The Publetariat Shop Is Now Open

See the new "Shop" link in the left-hand navigation bar?  That’s a link to the new Publetariat Cafepress shop, where your purchases accomplish two things: first, they enable you to be "out and proud" of your indie status, and second, they help us to cover the costs of hosting and running Publetariat.

Publetariat t-shirts as low as US$9.89!  Such a deal!In the shop you’ll find Flip Mino camcorders (both standard and HD models, perfect for shooting and uploading those book trailers!), a wide variety of t-shirts and sweatshirts (womens’ plus sizes, too!) , t-shirts for your dog, mugs, bags and stickers. 

You may have noticed our minimalist approach to advertising here on Publetariat; the ads you see are only provided as compensation to site content contributors – the site doesn’t earn any kind of commission or royalty on those click-throughs.  Cross-promotional link exchanges with sites like LibraryThing are in the works, but again, they will not provide any revenue to the site. 

All site management, administration and content contribution is being done on a strictly volunteer basis, and we try to use open-source software wherever possible.  Still, there are costs for hosting and domain registration and renewal, as well as for the offline software and computer equipment used to maintain and enhance the site.  Even so, since we know frugality is a key component of the indie artist’s way of life, our mark-up on every piece of merchandise in the shop is only 10%.  Proceeds from your purchases are much appreciated. 

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Small Press Marketing Tips

This post, by Jim Cox, Editor In Chief of the Midwest Book Review, originally appeared on that site. Note that these tips are also applicable to individual authors. What follows are a wealth of specific hands-on suggestions from a host of small press publishers on promoting and marketing small press titles which I gleaned from the now defunct PMA e-mail list when it served as a premier source of "how to" information for its members. — Jim Cox

1. When arranging book signings, ask store for a list of media contacts, and when talking to media, ask for names of their favorite book stores! — Kathy Guttman

2. Include a separate "review form" with every book you ship. This way your customers are encouraged to send in reviews, which are GREAT for your ad copy. — Scott Bilker

3. Consider setting up a book signing in a local grocery store! To be sure, grocery stores get more foot traffic than book stores. (this may work best for regional or local books. It can depend on the book and the market. ) I once signed 300 copies of a book in 4 hours in a small town local grocery. Not all chain grocery stores will let you do this… depends on the town, the store, etc. But… I’ve seen it work well! — Rod Colvin

4. Don’t be afraid to contact radio stations that have already interviewed you to see if they’d be interested in doing another interview. I have been coming up with interview ideas that go along with the season; for example, my "Top 10 Funny Kid Christmas stories." I have contacted stations that had me on last spring and summer, and most have wanted me to be on again. The interviews are short; only 5-10 minutes. In February I will call back with my "Top 10 List of Funny Kid Stories Involving Love." Then it will be Easter stories, Mother’s Day stories, etc. Many self-publishers can invent some kind of seasonal twist for their books. — Grace Housholder

5. When you have a radio or TV gig organized — call the bookstores in that area tell them when they order 20 copies, you will plug them on the air. — Alvin G. Donovan

6. Offer a free information sheet for anyone that calls your 800# and requests it. I have a new two-sided piece. One side has "Ten Tips for a Better Adoption Trip" and the other "Preparing Siblings that Stay at Home." The tips were culled from my very successful international adoption travel planning workshops. Of course, those that call in for the tip sheets can (hopefully) be converted into sales. — Mary Petertyl

7. Mary, I tried offering a free tip sheet to a TV show audience in hopes that requests would turn into book sales. (Subject was romance.) I got 125 requests and spent $60 just in postage ($.48 Canadian.), after spending 4 straight hours answering and returning phone calls, and writing down addresses. Only two people bought books ($40 total); the rest were just after a freebie. A second mailing brought zero orders.

Now I SELL tip sheets (I have 20+) at $2 each which also covers postage. My most successful is my Writer’s Fortune Cookie Predictions: 42 separately folded messages from a bossy oracle to overcome Writer’s Block. My brochure/order info rides for free. Most are multiple orders which often result in follow-up orders for published articles ($4-$6), special reports ($6-$8), and manuals ($8-$20). I’ve learned that unless I attach a dollar value to my creativity/knowledge it doesn’t seem to be appreciated. It might be better to offer a free tip sheet as a prize only to those who call in with a question or story and talk to you on air. The rest of the listeners can order theirs by mailing you $2. If they’re really keen on the topic they’ll send $2. Just my experience; hope yours is better. — Andrea Reynolds

8. Talk to a new publisher — one-on-one/person-to-person every month, you’ll become invigorated and marketing will begin to take place through some sort of contagious osmosis type process, or if you don’t like that one write an article for a local paper about local small presses (including yours) in your region, state, city. — Steve Semken

