Joe sez: If you've missed the last few guest blogs, they are worth reading and the comments are still open:
You can read Marcus Sakey talking about cover art here: http://jakonrath.blogspot.com/2013/06/guest-post-by-marcus-sakey.html
You can read Dakota Madison talking about finding success as a romance writer here: http://jakonrath.blogspot.com/2013/06/guest-post-by-dakota-madison.html
You can read CG Cooper talking about his Rule of Three here: http://jakonrath.blogspot.com/2013/06/guest-post-by-carlos-cooper.html
You can read Todd Travis talking about fear here: http://jakonrath.blogspot.com/2013/06/gust-post-by-todd-travis.html
So here's today's guest blogger, Patrick Balester...
HOW I LEARNED TO STOP
WORRYING AND LOVE E-PUBLISHING
I've been reading Joe's blog, A Newbie's Guide To Publishing for over five years now. I first met
Joe around that time, and I'll never forget it. I remember it like it was
yesterday...I was going through his garbage, looking for something, anything,
he had written on, to paste into my fan scrap-book...oh, wait, that was yesterday.
Now I remember! I was attending my first writer's
conference, in 2008. It was a cold and windy day...it was Chicago in February,
which explains why it was cold and windy. But it didn't matter. I was attending
my first conference as a writer (my book was about to be published by Avalon)
and I was down by the author tables when I saw him, the man whose Jack Daniels'
novels I had been reading for months. I nervously approached, ready to
introduce myself and tell him how much I enjoyed his work. He saw me. And
before I could say a word, he stuck out his hand and said “Hi. I'm JA Konrath.
Have a coaster”, and he handed me an autographed coaster featuring one of his
books in the series. I saw him several times over the next two days and he gave
me a lot of good advice, never hesitating to answer my questions. Joe convinced
me to put the first chapter of my novel on my website, to entice readers to buy
the book. What a guy.
Still, some of the lessons he discussed on his blog never
really sunk in, and I had to learn them the hard way, mainly because I didn't
have as much experience as a writer with new technology. I'm old school, and by
that I mean...I'm old. When I was a young lad and first put pen to paper, I
used...pen and paper. And not just any pen. Quill pens hadn't been invented
yet. My first pen was a sharpened stick dipped in mammoth blood, and my paper
was the hide of a saber-toothed tiger.
Needless to say, my first few stories were crap. This is true of any
budding young writer. But, a few thousand years passed, some sharp guy in
Germany named Gutenberg invented moveable type, and things progressed nicely after
that. In no time at all, I had my first computer, and I was producing stories
at a rapid pace. They were still crap, but I could pump them out a lot faster!
But I got better. Then I got published.
When my cozy mystery novel, In
The Dismal Swamp, was published, it came out in hardcover, and I was
thrilled. But the publisher was small. I got an advance, made some money, but
not a lot. By then, e-readers were appearing, but they hadn't gained wide
acceptance yet. My wife got one for Christmas a couple of years ago, and when I
tried to help her download books, it took us hours. Downloading software,
synching with the e-reader, connecting cables...I thought to myself, what a
pain! And this, from a man who used to work as a computer programmer. I
thought, this will never be me. I'm sticking with real books!
Besides, I had already seen the demise of Borders, and I
really enjoyed my local bookstore. I didn't want to see them vanish.
Independent stores were starting to disappear, which disturbed me, but the
smart ones were starting to adapt to new technology, offering free wi-fi,
encouraging customers to stay and have coffee while they shopped, and providing
good customer service. But I still didn't see how e-publishing would help me.
But then, something amazing happened. My publisher, Avalon
Books, was bought out by Amazon's publishing division, Thomas & Mercer in
2012. I got their writer's agreement signed it, and sent it in, but didn't
think much more about it. My book went to kindle in September, which was pretty
exciting. I told my friends. Then one day, I got my first royalty check from my
e-sales. Wow, I thought. It was a good chunk of change.
A month later, Amazon ran a promotion and my book vaulted
into the top 100 for mysteries, resting, perhaps for just a few minutes or
maybe more, in the top ten! I got my next royalty statement a few days ago, and
I suddenly realize I've made more on my book in the past five months than I
have in the past five years.
