Promo And Other Tips For New Authors

This post, by Jenna Anderson, originally appeared on her One Mystake At A Tyme blog on 12/5/10.

Often I hear new authors say, “I had no idea….” There are so many facets to this adventure it’s impossible to know them all the first time out the gate. Each of these facets is broken out and discussed at length around the web or water cooler.

Here is a list of topics new authors may want to investigate. They are in no particular order of importance. I suggest you look through this list then do further research. You will find LOTS of information and varying opinions. Even this LIST is long…. Wow.

Note: when I say books I am referring to books and ebooks unless otherwise noted. Second note: when I reread this it sounds pissy and bossy. Sorry, I didn’t mean it to. It’s all just food for thought. Take what you find helpful, ignore the rest.

1. Have you read any self-help books regarding publishing and marketing? There are many choices out there such as: The Newbies Guide to Publishing, Publish with Amazon Kindle with Digital Text Platform, Write Good or Die, Becoming An Indie Author and Are You Still Submitting Your Work to a Traditional Publisher.

I am not going to add any technical tips for formatting, uploading, POD, etc. in this blog post. The books above have information on those topics.

2. If you load your books on Amazon, Smashwords, etc. do not expect many sales the first few months. If this is your first book don’t be surprised to see ten or less sales per month.

3. Consider publishing your book in e format first. Putting your work out there as an ebook will give you the opportunity to get feedback, hear about typos, change the cover, tagline, description, etc… Once you commit to the expense of a print version you are stuck with that run for a while. Making changes is expensive in print. Making changes to an ebook is painless, almost free and very fast.

4. Create tags for your titles posted on Amazon. You can add up to thirteen yourself. Tags will help readers find you. (If you don’t know what this is, go to your Amazon product page and look around. You’ll find it.)

5. Research pricing. Play with your price. There are a lot of discussions on this topic.
 

Read the rest of the post, which includes 21 more tips, on Jenna Anderson’s One Mystake At A Time blog.

Establishing An Author Presence on Social Networking Sites

Editor’s Note: This week, we’re happy to promote new member Tony Eldridge’s blog post about social networking for authors to the front page.

If you’ve been online long, you’ve heard a chorus of experts say how important it is to create an online presence. When you start, you’ll see that it’s easy to set up many individual sites, but it takes a little more work to tie these sites together into a single unit that works as one. If you don’t do this, then you will create an online presence that is hard to manage.

Some authors choose to have a social networking site as their "hub". This, however, is not my preferred method. I’d recommend that your social networking sites be the spokes that feed into your main blog or website. For more on this concept, read a post that I wrote for BookBuzzr called, Creating A Marketing Hub.

Social networking sites ebb and flow with popularity, so what we discuss now may not be the same thing we might discuss tomorrow. That said, let’s look at a few sites that authors should consider joining as well as some general principles to keep in mind as we interact with others on these sites.

Tony’s List Of Top Social Networking Sites For Authors (And Why)

Twitter and Facebook round out my top two recommendations by far. This is where people are right now and if you learn to use these two sites effectively, you can find a lot of readers for your book.

GoodReads and Shelfari are two sites devoted to books. They are reader driven sites that give authors a great platform to interact with readers.

Author Central is Amazon’s site where authors can build out more information for people who are browsing for books. Why wouldn’t you carve out your spot on the biggest book-buying place on the planet?

Author’s Den is an author driven site where you can network with other authors as well as find readers for your book. 

I’ll admit that there are other great sites for authors to join. Many of these are niche sites that will be perfect for the book you wrote. For example, if you wrote a gardening book, then it makes sense for you to look for social networking sites devoted to gardening.

Once you decide to create a social networking presence, here are some things to remember:

  • These sites are created to build relationships, not to advertise on. Don’t spam your readers or you will be shunned. 
  • These sites can help you build a reputation as an expert in your field. Find ways to enter the conversations on them.
  • Keep it professional. While sharing some personal news can help you connect with your followers, too much will turn people off.
  • Give more value than you ask for and people will listen to what you have to say.
  • Don’t get ugly. While some people love to watch a fight, most are turned off by rude bickering. A "troll" is someone who gets his or her kicks from publicly fighting. Don’t fall into their trap by taking their bait.
  • For more great ideas on this topic, read: 
  • Dana Lynn Smith’s post on my blog called, The 7 Deadly Sins of Online Networking
  • Joanna Penn’s post called, Social Networking and Web 2.0 sites for Writers and Authors
  • John Kremer’s list of Social Networking Websites.