9. When you call a bookstore to ask questions or arrange signings they may want to transfer your call. Before they do, find out where you are being transferred. Ask nicely, "To whom will I be speaking?" That way if they screw up and send you to the wrong extension, you’ll know the name of the person you were supposed to speak to and can get back on track again without too much fuss. — Tara Calishain

10. For those of you who have never found out who is linking to your site. This is an easy way to find out the good and the bad. Here’s how: Go to the Alta Vista search engine (Publetariat Editor note: Google works too). Input your URL (Web site address). Alta Vista will then search and report back all the sites it is linked from. For those of you who have embarked on link campaigns, you may be fairly astounded. I was. — Paul J. Krupin

11. Don’t take out display ads in major newspapers. A few weeks ago, my friend took out an ad in Sunday’s Chicago Tribune Book Review section (to the tune of $2142). Six books sold. And his name is recognizable around Chicago. He’s the founder of Oil Express Lube shops, Entrepreneur Hall of Fame, multimillionaire, you name it. These ads don’t cover their costs. — Raimonda Mikatavage

12. I have an author getting 20 to 30 hits a week on her information Web page. I had her add some e-mail hot buttons to the page where a person could ask the author questions about the subject, they don’t have to order. We get early reader feedback, and gather e-mail addresses to approach when her book is ready. I do this on the Web page for my book. — Welmon "Rusty" Walker, Jr.

13. Make yourself newsworthy and seek out media attention as often as appropriate (GuestFinder is a big help with this, by the way). Do a lot of speaking, live and on radio — and promote your appearances. Help others and they will help you. And finally, remember to have fun! — Shel Horowitz

14. When you are doing a book talk or signing leave postcards of your book announcing the date and time you will talk at the bookstore cashier a week or two before the event so they can be put in all bookstore transactions or just picked up for anyone interested. — Pam Terry

15. When you send books to a bookstore send a press release to the newspaper in their town with a short cover letter mentioning that the book(s) are available at (bookstore). — Sue Robishaw

These are just the first 15 in a list of 42 tips…read the rest of the article at Midwest Book Review.

self publishing

how does a self publishing company
do the marketing for a book? especially to an audience in several foreign countries?

Notes from the TOC conference

I just returned late Thursday night from the O’Reilly Media Tools of Change conference in New York City. This was my third year at the conference. The first year I attended as a reporter for VentureBeat, and then these past two times as a speaker. For the benefit of those of you who didn’t attend, I’ll share some of my personal highlights, in no particular order:

Twitter Forever Changes the Conference Experience – Thanks to Twitter, conferences will never be the same. For every session of the three day conference, hundreds of TOC attendees were Twittering real time quotes, analysis and conversation. I found myself monitoring the Twitterstream (check it out here) as I listened to the speakers, and it added another interesting (though distracting!) perspective on the conference.

Twitterers held nothing back. If the speaker started giving a sales pitch, or made questionable statements, the Twitterers were merciless. If the speaker said something interesting (or not), Twitterers would tweet it and then that would cause a cascade of retweets. For three days straight, TOC was in the top five most discussed subjects on Twitter. Thousands, if not millions, of people who weren’t at the conference were getting a taste of the not only what was happening but what people thought about what was happening. Many of the Twitterstream participants weren’t even at the conference.

One of the most profuse and entertaining Twitterers on the TOC Twitterstream – and he wasn’t at the conference – was Mike Cane (@mikecane for you Twitterers), a self-described "ebook militant" and writer who lives near Staten Island. Twitterers from around the world tweeted their friends at the conference and had them convey questions to the presenters. At one great panel on social media in publishing, moderated by Ron Hogan (@ronhogan for you Twitterers) of MediaBistro/GalleyCat, Ron actually introduced his panelists by their Twitter handles.

Is Twitter going to become a secondary form of identity? I think yes. I think it’ll also forever change the dynamic between conference presenters, attendees and wannabee attendees. At some points, the Twitter echo-chamber reached heretofore unknown limits of, well, echo-chamberness. During the Blogging and Social Media Workshop led by social media guru Chris Brogan (@chrisbrogan) who told attendees he considers Twitter the new phone, session attendee Chad Capellman (@chadrem) uploaded a YouTube video of Chris speaking. When Chad told Chris about it, Chris logged on to YouTube and the audience watched Chris watch a big screen projection of the Chris video taken minutes earlier, and then Chad or some other attendee joked they could take and upload a new video of this special moment as Chris watched a video of himself that we could all then watch.

