Category Archives: eBooks

Mythbusting!

Feb
2012

Once again, the lovely Margaret Yang stops by to help illuminate a writing topic. This week, she’s tackling publishing myths, especially as they relate to ebooks. Take it away!

Maybe it’s because of the media hype around writers like Amanda Hocking and John Locke. Maybe it’s because writers have spent so many years learning traditional publishing, they can’t accept a new business model. Maybe it’s because there’s too much information on the internet, most of it contradictory.

Whatever the reason, there are a lot of myths about self-publishing. Here’s a look at the eight biggest ones—most of them easily busted, a few somewhat plausible.

1. All self-published books are crap. Editors serve as gatekeepers, keeping out the flood of bad books.

If editors can always spot a great book, why did so many of them reject Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone before it was finally published? Editors don’t choose the best books, they choose the books they think will make a profit. That is why Simon and Schuster published two horrible books by “Snooki.” Sometimes editors protect us from crap, sometimes they sell crap to us.

The popularity of self-publishing means more total books published, and yes, some of those books are really, really bad. Readers have to dig through the bad books to find the good books. Just like they’ve always done.

2. Self-published authors have sour grapes. They’re angry because they can’t get a traditional publishing deal.

Many authors self-publish after years of trying to break into traditional publishing. They desperately want to reach readers, which means they are embracing a new business model that lets them do so. Most self-published writers never mention the traditional publishing system, because it’s become irrelevant to them. On the other hand, some of the most vocal critics of traditional publishing are writers who had traditional book deals and walked away from them.

3. Everyone should self-publish. Who needs traditional publishers anyway?

While self-publishing is great for some kinds of books, like fiction for adults and general non-fiction, it doesn’t make sense for others, such as children’s books or specialized reference. Traditional publishing is also the best alternative for superstar authors, the ones who are household names. The huge advances and marketing support these authors get makes traditional publishing a good deal for them.

Successful self-publishers write amazing books that millions of people want to read and they work extremely hard at marketing and they are lucky. In other words, the things that make a self-published book a success are the same things that make any book a success.

4. There are huge upfront costs to self-publishing.

To self-publish a book, a writer needs to edit it, proofread it, format it, make a cover, and upload it. Each of those steps will cost a writer something. She will either have to spend money to hire those jobs out, or she will have to spend time and energy to do them herself. It is possible (but rare) for a writer to spend absolutely no money out-of-pocket to produce a finished book.

5. Self-publishing is difficult, therefore I’d better hire a consultant, facilitator, or agent to shepherd my book through the process, paying them with a percentage of my earnings.

There are a lot of details to take care of when you self-publish, but all of it is easy to learn, or you can hire those jobs out for a flat fee. If someone, no matter how reputable, wants a percentage of your earnings for the rest of the life of the book, just walk away.

6. Self-publishing hurts my chances of getting a traditional book deal later on.

On the contrary, self-publishing has become the new slush pile. Traditional publishers contact the most successful self-published authors, trying to get them into the traditional publishing system. And if your self-published book is not successful, you can remove it from sale, and start fresh with a new book. Editors and agents do not care about your failed self-publishing effort and you need not mention it.

7. I already know everything there is to know about self-publishing.

Things are changing fast, and information that was accurate two years ago is out of date now. There is something new in publishing every single day. No one can keep up with it all, but try to stay as current as you can by reading blogs, looking at industry news, and talking to other writers.

8. With all the publishing options I have, there has never been a better time to be a writer.

Actually, this one is true.

Margaret Yang is the co-author (under the name M.H. Mead) of Fate’s Mirror, Good Fences and other short fiction. You can visit her at www.yangandcampion.com.

Ink Stains

Jul
2011

Do you ever wonder what writers talk about when they talk to each other? Do you ever think, “I wish I could just pick that author’s brain for a little bit?”

Enter Ink Stains, a new ebook that features interviews with nine authors with more than 25 published books between them. These honest accounts feature authors overcoming self doubt, waging war against writer’s block, coming to terms with the editing process, and learning to trust their literary instincts. Their raw authenticity will inspire and encourage other writers. If they can do it, so can you.

I compiled and edited these wonderful interviews. You can click here to buy from Amazon (Kindle), or here from B&N (Nook). I hope these literary insights will help your writing leave its ink stain!