I also recommend that you choose one or two social networking sites to start off with. A mistake many authors make is by trying to do too much too quickly and getting overwhelmed. If you want more than an online billboard, then you’ll need to spend a little time developing your presence on these sites. Add more once you can handle the few you start off with. 

Here are some other posts that will help you with your social networking activities:

I hope this post helps you get started on the social networking part of your book marketing plan. There are a lot of resources out there to help. What I’ve shared barely scratches the surface. With a little planning, a little research, and taking things one step at a time, you can build an online presence with social networking sites that definitely bring value to you, your books, and to all the people you connect with. 

This is a reprint from Tony Eldridge‘s Marketing Tips For Authors.

 

An Object Lesson In…Something

We here at Publetariat are all about supporting indie authors and small imprints, and we have no desire to dogpile on one of our own. The indie path can be a tough row to hoe; experience is often hard-won, and lessons can be very expensive to learn—as demonstrated by the firestorm currently raging around indie author Jacqueline Howett and a recently posted review of her book, The Greek Seaman.

Herewith, we provide the relevant links and invite readers to draw their own conclusions.

The Greek Seaman, reviewed on Big Al’s Books and Pals; here’s where the controversy begins, but the real story is in the comments section. As of this writing, there are 307 comments and counting.

On Salon – The Ebook That Launched A Thousand Flame Wars 

Threat Quality Press – On Jacqueline Howett – this post takes a more sympathetic and conciliatory tone

Steve’s Advice – The Passion of the Christ (and Jacqueline Howett) – another more sympathetic piece

Mur Lafferty – In Which I Play Good Cop And Bad Cop With Jacqueline Howett

Alicia Hendley – The New Cyber-Bullies: The Case of Jacqueline Howett – has Jacqueline Howett become the victim of a massive cyber-bullying campaign?

Self-Published Authors Lounge: How NOT To React To A Bad Review

 

Establishing An Author Presence on Social Networking Sites

If you’ve been online long, you’ve heard a chorus of experts say how important it is to create an online presence. When you start, you’ll see that it’s easy to set up many individual sites, but it takes a little more work to tie these sites together into a single unit that works as one. If you don’t do this, then you will create an online presence that is hard to manage.

Some authors choose to have a social networking site as their "hub". This, however, is not my preferred method. I’d recommend that your social networking sites be the spokes that feed into your main blog or website. For more on this concept, read a post that I wrote for BookBuzzr called, Creating A Marketing Hub.

Social networking sites ebb and flow with popularity, so what we discuss now may not be the same thing we might discuss tomorrow. That said, let’s look at a few sites that authors should consider joining as well as some general principles to keep in mind as we interact with others on these sites.

Tony’s List Of Top Social Networking Sites For Authors (And Why)

Twitter and Facebook round out my top two recommendations by far. This is where people are right now and if you learn to use these two sites effectively, you can find a lot of readers for your book.

GoodReads and Shelfari are two sites devoted to books. They are reader driven sites that give authors a great platform to interact with readers.

Author Central is Amazon’s site where authors can build out more information for people who are browsing for books. Why wouldn’t you carve out your spot on the biggest book-buying place on the planet?

Author’s Den is an author driven site where you can network with other authors as well as find readers for your book. 

I’ll admit that there are other great sites for authors to join. Many of these are niche sites that will be perfect for the book you wrote. For example, if you wrote a gardening book, then it makes sense for you to look for social networking sites devoted to gardening.

Once you decide to create a social networking presence, here are some things to remember:

  • These sites are created to build relationships, not to advertise on. Don’t spam your readers or you will be shunned. 
  • These sites can help you build a reputation as an expert in your field. Find ways to enter the conversations on them.
  • Keep it professional. While sharing some personal news can help you connect with your followers, too much will turn people off.
  • Give more value than you ask for and people will listen to what you have to say.
  • Don’t get ugly. While some people love to watch a fight, most are turned off by rude bickering. A "troll" is someone who gets his or her kicks from publicly fighting. Don’t fall into their trap by taking their bait.
  • For more great ideas on this topic, read: 
  • Dana Lynn Smith’s post on my blog called, The 7 Deadly Sins of Online Networking
  • Joanna Penn’s post called, Social Networking and Web 2.0 sites for Writers and Authors
  • John Kremer’s list of Social Networking Websites.