Several times during his three hour workshop, Chris checked the Twitterstream to gauge audience impressions of his live performance. At one point after he walked on stage drinking from what looked like a beer bottle, Susan Danzinger (@susandanziger) of DailyLit tweeted she thought Chris was drinking a beer onstage, then yours truly (@markcoker) retweeted it because I was wondering the same, then Kat Meyer (@katmeyer) set the record straight, as did Chris when he saw the tweetstream on the big stage monitor. Twittering while watching Twitter while listening to and participating in a conference while the presenter talks about Twitter and is the subject of a Twitterstream while he himself Twitters makes for a very surreal experience.

Peter Brantley on Literature as a Driver for Services – Peter Brantley directs the Digital Library Federation, and he’s one of my favorite thinkers about the future of the books, and about the sacred place books occupy in culture. In a keynote address, Peter challenged the audience of publishers to consider how moving books from print to digital can change the nature of reading, and how the move to digital can open up new business opportunities for publishers. "What’s published will be less about the book and more about the people who read them," he said. He talked about how books will become networked and empower more participatory methods of reading.

Cory Doctorow Eviscerates DRM – In a keynote, author Cory Doctorow (@coreydoctorow) had the audience in rapt attention as he proceeded to disembowel Amazon and all those who would seek to perpetuate the short-sighted practice of DRM. He challenged publishers to step up to the plate and demand Amazon accept their ebook files DRM-free. If anyone knows where I can find a transcript of his talk, let me know so I can link to it here.

Chris Baty of Nanowrimo Says Authorship has Bright Future – One of my favorite presentations came from Chris Baty, founder of National Novel Writing Month, which just completed its tenth year of operation. Although Steve Jobs says people don’t read books anymore, Chris made clear that you can’t stop writers from writing, and for this reason alone books face a bright future because the process of writing helps writers appreciate books. "Novels are not written by novelists," he said, "novels are written by everyday people who give themselves permission to write novels."

At least one Nanowrimo participant has landed on the New York Times Bestseller lists, and several have earned book deals. The international Nanowrimo challenge has grown from only 21 participants in its first year, 1998, to 119,000 participants in 2008. Chris spoke at length about how the success of Nanowrimo has been driven by the powerful community that develops between writers as they share the deeply emotional experience of "meeting the book inside them."

The Rise of Ebooks – Ebooks were a big theme of the conference. The first year of the conference in 2007, there were maybe one or two ebook-themed sessions. Last year there were maybe three or four. This year, ebooks reigned supreme with at least ten sessions squarely focused on ebooks and with most of the other sessions touching on related themes. I moderated the "Rise of Ebooks" session. I admit, I’m biased, because I think my panelists (Joe Wikert of O’Reilly Media; indie author advocate and Publetariat founder April Hamilton; David Rothman of Teleread; and Russ Wilcox of E-Ink) did a kick *ss job of surfacing and debating some of the most interesting trends facing ebooks today. We covered a lot of ground in just 45 minutes, including:

  1. What’s driving the rapid sales growth of ebooks? (Answers: better screen display technology; availability of more titles; Oprah; lower prices; e-reading becoming as, or more, pleasurable than print; DRM starting to slip away)
  2. How long until ebooks go mainstream? (Russ predicted 2-3 percent of American households will own a dedicated e-reading device in the next 18 months [this is huge, and even if he’s off by half, it’s still huge], and most of the panelists agreed the ebook market will be dramatically larger in the next couple years.
  3. Screen technologies, present and future (screens will get faster, cheaper, better color, different sizes)
  4. Print vs. ebook, complementary or competitive? (most concluded they’re complementary, though I don’t think we’ll know if they’re a net positive or net negative for a few years – I suspect the latter)
  5. Supply chain implications for ebook intermediaries (new supply chain models forming, may not look exactly like print model; publishers and authors likely to get closer to consumers)
  6. Rich media ebooks, integrating video, audio, sensory feedback such as vibrations (lots of interesting stuff happening; a worthwhile opportunity to leverage traditional "book" content to offer readers a more engaging experience)

Artist Nina Paley Argues, "Give Away the Content, Sell the Containers." – Artist Nina Paley closed out the conference with a thought provoking talk in which she argued that artists and writers should give their content away for free but sell the packages that add value to their content. For example, she argued, water is free from the tap or filter, yet people will pay for water in a bottle for the benefit of the packaging, the brand, and the perceived benefits of that bottle or brand. Customers will pay for free content that is packaged in such as way that it adds value to the consumption of the content.