The ever-awesome Scott Neumyer.

Scott Neumyer has an agent! You may remember Scott: I interviewed him a short while back about the process of e-publishing. His book, Jimmy Stone’s Ghost Town, has more than thirty five-star reviews on Amazon, and he’s sold more than 1,500 copies.

Scott’s success is great, but there’s another triumph in here as well: Scott now has an agent. I caught up with him recently to ask him about this development, and how success in the eBook world translated to success landing an agent in the traditional book publishing world.

H4W: Congratulations! You have an agent! This is great news. Who is it?

Scott: Thanks, I’m super pumped to be represented by Anna Webman at Curtis Brown LTD.

H4W: There are so many authors with traditional manuscripts who are hungry for an agent, and here you landed one with an eBook. How did that come about?

Scott: Once I decided to self publish Jimmy Stone, I knew it was fine if the book stayed an eBook, but I also knew I’d need an agent’s help with film rights, audio rights, and more. So, after the book had been out for a bit and had started doing really well, I sent out feeler emails to agents. In my query, I included basic information about Jimmy Stone including sales information.

I got pretty quick responses. Some agents asked to see the book. I got an offer from one agent and some others asked for more information. A few more days, a few more phone calls, and I was with Anna.

H4W: And now Anna’s shopping your book around to traditional publishing houses?

Scott: Yes.

H4W: If Jimmy Stone finds a home at a traditional publishing house, will you take the book off Amazon.com?

Scott: I’m open to any discussion anybody wants to have. I’d always envisioned Jimmy Stone as a series. So maybe book one stays online, but books two and three are published traditionally. Who knows. But there are so many innovative and cool ways to do things now. I’m open to anything.

H4W: What do you think your experience says about the publishing industry?

Scott: It’s crazy. There are agents who are pursuing indies these days. The whole script is flipped. It’s like agents are querying authors suddenly. I know authors who are going back and publishing some of their old novels this way — stuff that never sold with traditional publishers, and it’s doing great online. eBooks comprise 11 percent of readers right now, and it’s only going to go up.

H4W: Overall, do you recommend authors publish their eBooks first, and try to find an agent that way?

Scott: As I mentioned in my last interview with you, I worked hard on Jimmy Stone and I made sure it was a good book no matter what its format. I didn’t just throw crap online and hope someone liked it. I worked on this manuscript for years, same as any author who wants to get published. The format isn’t going to sell a book. The writing sells a book.

eBook Primer

Dec
2010

Scott Neumyer just published his first novel, Jimmy Stone’s Ghost Town, as a middle-grade eBook. I interviewed Scott about the process of eBook publishing: what it was like for him, how he’s promoting his book, and what he recommends for other authors considering bypassing traditional publishers altogether. Scott gives Help for Writers the no-holes-barred scoop on the eBook world. I’ve broken our discussion into categories so the discussion is a bit more contained. Trust me, there’s a lot of information here!

[Full disclosure: I wrote a blurb for Scott's book, however, this Help for Writers discussion is focused solely on the process, benefits, and potential downfalls of publishing an eBook.]

LOGISTICS

H4W: Thanks for your willingness to be interviewed, Scott! To get started, let’s cover the nuts and bolts of this process because it’s such a new frontier. What’s the first step in publishing your book as an eBook? How does it go from a file on your computer to something on Amazon.com?

Scott: Amazon.com has a digital text platform where you start the process of turning your manuscript into an eBook. In my case, I had a Word document and Amazon told me step by step what to do to convert it into HTML text. One critical thing is that your book can’t have any auto-formatting or customized tabs or breaks, because it won’t translate correctly. It’ll just look like crazy symbols. So I had to really take the time to go through and clean up my manuscript and break it down to the bare bones.

H4W: After you had your HTML file, what did you do?

Scott: I used an app called MobiPocket to create a file from my HTML. And then I re-uploaded that new file to Amazon.com.  Amazon lets you pop in a file for your cover art, so I did that. Though their Kindle previewer, you can see what every single page will look like. I went through the book at least two times to make sure things looked right.

H4W: After you decided your book looked good, how did you decide what the book should be sold for, and what you’d get for royalties?