I also recommend that you choose one or two social networking sites to start off with. A mistake many authors make is by trying to do too much too quickly and getting overwhelmed. If you want more than an online billboard, then you’ll need to spend a little time developing your presence on these sites. Add more once you can handle the few you start off with. 

Here are some other posts that will help you with your social networking activities:

I hope this post helps you get started on the social networking part of your book marketing plan. There are a lot of resources out there to help. What I’ve shared barely scratches the surface. With a little planning, a little research, and taking things one step at a time, you can build an online presence with social networking sites that definitely bring value to you, your books, and to all the people you connect with. 

This is a reprint from Tony Eldridge‘s Marketing Tips For Authors.

Public blogging platform WordPress hit by Distributed Denial of Service strike

A huge denial of service attack hit WordPress.com last week. The guess of the WordPress team is that the strike was motivated by political beliefs. Though WordPress.com was affected by the attack, the thousands of websites running a WordPress.org platform were not impacted.

WordPress.com gets Distributed Denial of Service attack to occur

Thursday, WordPress.com got hit by a denial of service attack. It was a huge one. WordPress.com, owned by the WordPress Foundation, is hosted by three large server farms. Part of the DDoS attack had gigabits of data sent. The WordPress servers received this data. The WordPress Distributed Denial of Service attack was larger than expected, although well-known web sites have DDoS attacks often. During the attack, websites hosted on WordPress.com were intermittently down.

The big web sites didn’t get impacted

The DDoS attack didn’t impact online websites such as CNN.com, Wired and Flickr even though they all run on WordPress. WordPress.org is the host for these online websites though. WordPress.com was attacked. The program from WordPress is used on sites such as Wired and CNN. They use WordPress as a content manager. However, using the WordPress program is not the very same as owning a WordPress.com site. WordPress Foundation hosts WordPress.com blogs. WordPress.org blogs and sites, on the other hand, are hosted on the company’s own servers. That means a DDoS attack on WordPress.com would not impact any website hosting their own installation of WordPress.

Paying for network security

It is really important to have network security in order to protect from DDoS and hacker attacks. Using WordPress.com as a larger service is where small businesses and individuals will outsource that security. Network security protection is offered by several of these hosting services. It is quite easy to send gigabits of information to a site. Keeping a site accessible for a larger business with its own website is more difficult to do because of this.

Citations

 

PC World

pcworld.com/article/221357/wordpress_recovers_from_huge_ddos_attack.html

 

4 Links To Overcome Publishing Despair

The road to publication is filled with pain and tears… bloodshed… mayhem…. I’m being melodramatic here. Of course, that could just be that I’ve recently read several posts about how painful the publication process can be and how difficult it is to write good fiction. Here’s a small sampling:


“This is literally years of work you’re seeing. And hours and hours of work each day. The amount of time and energy I put into marketing is exhausting. I am continuously overwhelmed by the amount of work I have to do that isn’t writing a book. I hardly have time to write anymore, which sucks and terrifies me.” — Amanda Hocking’s post Some Things That Need to Be Said


“When it comes to traditional publication, at times, it may feel like the journey is filled with one root canal and subsequent infection after another. We know what’s coming—the long waits, the rejections, the stinging feedback. We’ve heard others talk about it, we brace ourselves for it, but then when it comes we’re unprepared for how much it really hurts.” — Jody Hedlund’s post Enduring the Pain in the Quest for Publication


“I’ve been blogging for a little over three years. I’ve been writing fiction since … well, pretty much since I could write. My blog posts are read by thousands of people. Only 1% of the fiction I’ve ever written has been published. Fiction is incredibly hard to do well.” – Ali Luke’s post Why Fiction is So Hard to Write



Admittedly, I’m picking on these blogger/authors, but it’s only because these posts spotlight the prevailing problem I’m seeing amongst writers, both new and not-so-new. We’ve picked up the bad habit of looking at the challenges, the hardships, and forgetting the real reason behind why we write. Most of us write because we can’t stop writing. We may ask, “Is it time to just give it up?” as JM Tohlin did before finally publishing The Great Lenore, but when it comes down to brass tacks we simply are unable to.

There’s about as much choice in sitting down to craft a story as there is in breathing.

