Traditional Publishing, Self Publishing, and Vanity Presses: My Take On Things

This post, from S.L. Armstrong, originally appeared on her blog on 11/28/09 and is reprinted here in its entirety with her permission.

The announcement last week by Harlequin regarding their partnership with Author Solutions, Inc. (owner of iUniverse and exLibris) to create a new imprint called Horizons has thrown a new log onto an old controversy: the highly charged debate between traditionally published authors and their self-published counterparts. You see, Horizons is intended to be a “self-publishing” arm of Harlequin’s company, and the virtual uproar has sent digital shockwaves through the internet.

But the disagreement isn’t over Harlequin’s decision. Blog entries from both sides are decidedly negative regarding this move, because of the clumsy way Harlequin has gone about it, specifically, their intent to steer rejected authors to their pay-for-play method, and their implication that sufficiently successful titles in this line could be picked up on contract by other Harlequin imprints. (Outcry from the Romance, Mystery, and Science Fiction Writers Associations over this has since prompted Harlequin to remove their name from the line — they’ve rechristened it DellArte Press.) Instead, the announcement has merely been the catalyst in renewing the ongoing argument between the two differing publishing models.

You may have noticed I put “self-publishing” in quotes above. This is because, interestingly enough, what has reignited the war of words between traditionally published authors and self-published authors is a business model that is neither one. DellArte Press, like the other services owned by Author Solutions, belong to a third category called vanity publishing. This middle-ground combined the worst aspects of both models, and the benefits of neither. And yet, though both sides agree on this salient point, it nevertheless brings them head-to-head on virtually every other aspect of the industry. The arguments have, as usual, degenerated from discussions on the relative merits of differing business models to disparaging generalizations of self-published authors as talentless hacks and traditionally published authors as cookie-cutter sellouts.

I have made the decision to forego the traditional publishing model in favor of the self-publishing one, and I want to take some time to outline why I have chosen this way. But first, I think it’s important that we all get our terms straight, because the biggest thing that I have noticed among recent blog entries (particularly those by traditionally published authors) is the tendency to conflate self-publishing with vanity publishing. Whether this is intentional or accidental, I can’t say, but I think it’s time the distinction is laid out.

So, What Are We Talking About Here?

When we talk about the “traditional” publishing model, what we’re talking about is the process by which an aspiring author submits their manuscript to various agents, negotiating the sea of rejection letters until one agent agrees to represent the writer. That agent then shops out the manuscript to various large publishing houses until one of them agrees to purchase the rights for the book. The writer is given a contract, possibly an advance on future royalties, and the book — after revisions by editors working for the publishing house — is printed in large numbers and made available to major booksellers around the country.

By contrast, a “self” publishing model removes both the agent and the publishing house, allowing the author to work directly with the printer to have their book printed. I’ll go into more detail regarding the benefits and drawbacks of this method through the course of this entry, but it’s easy to see at the very least that this is, in many ways, an “easier” path to publication than the traditional model.

In between these two is the “vanity” model. A vanity publisher is a company between the author and the printer that facilitates (for an often substantial fee) the relationship between those two entities. Vanity publishers generally offer many of the same services of a traditional publishing house, e.g., editing services or cover art design, but only if the author purchases them for additional fees beyond their initial investment for the publishing of the book itself. This is the model that Author Solutions uses for all of its subsidiary companies, DellArte Press included.

Further confusing matters, there is the term “small press” or “independent press”. For most intents and purposes, these companies are the same as the traditional model, but the exact line that distinguishes them from a large publishing house is less than clear, especially given that many of these independent presses began as businesses intended only to self-publish the works of those who started them.

Finally, there seems to be some distinction being made in some recent blog entries between the term “published” and the term “printed”, specifically the statement that self-published books aren’t “published”, just “printed”. As I don’t understand what is meant by separating the two terms, and the blog entry in question failed to elaborate, I will be using them interchangeably.

Self-Publishing Objections — Overruled

Now that I’ve set down the terminology as I understand it, and how I’ll be using it, what I want to do is examine some of the most repeated objections that traditionally published authors have given recently when coming down against self-publishers and offer rebuttals to demonstrate the conflation of self and vanity publishing that I have noticed.

First of all is the statement that if an aspiring author doesn’t get a string of rejection letters, they have no impetus to improve their writing, and therefore, the work they produce is of inferior quality. Setting aside the simple fact that the average rejection letter is a generic form letter that offers no suggestions for improvement, the implication of this statement is that being rejected by agents is the only way to know that one’s writing could use work. This ignores the existence of writing workshops and critique groups, which many authors on both sides of the debate are members of.

I won’t deny that there are plenty of non-traditionally published works that are of a significantly less polished quality than others, but I suspect that the vast majority of those are coming out of vanity presses and not true self-publishers. My reasoning for this is that a self-published author has more invested in the work — business license, purchasing and registering ISBNs, etc — and, as a result, is less likely to be satisfied with a book that is not of high quality than perhaps a vanity published author who does not have to put in the additional overhead just to get a book in print.

Following from the idea that non-traditionally published books are lower quality is the oft-quoted statistic from traditionally published authors that “self-published books on average sell only x books”, where ‘x’ varies between 75 and 200 depending on how vehemently the author is speaking against self-publishing. I’ve done some research on this and have traced the source of this number back to an article that cites sales figures from iUniverse for 2005. Not only is this several years old, during which time the self-publishing industry has grown by orders of magnitude, but iUniverse is a vanity publisher, and so the numbers are completely meaningless when discussing self publishing. A true self publisher is a separate business entity, not affliated with an existing press, so it’s impossible to get any true sense of those numbers by polling vanity presses.

And the number isn’t really representative even when talking about vanity presses, either. The assumption from the traditional side is that anyone who publishes wants to sell huge numbers of books, and in vanity publishing, that’s not necessarily the case. Someone who wants to collect the faded handwritten recipes from their grandmother into a more permanent form that they can pass down the family is not trying to become a best-selling author, but the quoted statistic uses that single printing to bring down the average of those who are trying to have a modest career in writing. The reported sales also don’t take into account author-bought copies, so an author who purchases 200 copies of their book and sells them by hand through a personal website or at a convention doesn’t have those 200 copies added into the reported sales figures, but the books aren’t any less sold. But I digress.

The next most popular objection to self-publishing by traditional authors is that self-publishers don’t have the agreements with booksellers that big publishing houses do, so a self-published author won’t see their book on the shelf. And this is both absolutely true, and completely meaningless. With a large portion of book sales being done through online retailers like Amazon, seeing a book on a shelf isn’t the only way to find it anymore. Besides which, the online sales market has prompted cutbacks in many brick-and-mortar stores, causing them to reduce their inventory. As a result, many midlist authors aren’t likely to have their books shelved either.

Now, when called on these objections, many traditionally published authors — at least, of late — have responded with a statement that they are only trying to protect aspiring writers from being taken advantage of by an unscrupulous business model. Granted, this could be a valid concern when talking about vanity publishing. The marketing pitch from those companies is designed to make their products seem attractive, just the same as the marketing pitch for any other product or service that exists. Including traditional publishing houses.

But an informed consumer weighs the pros and cons of all options. It’s not the place of these other authors to insert themselves into the process. If an author wants to rush into a choice without doing research, then they have that right. Same as if they want to buy a timeshare, invest in penny stocks, or put their trust in holistic medicine. And this is the reason why using this argument against self-publishing is useless. Because true self-publishers who have had to go through all the trouble of setting things up for themselves have clearly done their research and decided on this as the best option for them. This isn’t something you can simply stumble into, or something that one can enter into blindly because of some marketing pitch on a website somewhere. Traditional publishing, on the other hand, is based on a business model that moves the nuts and bolts of the decision-making out of the hands of the author themselves and into the agent’s, leaving more than one traditionally published author in the dark about exactly how their royalties are calcuated, the fine print regarding which copyrights they have and don’t have, and a thousand other little provisos in their contracts that were negotiated for on their behalf by someone who wants a piece of the pie as well.

Then, finally, with other avenues exhausted and the debate progressing beyond polite conversation, some traditionally published authors will fall back on the personal attack: “Self published authors aren’t real writers anyway. If they were, they could get signed with a publisher like I did.” Now, ordinarily, this sort of blatant ad hominem doesn’t require a response, but I want to examine it a moment anyway. I’m not a follower of the music industry, but from my outsider point of view, I don’t recall ever hearing musicians signed to large labels disparaging independent artists as not “real” musicians. Nor do small business owners generally take flack from larger ones about being too “talentless” to work for a bigger company. So why would a traditionally published author want to use that sort of argument? I have my pet theories, but anything I list here will end up with me being flamed into a cinder by authors denying it and pointing out my obvious bias, so I won’t elaborate. Suffice it to say that I don’t buy this any more than I buy any of the other objections thus far.