This is the kind of stuff that makes you sit up and take
notice. I'm beginning to appreciate the power of e-publishing. Along the way,
I've also started to use social media more effectively to promote my book,
something Joe has always stressed. Of course, all this would really pay off if
I had more titles, but I'm working on that. Nothing cures writer's block like a
paycheck, and lately the pages have been flying from the keyboard to my
printer.
I'm actively looking for an agent for my nearly completed
manuscript. I know I could take the self-publishing route, but I won't...not
yet. Joe can do it, because he's paid his dues, he's a top professional, and
knows how to edit his own work. I'm not at that level. Maybe someday I will be.
But at least I've come out of the cave. Unlike the woolly mammoth and
saber-toothed tiger, I intend to be here for a while. And e-publishing is going
to help me along the way.
Now, if you're still reading or haven't fallen asleep, time
to have some fun! Many of you are big Konrath fans, or you wouldn't be on this
page. But are you his number one fan? There's only one way to find out. Take
the Konrath
Quiz! And see if your a hardcore fan
like me, or just a wannabe.
I'd like to thank Joe for the opportunity to appear on his
blog, and tell the world what a great inspiration he's been to me, even though,
like the prodigal son, I had to learn some writing lessons the hard way. And if
you're still working on that first book, be more like Joe. Your wallet and your
career will thank you!
Joe sez: Thanks for the kind words, Patrick. Your quiz made me laugh out loud when you wrote it, and made me laugh again when I clicked on it today.
I'm glad that In the Dismal Swamp is doing well on Kindle. Right now it's at a respectable rank. I haven't read it yet, but I encourage everyone to buy a copy (yes, I buy copies of all my guest posters' ebooks.) It's just $2.99, and if it's as funny as his posts are, it should be a treat.
Since my blog is all about offering unsolicited advice, I'll comment on what I see as a paradigm change in this industry, and give Patrick and everyone reading this my 2 cents about what to do when a manuscript is finished. Here's the in-depth, comprehensive checklist.
1. Get a professional cover, professional editing, professional proofreading, and professional formatting.
2. Self-publish it.
It is no longer necessary to get an agent first and find a publisher. If that is one of your dreams, then you can set your goals accordingly (research agents, send out X number of email queries per week, attend conventions and pitch to them in person) but I've seen that the easiest way to get an agent (and a Big Publisher) in 2013 is to sell a ton of self-pubbed ebooks.
Self-publishing is the new slush pile. Agents and publishers are cherry-picking ebooks that get a lot of sales/buzz/good reviews and contacting authors directly. If Patrick wants to go that route, getting his ebook professionally vetted and getting it live is the way to do that.
In the past, there was a fear that self-pubbing ruined an author's shot at getting an agent. As I said, I've seen the world change since those days. While some agents may claim not to accept anything previously self-published, I bet a dollar to a donut they're trolling the Amazon Top 100 Bestsellers for authors. And if they aren't, they're dinosaurs who wouldn't help you or your book very much anyway.
Ebooks are forever. Forever, of course, is eternity.
But eternity can have a starting point.
Every day you don't self-publish is a day you potentially missed out on sales.
Reread that as many times as needed to get it to sink in.
The sooner you get your ebook live on Amazon, the sooner you start making money, getting reviews, finding fans, and improving your odds at succeeding.
Let me put it a different way. Let's say, because I lead such a healthy life, I'll live to June 27, 2070. My ebooks will continue to earn money after I've died, but I'll only be able to use and enjoy that money for 57 years. IF I self-publish today.
If I self-publish next month, I only have 56 years 11 months to spend that money. If I publish next year, I've only got 56 years to reap the proceeds from that ebook. If it takes me 2 years to find an agent, 6 months to land a publisher, and 18 months for them to go live, I just missed out on 4 years of potential income (not counting the income I'll miss out on because my stupid publisher prices my ebook at $12.99 and only gives me 17.5%.)
Get the point? There is absolutely ZERO reason not to self-publish as soon as possible.
If you feel your book isn't ready for prime time yet, join a writers group or hire an editor. Cover artists, formatters, and proofreaders can also be hired.
And what if your ebook wasn't ready and you self-publish and there are (gasp!) mistakes and typos and errors?
I just did this very thing.