She showed a trailer for her new animated feature film, "Sita Sings the Blues," which she plans to make available online for free. She plans to make money (and pay off the debts incurred to make the movie) by selling the film to theaters, and by allowing publishers to publish coffee table books of the movie and its art. She also plans to sell value-added packaged versions of the movie, such as the limited edition DVDs she sold at the conference (Corey Doctorow was the first buyer).

Amazon Announces the Kindle 2 – Amazon tried to steal some of the thunder of the conference by choosing to announce the Kindle 2 a few blocks away on the first day of the conference. Amazon, however, was conspicuously absent from the conference. While attendees generally praised the new device for it’s faster screen refreshes (enabled by new E-Ink technology) and improved user interface design, as mentioned above in Cory Doctorow’s keynote and repeated by other keynoters, presenters and conference-goers,

Amazon was ridiculed throughout the conference for its adherence to DRM on the Kindle. Download O’Reilly’s Free "Best of TOC" Ebook – There was a ton more of interesting opinions and news from the conference, and I couldn’t possibly capture it all here. O’Reilly put together a good ebook (it’s free) that captures the best of the show (its only big omission is it doesn’t mention the Rise of Ebooks panel!) you can download it as long as you don’t mind jumping through all the convoluted hoops necessary to register for, and "purchase" the free ebook. Check it out here: https://epoch.oreilly.com/shop/cart.orm?prod=9780596802110.EBOOK Watch TOC Videos – O’Reilly has created an online archieve of some of the videos from TOC 2009 and prior years you can access here.

Citizen Reviewer

At the O’Reilly Tools of Change conference, the buzzword of the event was community. In the hearts and minds of today’s reader, the opinions of fellow readers far outweigh those of professional critics, whose views can be seen as too ‘ivory tower’ or worse, too heavily influenced by the stature of the author or publisher. Increasingly, before buying, readers are turning to blogs and sites like Goodreads and LibraryThing to get a bead on what the community of readers thinks about a given book. This is a trend that works in favor of indie authors and small imprints by giving us an avenue to get on an even footing with our mainstream competition where reviews are concerned.

On his blog today, Seth Godin not only talks about the reach of influential bloggers but becomes one of those book-promoting bloggers himself on behalf of an author friend (and a tip of the cap is owed to Mr. Godin for the title of this article). You may not be a friend of any blogger quite so influential as Mr. Godin, but that doesn’t mean you can’t take advantage of the trend. There are two approaches to consider.

The first is to bring the bloggers to you, the second is for you to go to them. Either way, you must provide free review copies and you must be willing to graciously accept the reviews, whether positive or negative. You must also agree with each reviewer on a likely timeframe for the review to appear, so you don’t end up having to repeatedly pester them for status updates.

To bring the bloggers to you, on your site or blog, simply offer to give away free copies of your book to book bloggers in exchange for reviews posted at those book-centric blogs. You can set a limit on the number of free copies available, or you can have a standing offer to all takers.

As bloggers write in to take you up on your offer, you will want to take a look at each blog to learn four things:

One, is the blog really primarily about books?

Two, are there numerous reviews already posted there about books similar to yours (i.e., fiction vs. nonfiction)?

Three, what is the quality of those reviews; does the reviewer give thoughtful and insightful remarks, or just seem to delight in the sport of shredding books and authors?

And four, how much traffic does the blog get?

The main advantage of this tack is that it’s easy to do. However, there are pitfalls. First, there’s the uncomfortable task of turning down bloggers whose blogs don’t meet the four criteria above, and potentially alienating those bloggers. There’s also the limitation imposed by your own site traffic: does your site get enough visitors to give your offer high visibility, and are many of those visitors likely to be reader-bloggers? If most of your site visitors are fellow writers, this approach isn’t likely to work.

To go with the second strategy, of reaching out to reader-bloggers yourself, begin by doing a Google search on "blog + reader" or "blog + books" You can also use the "more" drop-down menu on the main Google search page to limit your search results to blogs only, as shown below. Google Blog Search In that case, your searches can be limited to terms relevant to your type of book, such as "fiction", "historical fiction", "supernatural romance", etc. Go through your search results and check out any blogs that seem like a good match.

Use the four criteria listed previously to winnow the field, then contact the most promising bloggers via email with a review request.

The second approach is much more time- and labor-intensive than the first, since you have to do all your own legwork. On the plus side however, since you’re choosing the bloggers yourself, you can exercise quality control without any risk of angering potential reviewer-readers. Either way, once a review goes up you’ll want to read it and personally thank the reviewer (in a comment form under the review, if possible) for taking the time to post it – again, regardless of whether the review is positive or negative. You’re far more likely to win over readers by responding graciously to a negative review than you are by savaging the reviewer.