Editors At The Gate

In response to the uproar against self publishing (which, as I’ve noted, is more an uproar against vanity publishing), those self-publishers have pointed out several flaws they perceive in the traditional publishing model. And while authors who choose that route, or the ones who have weighed in recently, clearly feel that the benefits overshadow the flaws, I feel it’s important to point those flaws out as well.

First of all is what has been called the “Gatekeeper Mentality”. This is the idea that a small number of individuals are in control of what makes it to the masses. In this case, that small number is the agents and editors. Traditionally published authors say that this helps the industry by weeding out the undesirables and ensuring only quality works make it out to the bookstores. However, my main objection to this is that publishers don’t pick books that they think people will like, they pick books that they think they can make a profit on. A publishing house is a business, and that means they’re concerned with the bottom line. There are plenty of examples of agents and publishers turning down perfectly good and enjoyable books because they didn’t believe they could make a profit selling them. That’s not ensuring quality; that’s padding their bottom line.

It makes publishers hesitant to take risks or branch out into areas that aren’t already established markets, and agents hesitant to represent authors that write books outside of “acceptable” subject matters that are proven money makers. That’s not to say that there aren’t agents and editors who won’t ever take a chance on something new, but they are rare. And if such a risky book does do a decent bit of business, you can guarantee that the next year, there’ll be thirty different derivatives of that theme on the shelf until the market is flooded. Meanwhile, tons of good books languish in slush piles and rejection bins because they aren’t part of the current hot trend. It doesn’t mean they aren’t quality or that they won’t sell, just that they may not sell as well, so they are passed over in favor of something more profitable.

Publishers don’t put out books as a public service. They do it because they want to make money. And they make a lot of money, especially when compared to the author whose work they’re publishing. With author royalties averaging between 6-8 percent of the net profit, and agents taking away a further 15 percent of that, it can take two to three years for most midlist authors to earn back their advance — if they ever do. The publisher, on the other hand, is netting 10-15 times as much as the author, and for what? Midlist authors, even those who have been around for a few years, rarely get any significant amount of the publisher’s promotion budget. Bookstores won’t make the investment in shelf space for an untried author either, so the author is left having to do the work of promoting their book themselves through conventions, websites, and blogs. And yet, even after doing the majority of the work, they still only get the barest percentage of the profit.

Which is not to say that the publishers do nothing. It’s just that the things they do, more often than not, are designed to remove all creative control from the author. Most authors, especially starting out, get no say in their cover art, internal layout, back-of-the-book blurb, or anything else to do with the physical look and feel of the book. Editors employed by the publisher get the final say on cuts and content to be certain that nothing that could hurt their sales might make it through to print. And since only something considered profitable would make it to this point anyway, an author trying to make it in the traditional world doesn’t even have full control over their subject, having to write “what will sell” instead of what they want to write if they expect to keep their contracts current and those advances coming.

“Some Books Don’t Deserve To Be Published”

So, given all that the publisher takes away from the author in terms of control and money, why do the authors continue to throw themselves at the feet of the publishers? From what I’ve seen in the recent spate of blog entries, I have to say it’s because of the sense of elitism that the publishers manage to foster in the authors. By creating this gatekeeper model, they are saying to the author that they are somehow “better” than the scores of aspiring writers that were passed over. And though to the publisher “better” means “more profitable for us”, the authors themselves seem to get a different message and think this means they are simply better and have the right to push their ideas on others.

Ideas like the one starting this section, which I have seen verbatim in a recent blog entry by a traditionally published author, are what I’m talking about. And that single word ‘deserve’ is what gives me pause. Some books are badly written, with poor grammar and spelling. Some have wooden, one-dimensional characters or confusing and unengaging plotlines. Some have subject matter some might consider offensive or simply in poor taste. And there are examples of every one of them sitting on a bookstore shelf somewhere right now. Agents and publishers aren’t in the business of deciding what “deserves” to be published. That’s more the purview of totalitarian regimes and goverment-run media conglomerates. Publishers want to make money, and they select books and authors that will make them money. That is their only criterion. Money, not merit.

And speaking of money, it’s not the only reason people write. A lot of the criticism levelled at self-publishers by traditionally published authors has to do with statements to the effect of “you’ll never make any money that way” or “authors don’t pay, they get paid”. To the second statement, I say if giving over 90 percent of your profits to someone else doesn’t count as paying, I don’t know what does. But as far as the first, it’s important to understand that not everyone has the same goals. Like many small business owners, self publishers generally have no aspirations to become millionaire success stories. They just want to do something they love, share it with the world, and if they can make a modest living at it, that’s a bonus. Self publishing gives them the freedom to write what they want without contractual restrictions or fear of being dropped for being less than stellarly successful, and it allows them to cater to readers that are otherwise not served by what the large houses are pushing out.

The existence of these untapped niche markets is another reason why the traditional publishing model shouldn’t be the only game in town. Because there are people out there who don’t want to read twenty variations of the same story just because it’s popular this month. And no amount of having traditionally published authors pointing at the New York Times Bestseller List is going to change that. Yes, some people will buy what’s available, and some of those books will be bought more often. But that doesn’t provide proof that there isn’t a market for something new anymore than the existence of the Billboard charts means there’s no place for the independent artist. Besides which, bestseller lists, particularly high profile ones like the NYT, are often self-perpetuating. A moderately successful book makes it onto the list, and then many people who wouldn’t have looked at it otherwise buy it only because it’s on a bestseller list, thereby boosting the numbers and pushing it further up the list. It says nothing about how “good” or “enjoyable” a book is, only that it’s been bought a large number of times. It’s entirely possible that a majority of the people who bought the book read it and hated it, but that’s not reflected in the bestseller list because its concern stops at the point of sale.

Lastly, it’s worth noting that on more than one occasion, the same authors putting down self-publishing in the most vehement terms will — often in the same blog entry — announce that self-publishing is “okay for some things” and even add that they “may consider self publishing a future project”. Which just sounds to me like the publishing equivalent of “See? I’m not homophobic; I have a gay friend!” Considering that the “some things” that they allow that self-publishing is “okay” for are usually non-fiction such as memoirs, diaries, or hobby books (for which model trains are for some reason given very frequently as an example), it’s more of a “you stay over there, and I’ll stay over here, and we’ll get along fine” attitude. In other words, things that don’t compete with the fiction that they write are fine, as though reading were a zero-sum game and any self-published book bought means one less book they’re capable of selling.

Can’t We All Get Along?

Self-publishing isn’t a threat to traditional publishing. But in a world where people can call in and vote for who should be the next big thing in music, a guy making Twitter posts of amusing shit his dad says can get a TV deal with CBS, and a chubby kid swinging a toy lightsaber can get a golden ticket to internet infamy, there is a growing culture of democratised entertainment. Rather than being forced to rely on the opinions of a few key people at the top of the industries as to what will line their already swollen wallets that much further, more and more people are beginning to feel that they — as the consumers of the media — should be the ones to decide what is good or not. And the only way that can happen is if they have the access to make the choices themselves without the interference of a profiteering gatekeeper.

Self-publishing and vanity publishing are two growing options to bring new content to people looking to discover the latest secret and be the ones who bring it to their friends. These are the people who relentlessly follow the new underground band from club to club, telling all their friends about them, helping to grow the fan base, and then abandoning them when they’re signed to a big label because they got so popular as to be noticed. In short, not everyone wants to be told what they’re supposed to like just because “everybody” liked it last week.

But, of course, some people do. And there’s room in the world for both.

And just to be clear, since some of these traditionally published authors claim that no self-publishers are saying it: I do not condone what Harlequin did, nor am I a proponent of vanity publishing in general. However, neither do I condemn the practice because if people want to throw money away into unscrupulous business models, they have that right. If they didn’t, Ron Popeil would be bankrupt right now.

Tomorrow there will be another, much shorter, post about vanity and self publishing, but I’ve been working on this for four days now and I need to set it aside now.

100 Open Courses to Take Your Writing to the Next Level

This article, from Suzane Smith, originally appeared on the Online University Reviews site in November of 2009.

Whether you are in high school, a graduate student, or a professional writer, there is [lots] of help on the web for your writing. [Communication is] an essential part to any career, everyone from journalists to managers to politicians needs to have an impressive [command of] prose. Those low on funds will find a wide array of tools to take their writing to the next level with these 100 open courses [offered by] everyone from leading universities to private companies.

MIT Undergraduate Open Courses To Take Your Writing To The Next Level

Start your free education off right by taking the same writing classes as the undergraduates of this leading Ivy League school.

  1. The Nature of Creativity : Get your writing to the next level by getting your creative juices flowing with this open course. It is an introduction to problems about creativity as it pervades human experience and behavior.
     
  2. Writing About Literature : Up your writing skills by writing about famous works of literature, poetry, and more. Goals of the course include increasing students skills in reading, knowing a single writer deeply, and encouraging independent decisions.
     
  3. New Media Literacies : Study literacy theory through media context in this course from ancient Greece to the present. Readings include Plato, Graff, Brandt, Heath, Lemke, Gee, Alvermann, Jenkins, Hobbs, Pratt, and Lankshear and Knobel.
     