When I released Haunted House, I made a special arrangement with KDP and had a pre-order page up. Hell or high water, I had to get that manuscript live by my promised pre-order date. But the book turned out more complicated than I expected, and real life threw me some curves, and I self-published it just 2 hours before it went live.
It had over 150 errors in it.
As you can expect, many readers were pissed off, and rightfully so. Many reviewers rightly criticized the book for so many errors. And I received many emails expressing disappointment (along with several who went the extra mile and pointed out the typos they found--something I'm always grateful for.)
So I fixed them as fast as I could, uploaded a new version, and apologized in the comments section (if you're someone I irritated, I'm truly sorry). My mistake was inexcusable. I should have given myself more time and done a better job with the proofing.
But guess what? The world didn't end. The book has a 4.2 average rating, and I've sold thousands of copies.
I screwed up, in one of the biggest ways possible, and I survived.
Now I don't recommend doing what I did, and I know for new authors a few 1 star reviews can really hurt sales. Maybe I lost some fans. But it seems like most of my true fans have forgiven me, and eventually this mistake will be lost to time because the updated version is live.
Let me state I do NOT condone self-publishing anything but your best work, professionally vetted. But if you screw up, it isn't the end of the world. You and your book can recover.
What you can't recover from is the days, weeks, months, and years lost if you don't self-publish when you can.
There are no launch dates anymore. No reason to wait for "the right moment." The right moment, in EVERY case, is always: as soon as the book is ready.
An ebook is forever. You want forever to start as soon as possible. Even if your goal is a top NY agent and a Big 5 publisher.
1. Get a professional cover, professional editing, professional proofreading, and professional formatting.
2. Self-publish it.
It is no longer necessary to get an agent first and find a publisher. If that is one of your dreams, then you can set your goals accordingly (research agents, send out X number of email queries per week, attend conventions and pitch to them in person) but I've seen that the easiest way to get an agent (and a Big Publisher) in 2013 is to sell a ton of self-pubbed ebooks.
Self-publishing is the new slush pile. Agents and publishers are cherry-picking ebooks that get a lot of sales/buzz/good reviews and contacting authors directly. If Patrick wants to go that route, getting his ebook professionally vetted and getting it live is the way to do that.
In the past, there was a fear that self-pubbing ruined an author's shot at getting an agent. As I said, I've seen the world change since those days. While some agents may claim not to accept anything previously self-published, I bet a dollar to a donut they're trolling the Amazon Top 100 Bestsellers for authors. And if they aren't, they're dinosaurs who wouldn't help you or your book very much anyway.
Ebooks are forever. Forever, of course, is eternity.
But eternity can have a starting point.
Every day you don't self-publish is a day you potentially missed out on sales.
Reread that as many times as needed to get it to sink in.
The sooner you get your ebook live on Amazon, the sooner you start making money, getting reviews, finding fans, and improving your odds at succeeding.
Let me put it a different way. Let's say, because I lead such a healthy life, I'll live to June 27, 2070. My ebooks will continue to earn money after I've died, but I'll only be able to use and enjoy that money for 57 years. IF I self-publish today.
If I self-publish next month, I only have 56 years 11 months to spend that money. If I publish next year, I've only got 56 years to reap the proceeds from that ebook. If it takes me 2 years to find an agent, 6 months to land a publisher, and 18 months for them to go live, I just missed out on 4 years of potential income (not counting the income I'll miss out on because my stupid publisher prices my ebook at $12.99 and only gives me 17.5%.)
Get the point? There is absolutely ZERO reason not to self-publish as soon as possible.
If you feel your book isn't ready for prime time yet, join a writers group or hire an editor. Cover artists, formatters, and proofreaders can also be hired.
And what if your ebook wasn't ready and you self-publish and there are (gasp!) mistakes and typos and errors?
I just did this very thing.
When I released Haunted House, I made a special arrangement with KDP and had a pre-order page up. Hell or high water, I had to get that manuscript live by my promised pre-order date. But the book turned out more complicated than I expected, and real life threw me some curves, and I self-published it just 2 hours before it went live.
It had over 150 errors in it.
As you can expect, many readers were pissed off, and rightfully so. Many reviewers rightly criticized the book for so many errors. And I received many emails expressing disappointment (along with several who went the extra mile and pointed out the typos they found--something I'm always grateful for.)