The fact is, yes, getting published traditionally is hard and being self-published can mean hard work (unless you’re JA Konrath). But here’s another fact: dwelling on how hard it is doesn’t get the story written. It’s time we dragged ourselves out of the pit of despair, step down from our high horses, and get to work.

So in the spirit of moving forward, here’s 4 great links to help get you in the groove:

  1. Opportunity Comes in Overalls by Kristen Lamb: She’s a social media expert with a sharp sense of humor who seems to know just when we need a kick in the pants and that’s exactly what she gives us in this post.


  2. A Perfectionist’s Guide to Editing: 4 Stages by Jami Gold: Jami’s a paranormal author on a deadline battling the imp of perfection, something many of us are doing, and gives us 4 great ways to ignore and use our inner perfectionist.


  3. Nail Your Novel by Roz Morris: This book is a plotter’s dream (and can help pantser’s too ;) ) as it gives easy to use steps in developing a novel from the first spark of an idea to the finished product.


  4. Hooked by Les Edgerton: This book is the simplest guide I’ve found thus far on how to fashion a beginning that’ll keep ‘em reading to the end.



What other ways have you found to pick yourself up and find that forward momentum you lost?

 

This is a reprint from Virginia Ripple‘s The Road to Writing.

Podcasts Are Coming Of Age

Podcasting has been around for a long time now, by internet standards. Anything that lasts more than a few months is long-lived by internet standards, but you know what I mean. Some things have their blaze of glory and disappear, though they leave a kind of legacy, like MySpace. Some things fire into the stratosphere incredibly briefly, incredibly brightly, and then are forgotten forever, like Chocolate Rain or the Star Wars Kid. They live on in infamy, in memory, but that’s about it. So it’s hard for anything, be it a person or an idea, to stick around for any length of time. Of course, podcasting isn’t really like a specific website or internet meme, but it is something that was either going to fly or sink.

With video-casting on YouTube and a website or three in every home, I did wonder back in the day (about 2008) if podcasting would really generate that desired state of normalcy, or if it would be something a geeky few would love briefly, before moving on. Here we are in 2011 and podcasting is unbiquitous. I co-host one myself, all about thrillers and other genre fiction. I listen to loads of them, especially fiction podcasts like Escape Pod and Podcastle. I’m still dancing with joy because my favourite podcast of all, Pseudopod, bought one of my stories recently. I can’t wait for that to come through.

But you know that podcasting is becoming truly accepted when it starts to win awards. Not podcasting awards, obviously, but other awards that have been around for ages and have now started recognising podcasts. I noticed this when I was going through the recently released Ditmar Awards ballot. Here’s the Best Fan Publication in Any Medium nominations list:

* Australian Speculative Fiction in Focus, edited by Alisa Krasnostein et al.
* Bad Film Diaries podcast, Grant Watson
* Galactic Suburbia podcast, Alisa Krasnostein, Tansy Rayner Roberts, and Alex Pierce
* Terra Incognita podcast, Keith Stevenson
* The Coode Street podcast, Gary K. Wolfe and Jonathan Strahan
* The Writer and the Critic podcast, Kirstyn McDermott and Ian Mond

Out of six listed nominations, five are podcasts. Among them are podcasts that I listen to regularly and one of them got my vote. The sixth one is a review website.

Here’s the same category last year:

Best Fan Publication

* Interstellar Ramjet Scoop, edited by Bill Wright

* A Writer Goes on a Journey (awritergoesonajourney.com), edited by Nyssa Pascoe et al

* ASif! (asif.dreamhosters.com), edited by Alisa Krasnostein, Gene Melzack et al

* Australian Science Fiction Bullsheet (bullsheet.sf.org.au), edited by Edwina Harvey and Ted Scribner

* Steam Engine Time, edited by Bruce Gillespie and Janine Stinson

No podcasts.

In the 2010 Hugo Awards, the Best Fanzine award went to StarShipSofa edited by Tony C. Smith. A podcast. It won a Hugo! It is brilliant, but even so it’s a great step in the acceptance of podcasting.

And this is just the genre podcasts that I’m familiar with. I’m sure there are thousands more out there covering all kinds of subjects. It seems that the audio magazine has really come of age. Even radio stations now are offering their shows as podcasts to appeal to people that might not be able to listen at a certain time, or may have missed a show. More power to the podcast, I say, and not just because I’m involved with one. Podcasting is a great example of utilising the power of the internet for good, producing quality, interesting content. Long may it continue.