  4. Shakespeare, Film and Media : A master of writing, study Shakespeare on film with this open course. Most of the work will involve analysis of the film text, aided by videotape, DVD, the Shakespeare Electronic Archive.
     
  5. Media in Cultural Context: Popular Readerships : This course will introduce students to the history of popular reading and to controversies about taste and gender that have characterized its development. Learn how to write for both men and women, different tastes, and more by taking this open course.
     
  6. International Women’s Voices : Learn how to take your writing to the next level by studying these leading women in history. Contemporary women writers studied will be from Asia, Africa, the Middle East, Latin America, and North America.
     
  7. The Linguistic Study of Bilingualism : If you speak more than one language and want to improve your writing, try this course. It examines the development of bilingualism in human history from Lucy to present day.
     
  8. Expository Writing for Bilingual Students : Similar to the above, this course specifically targets student’s abilities to write in two or more languages. It includes an extensive set of general writing guide handouts, located in the study materials section.
     
  9. Foreign Languages and Literatures : Examine the terms “avant garde” and “Kulturindustrie” in French and German culture of the early twentieth century through this open course. Figures considered include everyone from Adorno to Tzara.
     
  10. Advanced Spanish Conversation and Composition : This course examines perspectives on technology and culture in the language of Spanish. For fluent speakers only, students work on taking both their speaking and writing to the next level.
     
  11. Philosophy in Film and Other Media : See how philosophers have influenced writing and other media with this open course. It examines works of film in relation to thematic issues of philosophical importance that also occur in other arts, particularly literature and opera.
     
  12. The Art of the Probable: Literature and Probability : The objective of this open course is to focus on the formal, thematic, and rhetorical features that imaginative literature shares with texts in the history of probability. These issues include the causes for phenomena that are knowable only in their effects and the question of what it means to think and act rationally in an uncertain world.
     
  13. Technologies of Humanism : This open course explores the properties of narratives as they have evolved from print to digital media. Works covered range from the Talmud, classics of non-linear novels, experimental literature, early sound and film experiments to recent multi-linear and interactive films and games.

Read the rest of the article, which provides information and links for 87 additional free, online courses and seminars in writing, literature, communication, how to use software programs (a big help in the author platform area) and much more, offered by such respected names as MIT, Hewlett Packard, the United States Small Business Administration, Microsoft, Adobe and more, on the Online University Reviews site.

Et Tu, Indie Author?

In which Publetariat founder and Editor in Chief April L. Hamilton explains her decision to go the mainstream publication route with a revised and updated edition of her originally self-published book, The IndieAuthor Guide.

I am a maven of self-publishing. I believe that in today’s world, in most cases, there’s not much of great value a traditional publisher can do to help a previously unknown, debut author reach her goals that the author can’t do on her own. Advances are down, publisher-funded promotional budgets are slim to nonexistent, and brick-and-mortar bookstore distribution is no longer the crucial linchpin for driving book sales that it once was. In fact, in the few weeks since I first drafted this post Borders UK has gone into receivership.

I’ve also recently come to learn, much to my shock and dismay, that mainstream publication isn’t the surefire path to solvency and a career in authorship so many aspiring authors assume it to be—even if your book is successful enough to land on the New York Times Bestseller List. Even if many of your books land on that list, it seems your net annual earnings on a given book will likely be no better than the wages of a typical fast food restaurant manager. Now that Lynne Viehl and some other mainstream-published authors are going public about their earnings, the conspiracy of silence among authors is being slowly but surely dismantled and the truth is nothing short of mind-blowing. It’s now all too obvious that for the most part, the only authors who are earning a comfortable living off their books are those who have become cultural phenomena, those around whom entire cottage industries of movies and merchandise have sprung up (e.g., Stephanie Meyer, Stephen Covey, Stephen King, JK Rowling, et al.) and those who were already cultural phenomena before they published (e.g., Sarah Palin).

The problem is, most aspiring authors have unrealistic goals for their books and assume a mainstream publisher will be doing all sorts of things for them that aren’t really in the cards at all. They think signing a contract entitles them to a sizable advance, a significant promotional budget and effort on the publisher’s part, editorial reviews in major magazines and newspapers and on important websites, and possibly a book tour as well. Unless you’re a celebrity or otherwise notorious individual, or someone around whom buzz has built up for some reason, none of these things are likely to happen. Once you realize:

– the great majority of mainstream-published books never even earn back their advances (which means most debut authors have more trouble selling their second book than their first, if they can sell it at all),

– even if you manage to hit the NYT Bestseller List you aren’t likely to see a commensurate uptick in your standard of living,

– and something on the order of just 5% of all mainstream-published authors are capable of earning a living from their book royalties alone (and most of that 5% has a name like King, Rowling, Meyer or Brown),

you stop seeing stars and start getting down to brass tacks. Your goals become far more realistic and attainable. You begin to understand that the decision between self-publishing and mainstream publishing comes down to choosing the path that is the most likely to bring your newly-downsized goals to fruition. If one of your goals is to earn a profit on your book, the decision of whether or not to self-publish is a business decision, nothing more nor less. Particularly in light of recent revelations about what mainstream-published authors really earn, it should be a very easy thing to divorce this decision from considerations of status or “legitimacy”.

So why am I working with Writer’s Digest Books on the release of an updated and revised edition of my book, The IndieAuthor Guide, for publication in 2010?

Maven of self-pub I may be, but even I realize self-pub is just one option among several for getting one’s work to a readership. Though I honestly believe it’s the most practical option for most debut authors in today’s chilly trade publishing environment, self-pub is just a means to an end—and the end is the thing that matters.

When I wrote and self-published The IndieAuthor Guide, my goal was simple: for the book to reach as large an audience of would-be indie authors as possible. It wasn’t even truly about sales, it was about getting good information out there to—ideally—every would-be self-published author out there before they went down the path of misinformation and made all kinds of costly mistakes that could doom their books to failure (and themselves to incurring unnecessary expense).

Working with Writer’s Digest Books will not get me a whopping advance, book tour, nor any of those other pie-in-the-sky things aspiring authors dream of, but it will do far more to help me reach my goal of maximizing readership than I could possibly do on my own.

Writer’s Digest is a brand that’s known and trusted by writers the world over. Writer’s Digest is a source authors specifically seek out when they want trustworthy, clear, and helpful information that will help them with craft and career. Having my book released under WD’s aegis grants a tacit endorsement from WD of the book’s value to authors, and that will increase author interest in the book.

Writer’s Digest Books is an imprint that specializes in books for authors and about writing. Their title list is small and highly specialized, WD Books’ staff are experts in how best to reach their target demographic of authors and in this case, their target demo is the same as mine. Had I signed with say, Random House or Penguin, or even Workman, there wouldn’t be any Books Especially Written For And Marketed To Authors department backing my play.

WD puts out multiple periodicals, holds numerous events for writers, and has a sprawling, dynamic and forward-thinking web presence. WD cross-promotes its various product lines across all its available venues, resulting in a highly-targeted and low-cost approach to advertising. WD further promotes all of its books by making them available for sale through its own book club and at its writer events. I will still need to keep up my own promotional efforts of course, but I know WD will be every bit as invested as I am in ensuring writers everywhere know my book exists, and that they know how it can help them.

WD is no ivory-tower monolith of the “old ways” of publishing, its staff are quick to adapt to market and technological shifts in publishing, and WD was among the first to recognize the potential of self-publishing to help authors, both aspiring and established, reach their goals.

Long story short: I couldn’t possibly find a more desirable publisher for The IndieAuthor Guide than Writer’s Digest Books, and that’s including myself.

My self-published novels are another story, however. I can’t imagine signing either of them over for mainstream publication, but if the publisher were to guarantee me major promotional backing—in writing—, I might consider it. I’d also consider it if I’d already built up a bunch of buzz around the book, or had an offer in hand for a film adaptation, because that’s a scenario in which the book would already be at the tipping point of success and a nudge from a publisher could pump up the book’s momentum. But, given my total-nobody status in published fiction circles, none of this is likely to happen anytime soon.

Another instance where I think it would make sense for an author to sign a mainstream publishing contract for a novel is if a huge advance is on offer, and the author wants that chunk of money more than he wants longevity for his book. Mainstream publication with a huge advance means the author better hustle and invest heavily in book promotion, because if the book doesn’t earn back the advance the author’s mainstream publication career is over. Now, if the publisher is offering enough money upfront that the author can move to Bora Bora and live like royalty for the rest of her days, maybe she doesn’t care too much about the book’s ultimate performance, or whether or not she ever gets another book published by the mainstream.

Finally, it seems to me that self-pub versus mainstream pub is no longer an either-or proposition; increasing numbers of authors are successfully straddling that line to do both. Whether it’s about getting one’s back catalog back into print, publishing something one’s publisher has rejected due to market concerns, making one’s print edition works available in ebook or podcast formats when one’s publisher hasn’t elected to release them in those formats (and the author has retained the rights to do so himself), building momentum for an upcoming release, or simply reaching a readership through any means necessary, such familiar names as Stephen King, JA Konrath, Cory Doctorow and Piers Anthony have self-published, or are currently self-publishing.

