name, you get a Lower Division footballer who plays for Hartlepool United. As an aspirant writer, my stock is clearly lower than a minor footballer. If we both strike the big time, just as long as he doesn't have a ghostwritten biography, we should be okay me and him slugging it out in the search engine race.<br /><br />I am about to self-/ independently/ print on demand, publish a book. Nowhere on this blog will I plug the book. This is a blog about my experience of the process of self/independent/POD publishing, offered freely to anyone else considering going down the same route. If you like what you read here as an example of my style so much so you want to buy the book, you can google in order to track down the selling outlets. Mind you it's not published yet. Hopefully this blog will build into outlining each stage of the pre and post publishing processes.<br /><br />Anyhoo, how did I end up being responsible for publishing my own work? I had been writing stage plays for 15 years with limited success. My greatest achievement was self-financed and self-produced. I put my money where my mouth was. Not that it led to any progression along the professional path. For various reasons I turned from plays to prose. For 10 years I submitted unsolicited MS, mainly to agents and a sprinkling of presses. Over those 10 years, fewer and fewer presses would consider submissions that weren't through agents. As I had with my rejection slips from my playwriting days, I mounted the form letters on my wall by my desk to drive me on to prove them wrong. Some are now very discoloured with age, but that's by the by.<br /><br />I had given up on the principle of cold calling through the anonymity of the mail and stock rejection letter in return. Online submissions seemed an easy and cheaper way to go, but despite receiving 4 acknowledgments of receipts from the 5 I sent to, a year on to this day I have never received any verdict. Almost for something to keep up the illusion I was still a writer, participating within my chosen profession in some meaningful way, I joined the<span style="font-style: italic;"> Authonomy</span> online writing community. Mainly lured by the pot of fools gold that was the offer of a professional critique from <span style="font-style: italic;">Random House</span> for the monthly chart toppers. I left within 3 months, (if people are interested I can devote a post to the pros and cons of online peer review groups), but I knew I couldn't just crawl back under my rock, so I joined <span style="font-style: italic;">You Write On.com</span>.<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">You Write On.com</span> is a peer review site, but one which provided the opportunity to be self-published for those who wanted it, through a tie in with <span style="font-style: italic;">Legends Press</span>. Periodically, <span style="font-style: italic;">You Write On</span> would invite people to apply for the service, and for £49.99 you could have your book published and available as a print on demand service, having been listed on the main online retail sites such as <span style="font-style: italic;">Amazon</span> & <span style="font-style: italic;">Barnes & Noble</span>. For £50, surely it wouldn't be beyond the wit of most to get a few friends to buy it in order for you to get your money back. Unfortunately, what remained beyond the wit of man, or me at least, was making head or tail of <span style="font-style: italic;">You Write On</span>'s blurb about the service. <span style="font-style: italic;">Legends Press</span>' own website wasn't any more enlightening, so I dropped them an e-mail with a couple of queries I had.<br /><br />Knock me down if I didn't receive a phone call from <span style="font-style: italic;">Legends Press</span> head honcho Tom Chalmers to clear up my questions. In chatting, I realised that I had missed the<span style="font-style: italic;"> You Write On</span> deadline and would have to wait several months for the next round. It was then and there on the phone that I resolved to try and break out of the publishing malaise by going down the route of self-publishing. It was no different from mounting my own play. Though it offered greater longevity. The packages Tom was chatting to me about were a bit more than the basic £50 deal and completely through <span style="font-style: italic;">Legends Press</span> rather than involving <span style="font-style: italic;">You Write On</span>. I'll go through the package I plumped for in more detail below. At this point I decided I better do some research on what self-publishing involved, since I'd virtually made a spur of the moment decision.<br /><br />I got the contract through from <span style="font-style: italic;">Legends</span> and researched some other companies providing a similar service by getting hold of their contracts. Legends seemed competitive on price and offered 10 free copies to the author instead of the usual 5 elsewhere. That's 5 more that can be sent out to Press or Festival committees. There were claims about the superior quality of the actual printing, but in truth that was difficult to verify one way or the other.<br /><br />The main variation seems to revolve around the cover. The <span style="font-style: italic;">YWO</span> £50 package gives you no option of a bespoke cover; you have to choose from preset templates. The package I plumped for allowed me to come up with a brief for a professionally designed cover. In time I found out that this was a two bites of the cherry process. I sent off my brief, got a first version back, but only had one more stab at it since the package only allowed for one revision. I was a bit alarmed during this process, since although the designers had got all the diverse elements of my brief down pretty well, they had combined them all into one cover, despite the brief clearly stating that one set were for the front cover, the other for the back. I'll leave you hanging in suspense (or not) as to the outcome of this, since I have jumped ahead of the sequence of events in the process.<br /><br />I signed the contract, put it in the mail and paid the fee online. Then I performed a final line edit on the text I was going to submit, over the course of a Bank Holiday weekend. Ready to go. Or so I thought...Self-Publisherhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15202753872249861184noreply@blogger.com0