 

This is a reprint from Alan Baxter‘s The Word.

The Ebook Revolution: What Does Emerging Technology Mean For Writing And Reading Literature?

This post, by Adam Charles, originally appeared on iWriteReadRate on 3/16/11.

I sat in a bar a while ago talking with an old friend over a cold beer.  As an Engineer his viewpoint on the various topics we talked about was rather different to my own.  Whilst discussing widely publicised environmental issues his response was always that ‘technology would find the answer’.  My standpoint was rather less definitive on the subject.  Yes, I agreed, technology could play a key role, but it’s down to our choices – individually and collectively – to make any change a significant and lasting one.

My, perhaps tenuous, point here is that we’re at a real tipping point with technology in relation to how we consume literature and media in general.  Technology revolutionises, it refines, it redraws traditional lines of consumption, disrupts our historical patterns of behaviour, it finds a way of improving the situation in whatever aspect of our lives that it touches, but only if we embrace it.

We can see so many recent examples of how Internet and communications technology has fundamentally altered how and when we interact with our friends (real and virtual), connect to the world, find and listen to music, and we’re beginning to see this rebirth happen with how we discover, purchase, and consume literature in every genre.

With the proliferation of devices capable of viewing and downloading content wherever we are – such as smart-phones, tablets and dedicated eReader platforms – the wind very much appears in the sails for a generational change in how we buy and consume books, how we experience literature in general.  This is now reaching a point of market integration when it can no longer be considered in its infancy.  The people are speaking and it’s now time to embrace the change.

Read the rest of the post on iWriteReadRate.

What Is The Right Price Of A Book, Print Or Digital, Part One

This post, by Jane Litte, originally appeared on Dear Author on 3/17/11.

Pricing of books is a very important topic, both to readers and authors. With the rise of self publishing, finding the right price for a book falls heavily on the shoulders of the author. There is much discussion about the right price of books.

Stephanie Laurens blog seems heavily devoted to exploring the topic of price and she brings up a variety of issues to consider from the author point of view when considering pricing such as market reach and type of commodity being sold. Zoe Winters contemplated whether low pricing, such as 99c pricing, attracts the “wrong” kind of reader. Joe Konrath posts regularly about his pricing experiences. There’s a lot of food for thought in all of these aforementioned posts but I am not unpacking any of them today. Instead, today I want to talk about value because value, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder.

In economics there is a term called price discrimination. In ideal market conditions and if the seller has sizeable market power, everyone pays a different price for a commodity based on their “willingness and ability” to pay. (See Dr. Hughes, I did pay attention during three semesters of economics classes with you). The airlines employ price discrimination by selling seats on the plane at different prices.

Every reader has a different price they are willing and able to pay for a book. I believe that price represents the value a reader places on a book at the time of purchase. However, value can vary over the course of time from when the reader first becomes aware of the book to after the book is read, increasing and decreasing based on different variables. When readers speak about price, they are talking about the amount that they are willing and able to pay at the particular time that they are expressing the opinion about price. Willingness includes the measurement of time.

 

Read the rest of the post on Dear Author, and also see Part 2 in the series.

On Leaving Traditional Publishing For EBook Sales Success With LJ Sellers

It’s exciting to hear about independent authors making a living from their books and today’s interview with L.J. Sellers will inspire you! L.J. actually left her traditional publisher to go the indie route and she explains why in the interview.

 

 


In the intro,
I talk about how Pentecost went back up the Kindle charts again when I reduced the price to 99 cents for Read an Ebook Week. It seems that a lower price does boost sales and since my aim right now is to get more readers, the 99c price might be the way forward. I explain why the podcast is moving to every two weeks instead of weekly and talk about some of your feedback from my survey. I also talk about my Ebook Publishing mini-course which just launched. It’s a multimedia course behind the scenes on publishing ebooks on the Kindle, iPad, Nook and more.

L.J. Sellers is an award-winning journalist, editor, and mystery/suspense novelist. She has four books in the Detective Jackson series including The Sex Club and two standalone thrillers, all available on Kindle and other online bookstores.