I will continue to bang the self-publishing drum and provide whatever information and assistance I can to self-publishers for the sake of raising awareness and dispelling myths, but that doesn’t mean I’ve taken a hard line stance against going the mainstream route. That’s an author-by-author, book-by-book, or even format-by-format decision each of us must make. So long as the author is making an informed decision, neither option is any more or less valid than the other.

This is a cross-posting from  April L. Hamilton’s Indie Author Blog.

Why Booksellers Must Become Destination Marketing Oriented

What is Destination Marketing?

It is creating your business in such a manner that people want to come to it to have fun and be entertained. Whole downtowns can band together to create fun-to -shop places as a theme for their business community. There are plenty of stories about the big box chain bookstores driving the Mom and Pop bookstores out of business. How can the little guys compete and survive? By becoming a shopping destination.

My bookstore, The Book Barn, is a small store. It is literally a Mom and Pop operation, since 1979—just my wife and myself. It was 10 years or so ago that we first learned about destination marketing. We began having many more events at our store—author chats & signings and historical events such as The America Girls. We got better at these until we began to win national and State Governor awards for our events. More importantly, the word of mouth started getting around. The Book Barn was an interesting and fun place to be. Despite the economy, the price of gas, and 3 big box bookstores within 15-20 miles, our business began improving. Just as important, businesses around us began to understand what we were trying to do and started working on their events.

Two plus years ago, we decided to expand the scope of our next Harry Potter release party. It was difficult, but we talked the businesses on our block to work with us to create a Diagon Alley experience. The newspaper printed a special edition of the Daily Prophet and handed them out at the event. We had a HP movie playing outside. Over 2,000 people, many in costume ,came. Click here to see many pictures of people having a very good time. Ask yourself the following questions:

  • If they had a really fun experience in our downtown, would they leave with a good impression?
     
  • Are they more likely to return to shop?
     
  • Are they going to tell others about the fun time they had?

By putting this together and succeeding, the businesses around became more likely to join us in future events and have done so

In addition we have author book chats and signings, music & poetry events, and finally, we have historic events where we talk about a time frame, play & sing music from that time, play games from then, work on art/craft projects centered around the theme, and eat snacks common to the time and culture—a surround sound context. The kids and the parents love it. We ask for food or school supply donations for our local social care organizations

We have a wonderful Yellow Lab, Tucker, who greets everybody and loves up to them. Some bring in their dogs to meet and play with Tucker. We have had both dog and cat theme events featuring animal books and activities. We ask for treat and food donations for the animal shelter and the new dog park the city is building.

Do you see a pattern here?

We want people to see our store as a happy, happening place. We are not alone in this. Look at Rainy Day Books in Kansas City. They have stupendous lecture/signing events in cooperation with the Unity Church near their store. They draw huge crowds for national and international-level speakers and authors and sell a lot of books. The Wild Rumpus, a wacky children’s bookstore in Minneapolis, creates a wonderful, child-appealing atmosphere. There are live chickens and rabbits running around the store. In the middle of the mid-level book section, there is a small log cabin. Inside, there is a foot-wide plexiglass covering of a 10′ long trench which is lit up and contains white rats running back and forth under the floor. When you go into the unisex bathroom, watch what happens to the mirror over the sink when the light goes out—whoa, there is a beautiful aquarium filled with colorful tropical fish behind the mirror showing through.

The Bottom Line

For the smaller stores to compete there a number of things they can do; however, becoming a destination for people who want to come there is absolutely critical. The same can be said for websites. Make them interesting and fun to come to. People tend to share two things with their friends: great experiences and terrible experiences. Be sure you’re in the first category. Providing a good time while giving great service is essential.

 

This is a cross-posting from Bob Spear’s Book Trends blog.

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A Small Annoyance…

Last evening, while watching what now passes for "news", I  sat through a new commercial for the new, Mitsubishi…"whatever".  LIke every other automobile commerical currently running, it featured the car as the addition to the proper, targeted (insert name here implying young, urban, upwardly mobile) lifestyle. 

There should have been people in the commercial — happily enjoying the ride, but thanks to the miracle of modern computer image manipulation and animation, only walking, talking "collections of personal accessories" including cellphones, sunglasses and headsets actually walked over from the curb and got in the car to drive away.

The people were rendered invisible, just their accessories were seen. In other words, you are what you …buy.

I guess the idea was that for the targeted market, this vehicle is just another accessory that confers status upon the owner by virtue of their having purchased it.  Yes, and of course, using it, plainly, for all to see.  What’s missing was the owner.

Of course, it didn’t offend me personally, as it was clearly targeted to a much more acquisition-oriented, younger market.  It made me laugh at first, then I began comparing it to other equally ridiculous automobile advertising, such as "My Name Is Ram. My tank is full."  I mean, who was the genius who penned that trainwreck, anyway? But if I were in my late 20s, and strove upwardly to attain the proper position in life, I would have been offended that "I" didn’t really count so long as my money could be spent.  Man as credit balance.

I really hope that my grandsons can appreciate how transparent this is all becoming.  At least in my day, the marketeers and hucksters gave you a show along with your snake oil.  Now, you’re expected to begin valuing yourself based upon which products you fall prey to.  That doesn’t bode too well for the future, does it? It seems to set us up for the day where the job of the self-appointed Gohhead will be to churn out a variety of products, and our job as the new serfs will be to gobble them up. Bon Appetit!

Small Ads Can be Beautiful and Work, too!


Let’s talk about producing an ad design for your book. You’ve already assembled your media information, and narrowed down the potential venues to the ones you believe will give you the best targeted exposure for your money. On one side, you’ve got a list of the venues, sizes and color considerations that fit your budget. On the other, you’ve listed your “If only…” publications and online venues. These are usually places you’d like to see your ad based upon such careful research as “Wouldn’t my ad look great there! I’d be so proud!” They are usually the kind of venues that would somehow give credibility to your book, just for the association with the venue.

First…

First thing, pick up the “If only…” list, crumple it up, and throw it into the nearest circular file. Advertising venues don’t exist to grace your book by hosting your advertising. They exist to obtain your money in exchange for space. All the credibility you need, assuming you haven’t rushed the book to market without adequate editing and developmental re-writing, is in the fact that your book is complete and ready for sale. You’ve already achieved much more than most writers in just sticking to your guns and believing in your story.

Cost-Effective is the Key to Effective Design…

Now that we’re back to the work-table, and the “what-ifs” are buried properly, we’re going to prepare some cost-effective advertising to test the waters for your book. You’ll be testing each of the affordable venues to see if you can detect an edge for one over another. The results you are looking for are track-able inquiries for your book. It might show up as online click-throughs, impressions, or some other media-generated term that implies your ad was read. Each medium will have its own language and explanation for the fees you will be paying, so pay attention, and make sure you are set up to record and watch the results.

 

Let me make the point here, that IMHO, any reasonably skilled idiot can produce a beautiful, effective full-page ad.  It’s much, much harder to create an effective ad in 1/8 page or smaller, so assume the challenge. "Man" (or woman) up, here! You’ll be proud of what you can do in almost no space at all, if it is handled right.

Vector art, not "Paint Program" art…

Then, if you haven’t already done so, acquire a vector-based graphics and layout program. I was never able to justify the huge added cost of the Adobe, Quark and other “professional” caliber software. My design business was able to produce excellent results using CorelDraw and a few shareware add-ons. Since I didn’t have to a share files very often with other designers, it wasn’t worth paying twice the price for a program that really only did the same basic job. Same thing goes for the argument to buy a Mac rather than use your PC. I’ve been using a PC to do four-color separations and high-end, high resolution graphics since I threw out my color markers, around 1988. So do the best you can afford – don’t overextend yourself. It’s not as much the software as the brain behind it anyway.

 

Why Vector and not a “paint” program alone? Because you can achieve more with a vector program and have cleaner results. There are vector images, and there are bitmapped images. Vector images are mathematically-expressed descriptions of the outline of an object, which is then “filled” with coloor, or what have you. A bit mapped image , like a jpeg, is a collection of thousands (even Millions!) of tiny square, pieces of the whole.

Bitmap issues…

Bitmaps are resolved to be clear and fine in one resolution setting, one size. Vector images can be manipulated in size and shape with no diminishing of their final resolution or appearance. In the old, photo-mechanical graphics trade, we used to talk about generations of degradation in images, even type headlines. Each change in size, etc. used to cost about 10% of the clarity of the image. The more changes, the worse each image got. That holds true with bitmaps. It’s best to only have to re-scale and adjust a bitmap once, if at all possible, for the best results.