So I fixed them as fast as I could, uploaded a new version, and apologized in the comments section (if you're someone I irritated, I'm truly sorry). My mistake was inexcusable. I should have given myself more time and done a better job with the proofing.
But guess what? The world didn't end. The book has a 4.2 average rating, and I've sold thousands of copies.
I screwed up, in one of the biggest ways possible, and I survived.
Now I don't recommend doing what I did, and I know for new authors a few 1 star reviews can really hurt sales. Maybe I lost some fans. But it seems like most of my true fans have forgiven me, and eventually this mistake will be lost to time because the updated version is live.
Let me state I do NOT condone self-publishing anything but your best work, professionally vetted. But if you screw up, it isn't the end of the world. You and your book can recover.
What you can't recover from is the days, weeks, months, and years lost if you don't self-publish when you can.
There are no launch dates anymore. No reason to wait for "the right moment." The right moment, in EVERY case, is always: as soon as the book is ready.
An ebook is forever. You want forever to start as soon as possible. Even if your goal is a top NY agent and a Big 5 publisher.
Fantastic post, Patrick. Welcome aboard! And we'll be here still to help when you decide to self-publish. :-)
ReplyDeleteOh, and Joe - I'm sorry, but according to Patrick's test, I'm not really a fan of yours... :-)
According to his test, my wife and mom aren't fans either. ;)
ReplyDeletePatrick I'm not taking the test. Fear of failure,I suppose.
ReplyDeleteBut my apology is more important, anyway. Your post made me laugh out loud and I'm off to buy your book.
I am liking the guest posts, Joe.
I'm working on the social media thing. I never realized how private writing is. I could be a hermit, without even trying. I even say that with pride. So social media is a PITB, but...
Patrick, listen to Joe!
ReplyDeleteFunny story about Haunted House. Every so often I pester Amazon to allow indie authors with decent, if not spectacular, sales to allow their books to be preordered, with a requirement being that they load the manuscript at the time a preorder date is entered (one to three weeks later) to prevent being caught without a product ready. Of course they always say no...so in the meantime I'm sticking to the publish-when-its-ready rule.
Nice post, Patrick.
ReplyDeleteAnd I think it's worth emphasizing something Joe said. The traditional publishing paradigm is: LAUNCH the book and get as many sales in 4-6 week as possible, then forget about it unless you're a brand name bestseller. (Really. That's pretty much it). It could go out of print in anywhere from a couple months to never, but don't count on never.
The new paradigm is, publish the book yourself and collect sales over infinity, it doesn't go out of print. Ever. (Or until some new publishing paradigm comes along and kills ebook publishing).
The first version of CREATURES OF APPETITE had several errors in it... it wasn't because I was too cheap to pay a professional proofer, it was rather that I was far too impatient... the proofer needed 2-3 weeks to schedule it, and I wanted to see my book up asap...
ReplyDeleteso I proofed it myself, always a mistake, and when it went up, several reviewers noted errors and zipped me for it...
So I had it professionally proofed, uploaded a new, updated version and told any of the previous readers that I'd be happy to gift them a copy of the clean version...
It was a lot of work, but it had to be done... it was all my fault for being impatient...
And I vowed never to make that mistake again...
Todd Travis
Todd, I noticed you hit #1 in the freebies. How many did you give away?
ReplyDeleteNice post, Patrick.
ReplyDeleteJoe's right. Self-publish as soon as you can. There's no reason not to.
I've been publishing something about every two weeks now. Just loaded my latest to KDP this morning, and it should be live later today.
http://judehardin.blogspot.com/
I think I saw a link that GalleyCat now tracks the top 100 self published books, so the pub world is really changing faster than I realized. Thanks for all the tips.
ReplyDeleteYou're right about one mistake not sinking you. Dean W Smith wrote about this as well in his Myths series.
ReplyDeleteAt the end of the day, no one remembers (or cares) who you are. People who live in fear, constantly watching their step so that they don't make a mistake, are losing out.
While you must ensure your work is the best you can make it, given whatever constraints of time/money there are, you have to take the jump in sometime.
Hey Joe,
ReplyDeleteWriting as DB Morgan, my suspense novel, ICED, was overall #1 Free on Amazon most of April 6 & 7 of this year. I gave away 52, 574 copies in the US.