You can watch my video review of The Sex Club here

  • How L.J. started in journalism and editing and then started writing fiction, even though she didn’t think she was creative enough initially. After writing The Sex Club and inventing the character of Detective Jackson, she found a series that readers enjoyed. The latest in the series is Dying for Justice which blends two series characters together.
  • Why L.J. left her publisher and went indie. It was a time of change as she had been laid off. It was either giving up fiction writing or making a commitment to trying to make money with fiction. L.J. had been reading Joe Konrath’s blog and was inspired to do it too. Her publisher owned the Detective Jackson series as well as two books that wouldn’t be published for a while. L.J. asked for the rights back after deciding it was worth it to be independent, despite the stigma of self-publishing in the market. She turned down freelance work for two weeks and hired herself as her own publicist – great idea! Did 10 hours a day, 7 days a week for book promotion which created a spurt in sales for all the books. Within a few months, all 4 books were Top 20 in police procedural Kindle store. By the end of the year, L.J. was a full-time novelist, earning a living with fiction.
  • L.J. invested in her small business, getting cover designs, using editors. Readers liked the stories – it was just about getting the books out there and realizing the profit.
  • Top tips for publishing successfully on the Kindle. Write a great book that will compete well against everything else. It needs to grab attention. The authors with the most success also have quite a few books out there so that is important. It lends credibility that you’re not just a one-time author. A series helps too as people are invested in the characters.
  • Make a commitment to promotion. It needs to be done every day. It’s forum posting, guest posting, commenting, dialog on twitter. Your tagline will contain your book links. It’s indirect but effective as people get to know you. You can pull back on the marketing after you have some books out there. But L.J. believes both marketing and writing are important. We discuss advertising effectiveness for saving time but it costs some money. Kindle Nation is measurable as you can see the sales rise but it’s hard to tell what’s effective.
  • On ebook pricing. It’s a balance and it’s worth following Joe Konrath’s blog as he shares all the math and experiments on pricing. You can play around with the prices. People who are successful have different price points. It’s also about value for the reader and volume does make a difference.
  • On the changing stigma of self-publishing. It’s certainly still around as self-published authors can’t join professional organizations or be on panels at conventions. There are still stratifications. It will be hard for these organizations as same author, same books, same quality of writing but now independent means the author can’t be promoted by these organizations. That will become more complicated as more authors go the indie route. At the end of the day, readers don’t care.
     
  • For new authors coming into the publishing industry, L.J. tries not to advise as some people have a dream of being traditionally published. But for herself, going independent is the best choice.
     
  • On Kindle, the market will decide – either you’re not marketing enough, or the book’s not good enough.

 

You can connect with LJ at her website LJSellers.com as well as on twitter @ljsellers

The Sex Club and other books are available on Amazon and other online booksellers.

 

This is a reprint from Joanna Penn‘s The Creative Penn.

 

 

Book Marketing: Your Online Press Kit

When you’re launching and marketing your book it can be essential to get attention from the media. It may be big media, niche market media, trade magazines, book reviewers, book bloggers, talent bookers or any number of other representatives of print, electronic, or broadcast media. 

It’s your job to make their job easy.

There are many times you’ll want to send information to media contacts. It’s become common for authors to maintain their own media kit on their website, on the site for their book, or on their blog.

It makes sense. You can point inquiries to your Press or Media page, and make available lots of information to make it easy for busy reviewers, editors, reporters or researchers to get basic information on their own schedule.

I’ve been putting together a media kit for A Self-Publisher’s Companion, and studying some of the others I’ve found online.

  1. For instance, Tim Ferris of The 4-Hour Workweek fame, has a full media kit with press release, book summary and sample interview questions. He also has a large assortment of photos of Tim Ferris to choose from.

     

  2. My doctor Marty Rossman just published a book with Crown, a major trade publisher. I took a look at his site for his new book The Worry Solution. In addition to photos of the author and a bio, this page is heavily weighted toward interviews. It features extensive sample subjects for 8 different interviews, and a list of 15 possible interview questions.

     

  3. Seth Godin’s new publishing venture, The Domino Project, has, as you might expect, a robust Press page with excerpts, Q&As, and press releases for the enterprise as a whole and each title. Their media kit is a bold and effective 9-page PDF that tells the story of Domino in a compelling style.

     

  4. For a self-published author with a lot of experience I took a look at Susan Daffron’s Publishize Press Page. Note that well after publication Susan went back to add awards her book had won so the press page was kept up to date and effective as a tool to sell her book.

What to Include in your Online Press Kit

You can get creative with your press kit, but keep in mind that reviewers will expect certain elements. These include:

  • A press release, usually the one you write for the book’s launch.
  • Author bio, including previous publications and qualifications to write the book. Include author’s platform information.
  • Author photo, and it’s smart to include high-resolution files for print and low-resolution for online use.
  • Book photo, with the same resolutions as the author photo.