Vector benefits…

But with a vector image, it doesn’t matter how many times you tweak it, it will be perfect when you are ready for output. If, for example, your headline type is bitmapped type, then if you need to make it a bit taller and a bit narrower, the results will probably be less crisp than the original. If a headline needs to be tweaked with vector type, such as True Type fonts, then after the font is happily residing in your outline of a box as a headline, it can be tweaked as much as you want, height, width, letter spacing, etc., etc., with no ill effects in resolution at the output stage. I like Vector artwork for the same reason. Look exactly like a hand-rendered illustration with all the benefits explained above. You’ll still import any bitmapped photographic images into the vector program where you can now add type overprints and reverses with no ill-effects!  Anyway, onward…

First, the Headline…

I start every ad with a group of possible headlines. These are the calling cards for the concepts they represent. The idea, of course, is to motivate the reader to an action. The action, in print, may be to complete an inquiry form, or take a coupon to a book seller, or just copy down an online url for a later visit. The latter, in a print ad, is very difficult to track, beyond hoping for increased sales. Print advertising is generally more expensive, and generally needs more space to achieve trackable results, as you will need to allow for a form or a coupon, or you can utilize the numbered response service offered by some publications – at a higher price. I recommend, that for the most cost-effective use of your budget, you should do most of your initial testing online.

 

Online advertising venues include social sites, discussion forums, special interest sites (including merchandise that may relate to your reader’s interest) and of course blog sites. You’ve already got a few of these in your list of possibles, so lets, just for clarity’s sake say three have similar space size, resolution and color requirements. You’re, of course, going to use full color in your ad, unless you have a very compelling reason not to do so. Your book’s content will determine the best way to market it, and you may have a specific idea of an ad layout featuring black and white, with just a touch of color in exactly the right spot to grab the eye and get your meaning across – say a single drop of red blood, poised to drip off the end of your book’s title.

 

A hard-hitting ad is one that forces the reader to read it. It can’t be ignored and will stand out from other ads on the page upon which it’s presented. You need to test this phenomena by scooting your computer chair away from the screen for a moment, a bit further than arm’s length and while looking at a typical “page” on the venue you’re considering, see which ad or ads immediately grab your eye, even (especially!) if you can;t read them. These ads have an arresting design going for them, and after you’ve tested this a few times in different venues, you’ll get a good idea of what you’;re trying to achieve graphically.

 

The headline can’t be too long. Preferably, it will be two to four words, which will tell the reader to do something. A short, directive subheading is also a good idea, but it shouldn’t have to “explain” the headline. The headline should also, of course, be VERY legible. At arm’s length (my arm is pretty long — even better), whether in print or online, it should still jump off the page. In a small ad, with little room to sell, the headline should dominate the layout.

Legible! Legible! Legible!

Don’t use fancy type here unless you can test its legibility.  There are both serif (type with feet) and sans serif (no feet) type fonts that have lots of punch without losing any legibili8ty.  Choose one that "fits" with your book’s content, as to formal vs informal, business vs how to,  modern fiction vs literary. Look at book covers that work with ther content and see what type fonts are chosen. Find one you like, but also one that works well.

 

  If the type face is too busy, it will detract from the effectiveness of the message, while the reader has to figure it out. One exception might be using type that is so associated with your book’s content, the nature of the type face chosen accents the message. For example, you’ve written a thriller about a kidnapping. There are display typefaces that resemble the cliched “Ransom Note” made up of cut-out letters from magazines, etc. If you keep the headline short, the overall “design” is something the reader is probably already familiar with, so they don’t have to figure it out, only read it.

 

Another example, you’ve written the latest post-post-modern coming of age story set within in a dysfunctional family (maybe they are also vampires, but that’s another subject…). You might want to capture some of the essence of the story by using a “fractured-look” typeface, but again, it must be legible, legible, legible. The headline is the hook.

Color? Of course!

You may want to incorporate a full color background, a section of your book’s cover (for recognition’s sake) or say a related object. Keep it simple, and keep the type legible. Whether the type is reversed or “knocked out” of a color background to show in white or a highly contrasting color, or whether it stands alone in color itself, be sure it still jumps off the page. If using a section of your cover photograph, or illustration, be sure it is a section that when cropped down to a small sizer, is still recognizable, or that relates to the book’s content.

 

If your book isn’t fiction, but an instructive book, or a specific subject non-fiction, concentrate on a detail that your reader would respond to, and make that your “hook” graphic. This is the one, dominant graphic element that holds the reader’s eye, once the headline has done its job. Of course, if your book’s cover artwork has little to do with the content, beyond carrying the title and other information, then I wouldn’t recommend using it in this manner. I’d build my ad using type only or type plus color plus object. The hold-em graphic should always relate strongly to the content, and if your headline is a question – which is a great idea, as long as the answer can’t be “no” – then it should embellish or further associate the reader to the answer. The answer being, of course, within your book. I’ll give you an example in my own book ad.

An example of a small online ad:

 

 The ad runs regularly here and on a few blog and discussion sites. It is pretty small, as you can see. What I wanted to do was create recognition, and motivate the reader to click through. I use the title of the book to set up a question: “What red gate?” “Where?” Why is this important to me”, then use the subhead to direct the reader to act: Uncover the secret.

 

The small "triskelle" graphic below the subhead is instantly recognizable to readers with an interest in Celtic or Irish traditions, which "places" my bokk’s subject with little clutter. The overall photo section from the cover of the book sets up a mysterious, disturbing emotion, plkus it creates bookstore and online regcognition.

 

The really great thing about online ads is that all the reader has to do is click! You don’t have to add space for contact information, or anything else at all – that will reside on the link that comes up, of course! My ad links directly to Amazon, where they can sample the book, see it’s full cover, read reviews, and click once to buy! I leave a lot of the selling to Amazon. All my ad has to do is get them to click on it to get some questions answered.

 

One of the things that can be very useful in online advertising as in print campaigns, is to vary the copy. Changing the subheading can actually, with enough time and a good sequence, set up the reader to “look forward” to seeing the next one in the series. It also allows you to fine-tune your ads until they work the best they can, in the given venue.

 

I’ve also used a display typeface that is legible, but that also conveys the concept of antiquity. This alone adds more information. To the reader: uncover “ancient” secrets. In other words, "want to uncover these secrets? click the ad!"

 

You’ll notice that in my ad, I don’t even put my name in. My name doesn’t mean anything to the reader…yet. It isn’t important enough as a motivator to take up space. Maybe in a few years’ time it will be, but I’m not fooling myself – right now, it’s a zero when it comes to setting up a reader to click on my ad. It does exist on the cover of the book, of course, and when they click through, they’ll have access to as much information as they need to make the decision to buy.

Print considerations….

In print advertising, the creative work is more difficult because you need to push much harder setting up the reader’s motivation to action. In print, the action requires more from the reader than it does online. You’re, at the very least, asking them to remember your ad. Remember? In this A.D.D. World? If you need to actually do more than set up recognition for eventual book store or online action, then you will need to incorporate a device such as a coupon, contact information, a “reader service number” etc.

 

However, in magazine print, you have a lot more detail possible, as the resolution is usually pretty high. Newsprint can be hard for bitmapped photographic images in small sizes as the resoluition is very low.  You need to choose your eloements based upon the printed resolution. 

 

Keep it simple, Don’t ask too much of the reader of your ad. Make it easy for them to respond. Make everything as legible as it can be, and be sure to allow all the room they will need to respond properly, if it’s a cut-out form. More important, because you’re asking more from them, you have to make it worth their while. Offer them a discount, then be sure to make it enough that the savings are actually a factor, and not just “lipservice” Offer Free Shipping. Offer a Free Read. Free: the most effective word used in headlines in print when it comes to response.

Layout Issues….

Finally, set up the components of the ad in a motivating design. We’ve discussed some of the frameworks to creating an effective cover design, so use these in your ad as well. Reinforce the circular form of the reader’s eye movement to holed them in the ad. Have the various components “feed” the readers eye and lead into the next component. The idea is to hold them as long as possible. Give the individual components breathing room. Don’t crowd them against each other, for example, unless confusion and confrontation is the feeling you’re trying to achieve. If they stick with your ad long enough to actually process some thoughts about what you’re pitching, you’ve won the battle – the chances are you’ve bagged ’em.

Wrap it up with alternatives….

Finally, once you have a working layout, try making up a few alternates, using different colors, different type faces, different key graphics, so that you can place these upon examples of the pages they’d be inserted in (I always thought it was funny that that was the verb used to describe your ad being added to a page pf media, but then my humor can be pretty sophomoric…) so you can test how they come across in the actual environment where they will appear to the reader. Almost every ad layout looks great on a page of white space. What else can your eye be drawn to? Try it with other ads above and below, and in print, side to side, where unless it’s really good, it will be buried. If it works like this, and try it with a few people if you can, then it will do it’s job and you’ll get the best bang for your bucks.

 

Next week: Output — mechanical requirements, resolutions, file formats, and other jargon-riddled detail. This is what you send to the ad venue.

 

The Anatomy of Determination

This essay, from Paul Graham, originally appeared on his website in September of 2009. While it’s geared toward investors and participants in start-up businesses, since authors (especially self-publishing authors) and small imprints are businesses, his comments and advice in this piece are also applicable to Publetariat’s audience.