If the review is positive, promote it with an excerpt and a link on your own site(s) and blog(s). If it’s negative, while you can’t avoid all the views on the reviewer’s site or blog, it’s probably best not to add fuel to that fire with promotion on your own site(s) or blog(s).

April L. Hamilton is an indie author, blogger, Technorati blog critic and the founder of Publetariat.com. She is also the author of The IndieAuthor Guide.

Blogs: 10 reasons authors should have one

Blogs are a few years old in the tech industries, but now they are a must-have for authors who want to get the word out. If you don’t have a blog yet, here’s why you need to get blogging!

1. People can find you and your books on the internet.

Google loves blogs and regular content updates. Blog software allows you to update your blog whenever you like, creating extra pages for your website. These are indexed and over time you can build up a great internet presence so people can find you when searching.

2.Connect with like-minded people.

Being a blogger opens up a new world of networking. You can connect with other authors who blog, or literary agents, publishers and communities all over the world.

3.Two way interaction and feedback.

You can allow comments on your blog so people can connect with you directly by leaving a message. You can also comment on other blogs. This allows an interaction that cannot be achieved by a static website or email.

4.Marketing you as an author.

You can add all sorts of information about yourself at your blog, including photos, videos and examples of your work. You can list your publishing credits, your ebooks, articles, media appearances and anything else you want to use to market yourself as an author.

5.Book promotion.

Have a special page for your book where you can add photos, your book trailer, downloads of chapters and any other information on your book. You can do special blog posts, for example, an interview with you talking about your book, or a giveaway.

6.Online sales channel.

You can use your blog as a place to sell your books and services. If you integrate with a shopping cart or use a service like Smashwords or Clickbank, you can add links for these Buy Now pages.

7.Writing practice.

Blogging is a very dynamic way of writing. Sometimes you will get an idea and want to blog on it immediately. You will do some research, try to write something catchy or useful, and then post it all very quickly. Sometimes you might spend a lot longer on one piece, but generally you write between 500-800 words and get it out there. If you get “bloggers block”, then chances are you are not interested enough in the material to sustain a blog on it, so move on!

8.Blog your book.

You can use your book as the key material for your blog. Take excerpts and use them as posts, and then spin off from those posts into new things. This will get you traffic related to your topic/book subject so make sure you have a sales page that allows people to buy your book.

9.Build an audience.

People can subscribe to your blog through an RSS feed which means you can build a following who read your work. You can build relationships with these people and get direct feedback through comments and seeing how people respond to your posts.

10.Build your platform.

Publishers these days want a “platform” meaning that you have a following, people who will buy your books. If you are self-published, this is even more important as you will need to sell it yourself. Blogging enables you to build this platform in terms of a body of work, an online presence, knowledge of the industry and marketing as well as hopefully some people who are interested in what you have to say.

Record your book: 3 ways to speak your book instead of write it

There are a number of ways you can now have a book without writing it. Some people think best out loud, so talk your book and then edit afterwards. Here are some options:

1. Record it yourself. Buy an audio recording device that creates digital files (under $100) and talk into it. Create mp3 files. Put an ad on www.Elance.com and get bids for someone to transcribe it for you. Then get an editor to craft it into a finished product. If possible, do the proofreading yourself and it’s done. I use a basic recorder for interviews which I get transcribed professionally and returned to me over the internet. It’s cheap and fast.

2. Record over the internet. Use a service like www.IDictate.com where you can do the recording direct over the internet. They then return a typed file for you to edit.

3. Speech to text software. Use software like Dragons Naturally Speaking http://www.nuance.com where the software recognizes your voice and writes it on the screen for you. Edit from there. All of these will give you a written file that you then have to edit and shape into a book, but the bulk of writing is done in a different way. You can then get a freelance editor to help you shape the final product – try http://www.elance.com

Historical Fiction: Do Your Research

Editor’s note: when writing historical fiction, research is crucial. In this essay, author Heidi M. Thomas shares just some of the research she did to bring her novel, Cowgirl Dreams, to life.

Cowgirls: Empowered Women

The first cowgirls, like my grandmother in Montana, helped on their family ranches out of necessity. At an early age they learned to ride horses, rope cattle, and stay in the saddle atop an untamed bucking bronco. They competed with the men in those early ranch gatherings and continued to do so at the organized roundup events.