Many other items can and are added, but keep in mind that throwing more information at people is not always a good strategy to get them to pay attention to your message. Some great additions might be:

  • Sample review. These can be very helpful to writers who are in a time crunch, and who isn’t?
     
  • Sample chapter
     
  • Interview questions
     
  • Photos that can be used in a story about the book or its subect
     
  • Reprints or transcripts of interviews about the book
     
  • Testimonials from early readers with authority or celebrity

The easiest way to make your press kit available is to put all the documents into a PDF or a ZIP file and put a download link to the file on your book’s Press or Media page. This page works best when it’s in your navigation, or you provide a link on the home page of your site. The idea is to make it easy to find.

I was surprised to find that a number of writers with books out right now didn’t seem to have a press kit at all. Or it may have been that it was really, really hard to find.

Since we rely on publicity and spreading the word about our work through other people’s networks, it makes sense to me to make sure your press kit is obvious and easy to download.

 

This is a reprint from Joel Friedlander‘s The Book Designer.

Some Bestselling Kindle Authors Weigh In On The Kindle Revolution

This post, by Steve Windwalker, originally appeared on his indieKindle blog on 3/22/11.

One remarkable by-product of the Kindle Revolution during the past few months is the extent to which some Kindle authors are achieving a very new kind of indie rock star status as a result both of their ebook sales and of the fact that they have found various ways to build special followings and connections among readers, ways that are distinctly different from the kinds of connections that were available in the pre-Kindle world of publishing way back before 2008.

For those of us who are keenly interested in trying to understand where all of this leads, some of the blog posts by these wunderKindlers can make for extremely interesting reading. So, in addition to publishing a fascinating (and very long) post in its entirety here, I’m going to provide links to several other recent authors’ posts that have caught my eye recently because,  I believe, they add something of value to the historical record of this revolution:

and, last but not least, and presented here in its entirety with Joe Konrath’s permission:

Originally posted at Joe Konrath’s A Newbie’s Guide to Publishing blog, March 19, 2011:


Read the rest of the post on Steve Windwalker’s indieKindle.

Information For Innovation

In this Copyright Clearance Center (CCC) podcast and transcript, the CCC’s Chris Kenneally interviews Martha Anderson about the U.S. Library of Congress’s efforts to collect and classify digital media. The podcast and transcript are provided here in their entirety with the permission of the CCC.

A discussion with Martha Anderson, director of the National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program for the Library of Congress, recording while attending the annual NFAIS Conference in Philadelphia. Anderson tells CCC’s Chris Kenneally about her efforts to collect all manner of digital content, from Twitter tweets to amateur videos.

“I think the real value of this for the nation ongoing – for each of us as citizens; for each of us as students or researchers; or just people who are interested in life – is the ability to see things come together from different viewpoints, from different kinds of disciplines,” says Anderson of the powerful potential in combining this data in new and unexpected ways. “It will help drive the kind of innovation that we want. We want new thought. We need new ideas about how to solve our problems and that’s where this data comes in.”

 

New Member

Hello. I’m happy to have found this website and forum. I have one novel, The Lonesome Isle, that I published through Createspace. I am currently working on the sequel to that novel and have started writing another book as well.

I am excited to have others to turn to for advice in this whole world of publishing!!!

A Tale Of Two Authors

This post, by Kassia Krozser, originally appeared on her Booksquare site on 3/21/11 and is reprinted here in its entirety with her permission.

Monday, March 21, 2011 was a big day for publishing. On one hand, we have author Barry Eisler announcing he turned down a two book, $500,000 deal. On the other hand, we learned that super-hot indie author Amanda Hocking is shopping a new series, with a price tag climbing above $1 million for worldwide English language rights.

Needless to say, the ensuing discussion has been awesomely full of punditry and speculation. Thus, me! If I do not offer my two cents, then I will surely be kicked out of future publishing cocktail parties. After all, I must have thoughts on this madness.

So where to begin? I am presuming Eisler made a calculated decision, one that factored in the very real loss of worldwide print sales (wherein I completely agree with Mike Shatzkin on this point). Oh sure, there are ways to compensate, but this is not a trivial business choice.