Like all investors, we spend a lot of time trying to learn how to predict which startups will succeed. We probably spend more time thinking about it than most, because we invest the earliest. Prediction is usually all we have to rely on.

We learned quickly that the most important predictor of success is determination.

At first we thought it might be intelligence. Everyone likes to believe that’s what makes startups succeed. It makes a better story that a company won because its founders were so smart. The PR people and reporters who spread such stories probably believe them themselves. But while it certainly helps to be smart, it’s not the deciding factor. There are plenty of people as smart as Bill Gates who achieve nothing.

In most domains, talent is overrated compared to determination—partly because it makes a better story, partly because it gives onlookers an excuse for being lazy, and partly because after a while determination starts to look like talent.

I can’t think of any field in which determination is overrated, but the relative importance of determination and talent probably do vary somewhat. Talent probably matters more in types of work that are purer, in the sense that one is solving mostly a single type of problem instead of many different types. I suspect determination would not take you as far in math as it would in, say, organized crime.

I don’t mean to suggest by this comparison that types of work that depend more on talent are always more admirable. Most people would agree it’s more admirable to be good at math than memorizing long strings of digits, even though the latter depends more on natural ability.

Perhaps one reason people believe startup founders win by being smarter is that intelligence does matter more in technology startups than it used to in earlier types of companies. You probably do need to be a bit smarter to dominate Internet search than you had to be to dominate railroads or hotels or newspapers. And that’s probably an ongoing trend. But even in the highest of high tech industries, success still depends more on determination than brains.

If determination is so important, can we isolate its components? Are some more important than others? Are there some you can cultivate?
 

Read the rest of the essay on Paul Graham’s site.

100 Free Lectures That Will Make You a Better Writer

This article, from Caitlin Smith, originally appeared on the Online Universities Blog on March 9, 2009.

Being a writer means you constantly evolve and grow in your writing knowledge. One way to aid in this evolution to becoming a better writer is by learning from what others have to offer. The following lectures cover a wide range of fields including literature, speeches from current writers, lectures from Nobel Laureates in literature, lectures about fiction, non-fiction, poetry, journalism, and even entire classes on writing.

Learn from Great Literature

These lectures focus on specific writers and their works, frequently with an emphasis and analysis on the writing.

  1. Richard Wright, Black Boy. Professor Amy Hungerford takes a look at this American novel and also explores the writer’s determination to maintain the integrity of his novel in the face of a Book of the Month Club president.
     
  2. Flannery O’Connor, Wise Blood. The first part of this two-part lecture series discusses faith and interpretation while the second part examines the novel in several different contexts.
     
  3. Milton. Professor John Rogers teaches this class from Yale with lectures on a variety of Milton’s works, especially Paradise Lost.
     
  4. Modern Poetry. From Robert Frost to T.S. Eliot to Elizabeth Bishop, learn from modern poets in these lectures given by Professor Langdon Hammer at Yale.
     
  5. J.D. Salinger, Franny and Zooey. Learn to use evidence from the text to make a sound argument with this novel as an example.
     
  6. Guest Lecture by Andrew Goldstone. This lecture focuses on Vladimir Nabokov’s writing style in relation to other modern writers.
     
  7. John Barth, Lost in the Funhouse. Watch this lecture to find out about Barth’s commitment to language expressed in the risks he takes as a writer and how it accentuates the relationship of language and love.
     
  8. Thomas Pynchon, The Crying Lot of 49. Amy Hungerford looks at Pynchon’s work as "a sincere call for connection, and a lament for loss, as much as it is an ironic, playful puzzle."
     
  9. Toni Morrison, The Bluest Eye. Examine the role that language as violence plays in Morrison’s work.
     
  10. English 205: Lectures. Read the lectures from this class at Los Angeles Harbor College that covers English literature up to 1800.

Read the rest of the article, which includes links to lectures #11 – 100, under the headings Learn From Current Writers, Learn From Nobel Winners, Fiction Writing, Nonfiction Writing, Poetry, Miscellaneous Classes, University Classes Teaching Writing, and Journalism, on the Online Universities Blog.

Boost Your Profit Margin with Amazon Associates

Every author who has a book for sale on Amazon.com should be enrolled in the Amazon Associates affiliate program. Even if you don’t have a book on Amazon, you can still profit from this program by promoting other books or products using your affiliate link.

Just sign up for an Associates account, then create affiliate links to place on your website for your own books and any other books or products you’d like to promote. As an Associate, you will earn a commission (called a referral fee) each time someone clicks on one of your affiliate links and purchases the product. This is extra revenue, above and beyond whatever you normally make when you sell a book on Amazon.com.

Even better, you’re paid a commission on anything else the customer purchases during the same shopping session on Amazon. So if they put your book in their shopping cart, then decide to purchase a Kindle or a new vacuum cleaner, you get commissions on those items as well.

The amount of the commission depends on the type of product and your monthly sales volume, but it ranges from 4% to 10% of the total purchase made by the customer. You can read the fine print and find a commission chart here. You can’t use your affiliate link when you make personal purchases on Amazon.

To get started, sign up for an Associates account at https://affiliate-program.amazon.com/. You will be assigned an Associates ID, usually a string of numbers or letters ending in 20.  To create a link that will give you credit for sales, use this formula:

http://www.amazon.com/dp/ASIN/?tag=ASSOCIATESID

Replace “ASSOCIATESID” with your own Associates ID

Replace “ASIN” with the Amazon product ID. For books, use the ISBN-10 (10-digit ISBN).  For other products, look for the ASIN. Both are located in the Product Details section of the product page.

Associates
 
Check your product link to make sure there are no extra spaces, and test it to make sure it works. There are also some link building tools on the Amazon Associates page, and you can even create banner ads or a whole store full of products.

What other products could you promote? Feature complementary, non-competing books that would appeal to the people who read your books. If you’re a cookbook author, you can link to your favorite cooking gadgets for sale on Amazon. If you’ve written a travel book or a book on photography, you could link to cameras. Think about how the product categories on Amazon.com tie to your book and use your imagination.

Other Amazon-Related Articles:

How to Increase Your Book’s Visibility in Amazon’s Search Results

Publishing Content for Amazon’s Kindle

This is a reprint of an article that originally appeared in Dana Lynn Smith‘s The Savvy Book Marketer newsletter for November 2009. You can subscribe to the Newsletter for free here, on The Savvy Book Marketer site (see signup box near the middle of the left-hand column of the site).

Everything You Thought You Knew is Wrong

And this is what surprises me. Harlequin, you’re brilliant. You’ve made nothing but all the right steps in all these decades of publishing. You flourish where others founder. You took a great (welcome) leap with Carina, but this? This displays the business sense of a kindergartner.

–Moriah Jovan, Harlequin: Ur doin it rong

How fast is the publishing industry changing?

Two weeks ago, I praised Harlequin for their new digital-only imprint, Carina Press, noting that its business model, while not “new” by any stretch, was a great leap into the future for a traditional publisher to make, especially a well-established leader in its niche. Commentary about the new initiative was mostly positive all around, and purely measured on buzz, its announcement was a PR success.

Last week, they got a noticeably different response to another new initiative, the launch of a self-publishing program under the banner Harlequin Horizons, in partnership with Author Solutions, Inc.. The backlash was fast and furious  from both the Romance Writers Association and several outspoken members of the romance community, including Jackie Kessler, whose “Harlequin Horizons versus RWA” post is a must-read.

By almost any definition, last week was a PR disaster for Harlequin, but for authors, it was just the latest sign that everything you thought you knew about publishing  is wrong.

Ten years ago, when I worked for Poets & Writers, they didn’t accept advertising from vanity presses, and their definition was pretty strict and unwavering. A little over two years ago, when I worked for Writer’s Digest, we had some heated debates over how to handle the topic of self-publishing from an editorial perspective, as well as how to deal with the various advertisers in the space, some with worse reputations than others.

Earlier this year, Author Solutions acquired another one of its competitors, Xlibris; entered partnerships with traditional publishers Thomas Nelson and Harlequin to create self-publishing imprints; and partnered with Sony to make all of their books available as eBooks.

Other recent developments in the POD/self-publishing space include Amazon’s merger of Booksurge and CreateSpace; Lulu’s adding 200,000 eBooks from traditional publishers to their platform; and Andrew Sullivan is self-publishing a book via Blurb.

The publishing industry is changing dramatically, and while it’s much too early to predict where things will end up and whom will be left standing, one thing is very clear: the old rules are being thrown out the window.

Publishing, whether traditionally or DIY, is a business decision, not an artistic or political statement–it needs to be approached with a rational head; an understanding of the pros and cons; and a clear definition of what “success” means based on your own goals.

Everyone has their own agenda when it comes to publishing, but at the end of the day, it’s your book, your career, and your decision.

Anyone who tells you differently is either selling something, or clinging to the past.