In 1885, Annie Oakley, a diminutive sharpshooter in Buffalo Bill Cody’s Wild West Show, paved the way for other women to be recognized in the rodeo arena. Two years later, Bertha Kaepernick was allowed to enter a horse race in Cheyenne’s Frontier Days only because the arena was so muddy the cowboys refused to participate. To entertain the crowd, she was coerced into riding a bucking horse. Despite the terrible conditions, she managed to stay in the saddle, and put the men to shame. She continued to compete and often beat such legendary cowboys as Ben Corbett and Hoot Gibson.

Prairie Rose Henderson Following in Bertha’s footsteps years later, Prairie Rose Henderson of Wyoming forced the Cheyenne organizers to allow her to ride. She went on to become one of the most flamboyant cowgirls of the era, dressing in bright colors, sequins and ostrich plumes over bloomers.

Lucille Mulhall, whose father, Colonel Zack Mulhall, ran a Wild West Show, was described in a 1900 New York World article as “only ninety pounds, can break a bronc, lasso and brand a steer, and shoot a coyote at 500 yards. She can also play Chopin, quote Browning, and make mayonnaise.” Both Teddy Roosevelt and Will Rogers have been credited with giving Lucille the title “cowgirl”. She also went on to appear in silent films.

Between 1885 and 1935, many women proudly wore that title and competed with men, riding thesame broncs, steers and bulls. They also roped and bull-dogged alongside their male counterparts. The list includes Marie Gibson, Alice and Margie Greenough, Fox Hastings (one of the few women bulldoggers), Tad Lucas, Vera McGinnis (who shocked the public by wearing pants), Bonnie McCarrol, Florence Randolph, Ruth Roach, Fanny Sperry Steele, Mabel Strickland, Lorena Trickey (infamous for stabbing her lover to death with a pocket knife), Margie Wright, and many others.

Rodeo, today a competitive sport with college scholarships, developed from the everyday world of cattle ranching. Its roots and many terms stem from the Spanish conquistadors of the 1700s. The first rodeos began in the mid-1800s with informal contests held among working cowboys to see who could ride the meanest bronc or rope a steer the fastest.

A hundred years ago bronc busting didn’t have the life-saving luxury of a buzzer going off after eight seconds. Cowboys rode until they were bucked off or the horse gave up, whichever came first. Some of those rides lasted up to twenty minutes. Events later became more organized when cowboys drove thousands of cattle and horses to town in the yearly round-up, usually around July 4th. By 1920, rodeos regularly featured three cowgirl events-ladies’ bronc riding, trick riding, and at rodeos with a race track, cowgirls’ relay racing. To score in the saddle bronc event, women had to stay on board eight seconds (the men rode ten) and they were allowed to ride with two reins, although they could opt to use one as the men did.

The time limit changed to eight seconds for men and six seconds for women during the 1950s. This is the kind of life Nettie, the heroine of my book, Cowgirl Dreams, lived and aspired to.

Heidi M. Thomas is a creative writing instructor, freelance editor and manuscript consultant. Learn more about Heidi, her books and services on her site.

An Interesting Viewpoint on Indies

I’d like to share this from Independent Publisher Online Magazine:
[http://www.independentpublisher.com/article.php?page=1276]

The Good, The Bad & The Simply Ridiculous
Why Independent Publishers Can Rule the World

by Nina L. Diamond

For the last two decades, we’ve all seen that neither the major publishing houses’ crazy business model nor the variety of business models used by independent publishers have worked. Some have been worse (major houses) than others (independents).

As our current unfavorable financial follies progress worldwide, it’s clear that every publishing entity will have to change how it does business. Some will change for the better. Others will simply change without the concept of better entering the picture.

My money (what little we starving writers and authors have these days) is on independents changing for the better and the major houses finding ways to stay afloat while continuing the model that has been so destructive to books and authors.

This brings us to some news – the good, the bad, and the simply ridiculous:

The Good
Independent publishers are in the same position that cable TV networks were back in the ‘80s and early ‘90s.

The three broadcast TV networks (ABC, CBS, NBC) short-sightedly and unwisely underestimated cable’s potential. Well, we see where that got the three smug behemoths: focused solely on money, they’ve lost their market dominance, scores of viewers, and most of their creative credibility.

Their news operations can barely keep up with cable’s quality, and the networks’ creative programming has been reduced to a handful of quality shows amidst a line-up of mind-numbingly stupid so-called “reality” shows, while the cable networks have grown in number and in high-quality, critically acclaimed programs loved by audiences.

The cable companies, those independent visionaries once dismissed as poor step-children by the broadcast industry and the print media, have shown that quality rises to the top.

Today, independent publishers can follow the cable network model, and rise to the top of the publishing industry.

Did putting money first and quality a very distant second spell financial success for the three broadcast networks?

Of course not.

And it hasn’t spelled success for the major publishing houses, either.