On the other hand, Hocking is likely looking at those same worldwide print sales and realizing there’s money in them there books. The two authors are looking at the same worldwide market and taking different approaches. One is a seasoned author, the other is just now realizing her potential.

So who is making the right decision?

Both.

Yeah, that’s a helpful answer. Bear with me.

Eisler has an established fan base, and he can tap into a growing network of indie authors who are, for lack of a better concept, forming their indie marketing circle. This is not a new concept. It’s the way indie romance authors — those digital-first (or digital-only) authors — have built careers for the past decade. History has shown this works for some authors.

I think of it as a numbers and talent game. Only a few authors truly rise above the pack. It’s like real publishing, only with more control. However. Any author who goes indie has to become an end-to-end business. Writing, editing, production, distribution, marketing. Oh sure, some of these can be outsourced, but the author must be on top of all these function. Cannot let any one of them slip.

Just as few employees in corporate jobs have the ability to be management and worker bee, few authors have the skills to be everything and more. The authors who seem to do best have what can only be called an entrepreneurial spirit. My belief is that writing is a creative process; being an author is a job.

And it’s not an easy job. This is why I believe Eisler calculated more than a few odds. One does not walk away from a purported $500,000 easily. As many smart people have noted, you don’t go into publishing to get rich.

What Barry Eisler has going for him is control (not to be underestimated), speed to market, the ability to experiment, and instantaneous worldwide digital distribution. This comes into play in our next section.

Now back to that other hand.

Hocking has, and I think you’ll know what I mean, tapped into the Twilight zeitgeist. Something I’d note no major publisher (or minor) has managed to do. I have not read her work, but know more than a few people who have. Clearly she can tell a story that engages readers (not an easy skill!), but there is a consensus that she needs more editorial oversight. I believe in editors in a big way, and know that good editors make a story so much better.

Hocking has also, conservatively and based on news reports, netted well over a million dollars (before taxes, those pesky things!). That is serious money in publishing. I know people who’d sell their souls for that kind of publishing money.

It’s also hard money for publishers to meet. This is an author who is accustomed to making seventy cents on every dollar. Used to getting paid monthly. Used to freedom.

Yes, she’s only reaching a fraction of her audience. Print remains the dominant worldwide format, and, while digital is growing like crazy (a key component of Eisler’s calculations), ignoring any part of the publishing marketplace is something one must do with extreme intelligence and caution.

Can print publishers offer her at least as much as she’s making as an indie author? It’s easy to throw money at the problem. But is it as easy to throw money at the success?

I said I think both Eisler and Hocking are making the right choices, but, if you were to corner me in a bar and ask me which author is following the right path right now, I’d say Eisler.

He’s taking a riskier path, for sure, and there is no guarantee. His history suggests he has some talent when comes to calculated risks. And while he’s burned some publishing bridges, he also has a track record in the industry.

Hocking, however, is more of a publishing dark horse. She’s done the indie thing amazingly well. I cannot over-emphasize how critical this is, and how well she’s done it. But there is a gap between indie publishing (especially self-publishing, without a lot of professional editorial input) and corporate publishing.

The biggest challenge, and the reason I’m putting my money (virtual because the husband hates it when I bet cat food dollars) on Eisler is that the publisher who signs Amanda Hocking today will likely not have a book on the shelf before 2012, more likely 2013. Note my nouns.

The Hocking zeitgeist is right now. Her audience is right now. Her moment is right now. Can this buzz be sustained a year or more? Can her audience be engaged for that long? Yes, if she’s continually giving them the books they want…at the price point they want.

Will the Amanda Hocking audience pay $9.99 for her books? This is not an idle question.

Can publishing capitalize on an Amanda Hocking? This is a serious question.

Note: Sarah Weinman, wisely, questions my belief that Amanda Hocking will lose momentum. I did consider Sarah’s arguments while writing this, but felt then (and sorta feel now) that two things will slow this phenomenon down. The first is the competing works clause in an author agreement. The publisher Hocking presumably will eventually sign with (how’s that for confidence?) will surely balk at any works they deem “competition” for their own release. How Hocking works around that and pleases her audience becomes a challenge.

The second hesitation I have is that publishing a book is a lot of work, and even the most seasoned writer finds challenges in undergoing the full editorial process on one book while creating new works. Once Hocking is assimilated into the traditional publishing machine, there will be a constant flow of work for the series she’s creating for that publisher, and I worry it will come at the expense of her indie work.