This is a cross-posting of a piece that originally appeared on Guy LeCharles Gonzalez’ blog on 11/23/09.

 

From The Editor's Desk: Publetariat Takes A Holiday And Gives Thanks

Publetariat staff will be unavailable from Wednesday, 11/25/09 through Sunday, 11/29/09 (in the Pacific time zone) in observance of the Thanksgiving holiday. New articles will still post on the usual days according to schedule, but no email or contact form correspondence will be answered, no comments will be moderated and no memberships will be processed until Monday, 11/30/09.

In keeping with the spirit of the holiday, I’d like to take this opportunity to express my personal gratitude to all of Publetariat’s contributors and just as importantly, if not more so, to you: Publetariat’s audience. After all, the wonderful work and input of Publetariat’s editorial roster doesn’t mean much on this site unless it means something to you.

Thank you for making Publetariat a part of your writing and publishing life. My aim in founding the site was to give self-publishers and small imprints a welcoming home on the web. I wanted Publetariat to be a place where their specific needs for industry news, assistance with the craft and business of authorship and publishing, and an interactive community would be met, and their informed decisions in publishing would be honored. I wanted Publetariat to be a place where they would finally get the recognition and respect they deserve. 

The credit for making that dream a reality rests with you, the Publetariat community.

I am deeply humbled by how quickly the site has grown in traffic and memberships since its launch on February 11 of this year, and I’d be remiss if I didn’t also express my gratitude to the larger community of kindred independent artists in every field, publishers, writers and authors of every stripe who’ve embraced Publetariat and have supported its vision even if they themselves are not involved in any way with self-publishing. 

So thank you, every one of you: self publishers, indie artists outside of publishing, micro and small imprint operators and staff, mainstream publishers, mainstream published authors, aspiring authors, industry watchers, literary and publishing professionals in all walks, readers, book bloggers, teachers, academics, members of the media and yes, even Publetariat’s critics. 

I wish all of you a happy and restful few days, and look forward to rejoining you Monday.

GeoCities, Scribd and Your Content

This post, from Mark Barrett, originally appeared on his Ditchwalk site on 10/8/09 and is reprinted here in its entirety with his permission.

I ran across a short note on Mashable yesterday announcing that Yahoo will be closing GeoCities this month. While the post rightly notes that GeoCities was one of the first social networking sites, that’s not what I first thought about when I read the news.

What I thought of was this:

In January 1999, near the peak of the dot-com bubble, Geocities was purchased by Yahoo! for $3.57 billion in stock, with Yahoo! taking control on May 28. The acquisition proved extremely unpopular; users began to leave en masse in protest at the new terms of service put out by Yahoo! for GeoCities. The terms stated that the company owned all rights and content, including media such as pictures.

Yes, you’re reading that right. Yahoo paid 3.5 billion dollars for an online community, then one of the first things they told every user in the GeoCities community was that Yahoo now owned all of the content on each and every GeoCities web site. In the business world this type of decision is known as the dumbest thing anyone has ever done.  

I wasn’t going to post about this bit of web history, however, because there’s nothing new under the sun. Facebook, MySpace, Google, Amazon, Microsoft and hundreds of other tech players are constantly trying to figure out how they can own or exploit user-generated content. That’s the entire online game. It’s not the ads or the clicks or the twits or the tweets or the bleats. It’s legal ownership. (Which is why there is no greater battle being waged on behalf of independent authors than the copyright battle.)

Yesterday afternoon, however, I ran across a week-old forum post on a writing-related forum in which a frustrated writer pointed to this section of the Scribd Support FAQ:

Every three months we’ll review your earnings balance. If your balance is at least US$100, Scribd will issue you a check or credit your PayPal account, depending on your preferred payment setting. If your balance is less than US$100, we’ll roll your earnings over to the next quarter.

The author in question wanted to remove a story from Scribd and cash out her balance of approximately $50. But the Scribd elves pointed her to the $100 threshold in the FAQ and told her they couldn’t give her the money she’d earned from her own story. In effect, until she earns $100 from the work, Scribd holds any earnings hostage.

I have no idea if her dispute was resolved or not, but I have to hand it to Scribd: they figured out how to effectively lease content from authors with no money down, while simultaneously cutting cash-flow needs by instituting a relatively-high minimum-payment threshold. Where GeoCities tried to steal user-generated content outright, the noble lords at Scribd — whose stated passion is making documents available to the masses — have figured out how to control authored content and disbursements in a way that benefits themselves.

Am I saying Scribd is doing something illegal? No, and that’s exactly the point. If you put your content on Scribd you’re agreeing to a CONTRACT Scribd wrote which governs how you are paid for YOUR CONTENT.

Given that most authors probably do not meet the $100 threshold for any given quarter it would be interesting to know how much cash Scribd rolls over each month, and how much interest is made on that money. Assuming the money is being invested, of course, as opposed to, say, being used to cover operating or legal expenses.

It would obviously be a shame if Scribd went under and took all those small author-earned balances with it. I would hope funds earned by authors are kept separate from Scribd’s own business expenses, but the FAQ doesn’t seem to address that question. It also doesn’t spell out whether Scribd invests author-earned revenue, or whether authors are entitled to interest on their own earnings.

The moral here is pretty simple. If you have content, corporations who want you or your stuff on their web sites are going to try to profit from your content any way they legally can. That’s how you know these people are not your friends. At best they’re your business partners, but they’re better at business than you’re ever going to be. They have lawyers and financial advisers on staff or available through funding agents. You have nothing, and they know it.

Watch your back. Read the fine print. Don’t give up your rights.

Update: To make sure that Scribd’s policy was not the industry standard, I asked Smashwords’ Mark Coker about his policy on payments to writers:

We’ve traditionally had a $25 threshold, though we officially lowered it last week when we added a formal PayPal option. See your Payee page via your Account page. If an author leaves Smashwords, we settle up with them, no matter how small the amount. Otherwise, we pay at the thresholds (though we make exceptions all the time on request).

Mark added that Smashwords settles up with any author who wants to leave the site:

We’ve paid some former authors as little as $2.80. It’s their money.

Yes it is.

Show Me The Money, Bitches

At the end of the day, I can be a very pragmatic and mercenary individual. Some people deeply admire this about me, some think it makes me a bitch or naive. But it is what it is. When I was a little kid, I wanted to be a published author. I wanted my book to be on bookstore shelves and I wanted to be famous. 

At that time, I believed that everybody who had a big publisher publishing their books, who had a book on bookstore shelves, was making a living doing it. Hell, even into adulthood as I started to seriously begin the undertaking of writing novels I still believed this.

So naturally, in the beginning I was all about traditional publishing for myself. I read all the standard magazines and books and knew all about how to query an agent. I was confident I was one of the smart ones because I wasn’t like these other little boob wannabes who were sending in their submissions on pink scented paper and telling the agent that their grandmother loved it and their grandmother’s dog took a nap on it which meant that the dog loved it too.

At some point I don’t know how or why, I started to wake up. I mean let’s be real here, this may not be the truth for everyone, but I am not working my ass off to give up control of my work and get paid shit for it. Period. dot com, dot net, dot org. It just ain’t happening. I don’t really care what everybody else is doing, or what the socially approved standard path is, or what is “respectable.” “Socially acceptable” has never paid a single person’s bills.

I think my eyes were opened when I started talking to a published author on LiveJournal. It was my first actual back and forth real written contact with a published author and I was thrilled that she’d taken time out of her glamorous life to help me. (Though later when I decided to self-publish, she heavily encouraged me not to cause I wouldn’t make any money self-pubbing, but on to that in a minute.) I won’t mention this author’s name because I’m not dragging her into my diatribe, and I admire her and her writing very much, but suffice it to say, her posts were candid enough that I could read between the lines.

Even though she had a major name brand publisher that we’ve all heard of, she still had a full-time job and wasn’t able to live solely on her writing income. This gave me considerable pause. As I studied more, and read between more lines of what authors were saying and specifically what they weren’t saying (the exact dollar amount of their advances), I began to realize that this author was in no way unique.

I felt like I’d been Mary Kay’d. I might need to explain that reference. When I was eighteen I signed up to sell Mary Kay. I was lured in with the promise of the pink car. I knew I was motivated and could sell things and surely I could have the pink car. But once I was inside I started to see all the downfalls of multi-level marketing and why most people can’t make a living at it. And why the pink car, was not going to be a part of my future most likely.

It seems this is the same thing that has gone on forever in the publishing industry. Hopeful writers believe at first they’ll make a living just by being published by a big name publisher. Then once they’re in, they realize they need to have a backlist first (though please explain to me how an author can gain any traction in this way when so many times they only can manage to keep 2-5 books “in print” at any given time. I prefer a treadmill that makes my ass smaller, thanks.)

Then of course the realization starts to sink in that MOST published authors, including many who have reached that pinnacle, the NYT Bestseller list, are not making a living doing this. Only those with huge prolific outputs that are fairly successful along with the famous ones, are making a living doing this. (And I really just don’t want to put out more than one novel a year on average. I want to put out better quality books not more of them. And normally quality suffers with quantity. We’ve all seen it happen.)