And, as you’ve noticed, it certainly hasn’t worked out very well for the real estate, banking, and investment industries.

It never does, when you don’t care what you sell as long as you’re selling something. That always leads to selling nothing.

Independent publishers far outnumber the major houses, and can survive the storm because the independents have a tradition of focusing on quality, and of respecting authors and their books.

They can come out on top because they don’t have the burden of a mandate to sell crap in order to funnel millions of dollars into corporate conglomerate leaders’ salaries, bonuses, and other payments, and to cut back on staff and titles when they can’t sell enough of said crap in order to keep stuffing those dollars into corporate honchos’ pockets.

They can come out on top because they have the flexibility that the major houses lack.

They can turn on a dime. And get by on one, too, for a while if they have to.

Recently, I had a conversation with Lynne Rabinoff, a literary agent who represents an author I’ve been working with. She represents high profile and midlist authors, and, until now, like most agents, has pitched her authors primarily to the major houses.

Given the current publishing climate, she’s now routinely including independent publishers in her list when she pitches an author’s book.

Other agents, she says, are doing the same.

Her advice to the major houses?

“Put more emphasis on what a book has to say rather than on a glitzy platform.”

That will force them “to pay more attention to a book and to reign in the big advances that just end up hurting everyone.”

Her advice to authors?

“Think twice about writing a book. You need to know that what you’re saying is important. Not everyone can or should write a book.”

Often, she says, the material is better suited for a magazine article, if it’s even suited for publication at all.

But, alas, the lure of fame and fortune – that, of course, doesn’t come to 99.9% of authors – leads so many people to want to have a book published, often when it’s not warranted. And that does nothing but hurt the industry.

So, yes, there is good news to come from today’s publishing predicament. At least for independent publishers and their authors.

Independents, with the quality and creativity they offer, are in a position to take over the industry. And agents who once shied away from independents solely because they couldn’t fork over big advances, are now turning to them. That helps authors, keeping them from being under-represented, or not represented at all, as they deal with independent publishers.

The Bad
Economic recovery is going to take a while. This isn’t the sniffles, it’s a serious illness with a long treatment plan. The patients, however, will steadily improve. If they take good care of themselves and stop doing self-destructive things.

The Simply Ridiculous
The list of absurdities in the publishing industry could wrap around the world twice, so I’ll just share one with you that’s emblematic of what’s been wrong for so long:

An author I spoke to has been having a hard time getting a novel published.

What’s so ridiculous about that?

The author has had about 20 fiction bestsellers that have been loved by critics and readers, and that have made a tidy fortune for the major houses that have published them.

So, why the trouble getting the next one published?

The major houses would prefer to publish only the author’s non-fiction, which is very good and has done okay, but nowhere near as well as the bestselling novels. Novels that readers have made very clear they want more of.

See, I told you it was ridiculous.

Independent publishers will lead the book world if they can focus on the good, ride out the bad, and learn from the ridiculous.

* * * * *

Nina L. Diamond is a journalist, essayist, and the author of Voices of Truth: Conversations with Scientists, Thinkers & Healers. Her work has appeared in numerous publications, including Omni, The Los Angeles Times Magazine, The Chicago Tribune, and The Miami Herald.

Ms. Diamond was a writer and performer on Pandemonium, the National Public Radio (NPR) satirical humor program, for its entire run in Miami and select markets nationwide from 1984-1998. As an editor, she works frequently with other authors and journalists on both fiction and non-fiction.

Winner at Last!

I’ve just won first prize in the H E Bates shorts story competition!! Although I‘ve been short listed a few times in various comps and even came second a few times, this is the first time I have ever won a short story contest, so I’m pretty much over the moon about it. The details are at http://litnorthants.wordpress.com/news/ although you can’t read my story ‘The Handprint Child’ there. The collection will be published this year and as far as I know that will be the only way to see the winning entries, but I’ll post more about that when I know.

Beware of Email Overload

With most of us suffering from email overload these days, it’s important to think carefully about the frequency and format of your broadcast emails.

Online marketing experts advise communicating with your list frequently, so people don’t forget you. On the other hand, sending too much email is the quickest way to motivate people to click the "unsubscribe" button. I’ve unsubscribed from a number of lists because I got two or three promotional emails a week from them.

Also consider the length of your ezine. I receive several ezines that contain a lot of great information, but they are so long that I usually skip over them in my in-box, thinking I just don’t have time to read them right now. Sometimes I get back to these ezines later, but often I end up deleting them unread. If you send a weekly ezine, it’s especially important to keep it short and easily digestible. In my own ezine, I always have more story ideas than I have space for, so I use that extra content on my blog.