Scott: Amazon lets you choose your own pricing and royalty structure. So if you price your book at $2.99 or up, you get 70 percent of the royalties. If you price your book at $0.99, like I did, you get 35 percent of the royalties.

H4W: Okay, we’ll come back to royalties in a second. You uploaded your book on Amazon, but it’s available other places too, such as smashwords.com and Barnes & Noble. Was it the same process for each site as it was for Amazon?

Scott: Largely, yes. Smashwords created an ePub file, which is what most sites that aren‘t Amazon use (Amazon uses PRC files, which only work on a Kindle or on Kindle apps). An ePub file will work a lot more places, including on smashwords and on Barnes & Noble’s Nook, which is their version of an e-reader.

H4W: Do I need an e-reader, like a Kindle or a Nook, to access your book?

Scott: Nope, not at all. Smashwords will let you read the book on your computer, right from the web, if you want. And there are Kindle and Nook apps available for PCs and Macs. There are even apps for your iPhone, iPad and many other mobile devices. So, you definitely don’t need to run out and drop a couple hundred bucks just to start reading eBooks.

THE eBOOK CHOICE

H4W: What made you decide to take Jimmy Stone’s Ghost Town in this direction?

Scott: I’ve been thinking about this for a long time. This book has been two years in the making. It’s been worked on and has been professionally edited. I’ve had a literary agent before and I’ve sent out queries but, for me, this was just the right thing to do for my career.

H4W: Does the fact that you’ve worked so hard on your book set you apart from other eBook authors?

Scott: Well, I’ll say this much. If you write an entire manuscript during NaNoWriMo and then, two weeks later, you put it up on Amazon at $0.99, you blew your shot with your customers. Chances are it’s crap, and that’s your name, that’s your work, and no one’s going to ever want to buy from you again. My goal was to put a really good book out there that people would enjoy and would make them want something from me down the road. I’m looking at this from a long-term perspective.

H4W: That sort of hints at the stigma of being self published. There are certainly lots of good eBooks out there, but there’s also a stereotype of eBooks being of poorer quality than traditionally published manuscripts. What do you make of that?

Scott: There are definitely readers out there who have been burned by bad eBooks. They’re out there. But good authors who publish good eBooks seem to me to have a chance of garnering a following and building a base of readers who are willing to spend $0.99 or even $2.99 to read more.

H4W: Right, pricing. We needed to circle back to that. Why did you put your book at $0.99 when the royalty structure would have given you more for a $2.99 book? Don’t you stand to win on both fronts with the higher price?

Scott: I’m a first-time author. Nobody knows my name. It’s not like I’m Stephen King putting an eBook out into the world. I had to price my book in such a way that people would be willing to take a chance on me. At $2.99, they might not take the chance. But at $0.99? Maybe they will. Down the road, with my next books, I can always charge more if I want. But right now, $0.99 is the right place for me.

MARKETING

H4W: Is a good cover just as important in the eBook world as it is in traditional publishing?

Scott: Absolutely. That thumbnail is the first thing people see. If it looks cheap or amateurish, people won’t buy your book. I guess a lot of the same designers do the same kinds of eBook covers for people over and over. I say invest in a good graphic designer who can give you something that stands out.

H4W: I imagine you have to get creative in marketing your eBook. What are you doing?

Scott: We just wrapped up a Bring Down Bieber campaign. On one of the Amazon.com lists, we were right behind him in the rankings. So I launched a mini-campaign on Facebook and Twitter asking people to buy the book to help bring down Bieber. We wound up getting ahead of him in the rankings, which was awesome.

H4W: That’s super creative. Seems to me traditional publishers might be able to benefit from that same kind of grassroots marketing.

Scott: I don’t have all the answers, but I do think there are different and better ways to promote books that haven’t really been looked at. For example, on Twitter, all the mainstream publishing houses only push their big titles. Why not take a different approach and push a title that needs the love? There is a good network of eBook authors who are plugging into Twitter and Facebook to help promote and support each other. Maybe the big publishers will learn from us.

H4W: I think they probably already are! Thanks, Scott, for stopping by to educate us all on eBooks. Best of luck to you!

Scott: Thanks so much for having me!

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