Once I learned these financial realities, I was off the trad train. Fuck that. If I’m going to make peanuts, I’m keeping full creative control. I’m going to be able to approve or deny my cover. I’m going to pick how my book is laid out, and how it’s marketed and distributed. I’m picking the formats. I’m picking the editors, I’m titling my own books. (i.e. I’m not coming up with a great title just to have someone’s marketing department shoot it down and rename it.)

I am not your commodity.

I belong to me. My words, thoughts, feelings, and art belongs to me. And I will create it, package it, and distribute it the way I see fit. The ONLY people that matter in this equation outside of myself, are my readers. Not the talking heads in the publishing industry. I don’t need a publisher to get my words in front of readers. I don’t need a publisher to make a little money. And I certainly don’t need the drama, politics, and headache of the whole treadmill if I’m only going to discover that the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow for most is fool’s gold.

With authors doing so much of their own marketing now, and fewer people buying most of their books in brick and mortar bookstores anyway… with so little money on the table for most even after years of grueling work and many books… exactly what the hell could possibly be in it for me besides external validation from the other writers and the “publishing industry” as a whole? Why is that validation worth my soul? It isn’t.

So many discourage those who want to self-publish with the warning: “You’re unlikely to make money self-publishing.” As opposed to what option? And how are we quantifying the phrase “making money” here? Because a tiny bit of money is still a tiny bit of money even if your publisher handed it to you.

Will I “make a living” self-publishing? Well… that’s hard to answer because I’m thinking inside a different box. I have the MPC-mentality (multiple-profit-centers.) My “business” is basically finding every way in which I can make money from my writing and making use of it. This includes writing websites that I monetize, selling fiction in print and ebook, selling nonfiction/infoproducts in print and ebook, copywriting, a bit of freelance work, and any other ideas I come up with.

This little mini writing empire is on a 10 year plan, of which I’m in year 2. Some of the plates I spin are more for passion than for profit, like fiction. But considering the fact that I can keep my ENTIRE backlist in print, I’m writing a series, and I keep ALL the profit and not just a royalty, the concept that I could “make a living” just from fiction in ten years isn’t so outside the realm of realistic that I can’t even entertain the possibility.

I do understand that writers are part of a community and in some ways I purposefully alienate myself from this community. But at the same time, most of the politics and drama is unnecessary to my life. And I always get burnt because what I’m saying is not what people want to hear. Even if I say it nicely and temper it with many caveats. I have my own tune, my own plan, and I’ll follow it succeed or fail. But what I won’t do is jump on a treadmill that to me isn’t worth the small payment at the end.

Self-publishing, even if at the end of the day I make little money, IS worth it to me, because it’s MINE. There is a pride of ownership there. Even if it’s not considered as socially acceptable yet as say opening a flower shop, it’s not like I’m running a brothel here. Social attitudes will catch up (and if they don’t you know I’m still doing it, because that’s just me.)

And on the money issue. KEPT has sold 2,500 copies on Amazon and has had 15,000 readers otherwise in the past year. It’s only a dollar on Amazon because they wouldn’t let me give it away for free. It was initial test marketing, not a money-making enterprise. Nevertheless, I’ve already in one year made more in royalties from the novella on the Kindle than I likely would have been paid as a first-time author, had I had my novella accepted for a print anthology.

I don’t write “for the money.” But if money wasn’t any piece of the motivation for me, I would just give all my work away for free. What is the point of selling it for profit if you don’t intend to actually MAKE a profit? I intend to make a profit. There is no crime in this. But I realize I can’t make a profit worth my time inside the standard publishing system. Your mileage of course may vary and it’s okay if it does. I don’t require a bunch of bobble-head yes-men in my life. You can disagree with me and I won’t call your momma names.

So yes, self-publishing for me is a business decision and a personal decision.

Also, just in case you think I’m talking out of my ass and can’t possibly know anything cause I haven’t been inducted into the standard publishing system, here are some posts for you to chew on… two traditionally published authors, both saying basically the same things I am, they just draw different conclusions for their own lives (i.e. not self-publishing), and say it a little differently. But it’s the same bottom line truth.

More on the reality of a times bestseller

The Big Lie

[Publetariat Editor’s note: also see this post from author Kimberly Pauley, in which she shares some of her financial details, and some other authors do likewise in the comments section.]

This is a cross-posting from the weblog of Zoe Winters.

Antellus to Offer Free Downloads of Sample Chapters

Antellus – Science Fantasy Adventure and Nonfiction Books
http://www.antellus.com

Antellus to Offer Free Downloads of Sample Chapters

Antellus, a private independent publisher of science fantasy adventure and nonfiction books, now offers free PDF downloads of sample portions of its books and ebooks for shoppers to view before buying.

"We have always tried to honor the rule buyers have of looking before they buy," Antellus CEO and author Theresa M. Moore said. "So as part of our marketing efforts we are offering sample chapters so people can know what they are getting for their discretionary dollars."

The samples can be downloaded directly through the site, and contain at least a quarter portion of each book, with pages varying in number according to the size of the book. Antellus offers all its books in print, Adobe PDF, and other formats through other providers like Smashwords and Amazon Kindle.

Antellus is a privately owned independent publisher of science fantasy adventure and nonfiction books on a variety of related topics like history, mythology and science. Requests for information may be made by email to: info (at) antellus.com. The publisher is located in Sherman Oaks, California.

November Novel Writing Month

Na No Wri Mo Sounds like words to an African tribal dance if I didn’t know better. In 2007, I read about this National Novel Writing Month contest which takes place in November. This contest has been happening since 1999. Thanks to the internet the amount of contestants, called NaNoers, went from 21 in 1999 to 94,000 in 2007.

This year I decided to check into the details. The contest is free to enter. At the end of the month I would have to have fifty thousand words to finish in the contest. Then in December the novel can be edited and polished. A winner is picked from the entries. There is a list of writers that have had a novel published after entering it in this contest.

From what I read the authors are winging their story. They aren’t expected to know where the novel is going, but every day just pick up where they left off. Don’t worry about a chapter by chapter plot synopsis or an outline. This approach to writing is not new to me. It’s the way I approached all my books. The secret is in going back to rework the story, edit and polish it into a work you can be proud to have your name on.

On a whim I entered the 6th of November. So I was already five days behind which worried me. I tried to tell myself two thousands words a day doesn’t sound like a lot for me. Once I made up for those six days that is, fifty thousand words should be no problem. Little did I know that this would be one of those months when I would be gone at least half of the thirty days. Little things have gotten in the way of my writing a novel like a wedding, book signing, dental visits and now Thanksgiving.

Several November days, I spent most of the afternoon emailing libraries in Iowa, Missouri and Pennsylvania to let them know about my two Amish books listed in Ingram Distribution Catalog. In the email I mentioned that I had an online bookstore that all my books can be purchased from, thinking that libraries could go to the website to look at the books. Maybe even buy books from my site.

Quite an undertaking to do that many emails when I realized how many libraries there were in each state. Made me glad for copy and paste. For Iowa, I mentioned that I lived here. As for Missouri, I had emailed the libraries last year when I published my Civil War book which is a fact/fiction book based in Vernon County, Missouri. Maybe they will remember me. Maybe not. I’ve been told many emails about new books target libraries. As for Pennsylvania, residents buy my Amish books more than any other state. One theme that was on most library sites in that state was the fact state funding had been cut for libraries which meant their budgets had to be reduced. This didn’t sound like a good time to be advertising books for sale, but my self published, paperback books are inexpensive compared to books from publishers that are sold in bookstores. Perhaps, a library’s reduced budget would be a reason to buy my books. Now I wait and see. If I have any luck with these libraries, I still have 48 states to go.

 

There’s something to be said for incentive. Being in the NaNoWriMo contest has given me that. I had the story line all plotted in my head for some time but advertising and starting the new website had kept me from getting started on the book. Now I am well under way. Maybe not far enough along for NaNoWriMo, but looking forward to releasing it sometime next year.

Thanksgiving is upon us. As with many family gatherings, relatives have to travel. We go to Marion to my younger brother’s for lunch. As usual, he has barbecued turkey on the menu. Not such an undertaking the way he does it. The grill is in the garage out of the wind. There’s a thermometer inserted in the turkey that transmit to a sensor in the kitchen so he can watch the rising temperature. Once or twice, my brother runs outside to check briefly just to be on the safe side. The rest of the time he is visiting with us and watching a parade.

For the evening meal, we rush forty miles or so from Marion to Belle Plaine to my husband’s mother’s house for another big meal. Sometimes I think it was a mistake to put Thanksgiving and Christmas so close on the calendar. We no sooner get our appetites back from Thanksgiving and Christmas comes with more food. Come to think of it. We are truly blessed and should count our blessings every day. We have our families close and plenty to eat.

Have a Happy Thanksgiving and travel safe. I’ll be back next Tuesday.