Beware of Email Overload

With most of us suffering from email overload these days, it’s important to think carefully about the frequency and format of your broadcast emails.

Online marketing experts advise communicating with your list frequently, so people don’t forget you. On the other hand, sending too much email is the quickest way to motivate people to click the “unsubscribe” button. I’ve unsubscribed from a number of lists because I got two or three promotional emails a week from them.

Also consider the length of your ezine. I receive several ezines that contain a lot of great information, but they are so long that I usually skip over them in my in-box, thinking I just don’t have time to read them right now. Sometimes I get back to these ezines later, but often I end up deleting them unread.

If you send a weekly ezine, it’s especially important to keep it short and easily digestible. In my own ezine, I always have more story ideas than I have space for, so I use that extra content on my blog.

In This New Murky World, What Makes an Author?

Here at Publetariat, April Hamilton talked about the Tools of Change conference, and mentioned in passing about the blurring lines for what makes a legitimate author. Over on his blog, Nathan Bransford is asking the same question. Publishing has always been extremely difficult. Writers have clawed and fought their way into traditional publishing contracts. And so when they get there, they want a label that defines them as special and having achieved this great feat. And that’s totally understandable. It’s a basic human need to be acknowledged for the things that we accomplish. And labels are a shorthand way of making sure that that acknowledgment happens. But for years it’s created division in the writing community. There were the real legitimate authors and then everybody else. And there were certain things you had to do to be real, legitimate, and worthy. For awhile it was pretty easy to tell who was real and who was fake. If you had a published book out, you were real. Yes, there were vanity presses, but those books could be spotted a mile away, and not only did they not sell, but they didn’t have any avenues to sell. There was no Amazon.com or any other online venue, and there was no danger that a bookstore was going to stock them. And Physical brick and mortar bookstores were where the book sales were happening. Then came ebooks and print-on-demand, and that real author definition had to become more strict. Obviously ebook authors weren’t real authors, or at least that was the prevailing wisdom. Because clearly, an ebook publisher wasn’t a real publisher. I mean they weren’t dealing with paper. And everybody knew that publishing was all about the paper. But then some ebook publishers really started to gain a following. In my own genre (Romance), we had Ellora’s Cave and Samhain (among a few others) rise up. And of course Harlequin has always made a strong and innovative ebook effort. Slowly ebook authors have become regarded as real authors though some of the snobbery still exists. But print-on-demand? Self published authors? Isn’t self published author an oxymoron? Shouldn’t it be self published hack or self published scribbler, or maybe if we’re feeling generous, self published writer? Many of us here are firmly in the indie author camp. Self published sounds vain. Indie filmmakers aren’t called: self published movie makers. Author is a title for everyone who creates something. (Check the dictionary and see for yourself.) There cannot be an approved list of publishers that defines you as an author, despite the attempts of some genre writing associations to do just that. Because of the lowered entry barriers and the fact that nearly anyone can start their own publishing imprint these days, if it comes down to, "You’re a real author if someone else published your work, but not if you published it yourself," then I could go down the street and get my neighbor to publish me. I think it’s obvious how ludicrous this is getting. The days of real legitimate authors being so easily defined are long gone, and now we live in a world of gray. As an indie, I’m proud to be here. A fellow indie, J.M. Reep, has mentioned, traditional publishing isn’t as traditional as we think it is. The tradition of publishing in the earlier days was self publishing. Authors and their families very often were the ones that got a work into print. It wasn’t a commercial NY endeavor. Some of the names on that early self publishing list might surprise people who are used to seeing NY as the only holy grail for a writer. But that was when we viewed publishing in a different way. We’re going through these same growing pains again now, as we are being forced to change our view of what makes someone an author. The lines are blurring, and perhaps the best thing we indies can do, is try not to get too sucked up in labels. You’re an author to everyone who reads your book and loves it. Chances are good most of them don’t know who your publisher is. Most of them don’t even know who Stephen King’s publisher is. So if you’re waiting for the world to collectively stand up and be impressed by the name of your publisher, that might be a long wait.

What's that thing about the enemy of my enemy?

Novella:

Greta is a werecat whose tribe plans to sacrifice her during the next full moon. Her only hope for survival is Dayne, a sorcerer who once massacred most of the tribe. What’s that thing they say about the enemy of your enemy?

KEPT is available as a free PDF here:

http://zoewinters.wordpress.com/kept/

Or for your Amazon Kindle, here:

http://www.amazon.com/Kept/dp/B001M5TE1I/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1228169080&sr=8-1

First print release coming out later this year.

Thanks!