Hope that helps!
Tim Myers (DB Morgan)
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteI love the helpful synergy of these guest posts--Joe helps the Alzheimer's fundraiser, the guest posters help their books, and the posts help us!
ReplyDeleteBTW Joe, is there a way for us future guest posters to know if we succeeded in reserving our "day" without making you write hundreds of emails? Sorry to be a pest but I worry about hungry spam filters and things...
Joe,
ReplyDeleteso far I've given away 61,000 books and change... still a day to go, but downloads are starting to level off, it's dropped to number 7 overall and number 2 in thrillers, but things are slowing, which is to be expected, of course... (Tues and Wed were crazy in terms of download numbers)... hopefully I'll hit 65 or 66 k by Friday night.
My other book's sales have picked up nicely, and readers seem to really like both.
I'm very pleased with how it's gone so far...
I will give you a full update when it's complete...
Todd Travis
I like that, someone admitting his mistakes. Glad you fixed the errors and reuploaded a new version.
ReplyDeleteAbout the paycheck, so true. And bad sales hurt motivation. :/
Anyway, good luck on your books (but it seems you've had a lot of downloads, awesome)!
I wish money started pouring in the instant I self-published. Hasn't been the case, for me. I don't regret forgoing the traditional route--the experience I had publishing stories with magazines was frustrating enough--but I do sympathize with Patrick Balester's words: "I know I could take the self-publishing route, but I won't...not yet. Joe can do it, because he's paid his dues, he's a top professional, and knows how to edit his own work. I'm not at that level. Maybe someday I will be."
ReplyDeleteStill, finding an agent takes work, too, and I'd rather use that time and energy trying to spread the word about my book.
Loving the guest posts, with many different paths to many different goals of this writing journey. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteGreat guest posts, and great guests in general! It's wonderful to read diverse voices here.
ReplyDeleteI'm a big enthusiast of "git her uploaded" publishing. I've been publishing a novella per month for the last four, and reaping the profits. Even a difference of a day means a couple dozen more sales. It also makes the writing go more quickly and more easily when constant new books are the norm. Takes the fear factor way down. Just jump in and do it! It's not brain surgery.
Each book teaches you to be a better writer and gets you more readers.
Joe, my book CREATURES OF APPETITE is now currently at number nine overall and the number two download in suspense thrillers, second only to THE LIST... which tops both lists at number one ... congrats!
ReplyDeleteI couldn't be happier to follow in your stead...
I loved THE LIST, btw, great read.
Todd Travis
So glad I decided to stop drafts of my query letter and self pub my thriller two years ago. Had I gone the traditional route, it might have been published this year.
ReplyDeleteA friend of mine just announced last month he signed a deal for his first book to be published sometime 2014 by a small press. While I was happy for him, I was thinking "there goes 18 months of sales".
We're all on a different path. I'm glad I chose the one I did.
so far I've given away 61,000 books and change...
ReplyDeleteThat's terrific, Todd. Congrats.
Patrick,
ReplyDeleteI agree with what Joe says - go the self pub/indie route; then the publishers will come your way.
Have you ever checked out Dean Wesley Smith's site? http://www.deanwesleysmith.com. He has an excellent series about thinking like a publisher - you should read that and other things he has there.
BTW, if you aren't sure about setting up the ebook, cover, etc., you can try a place like Lucky Bat Books, which has a menu of options you can choose from. You can have just a cover done, for instance, or choose a bunch of other things. You pay once, and that's it. :-)
Publishing contracts are esp. egregious now, so if you're still determined to go that route, IMHO you should get an IP lawyer instead of an agent. A lot of agents do NOT have legal backgrounds, and you might get royally screwed if the agent doesn't truly know the legalese of the publishing contracts that are out there now. (See Dean's site or even The Passive Voice's site for more info on that.)
I've been on a mystery kick for most of this year (taking time off for Jude Hardin's Nicholas Colt thriller series :-)), so it was nice to see a mystery author represented here! Your sense of humore struck a nice chord, so although I'm sampling first (force of habit), I'll probably end up buying it anyway.
Good luck to you! :-)
Thanks Nancy,
ReplyDeleteNo, I haven't checked out Dean Wesley Smith's website, but I will. I'm still going through the comments. Glad to hear other people's take on this.