E publishing: Where do I START?
Lately I have had a LOT of people asking me for advice on e publishing (or, horrors, to teach a workshop on it...) and I’ve been promising to compile a list of e publishing resources here to at least direct people to some solid help while I get my thoughts on the subject together into some kind of useful order.
But lists of resources are most helpful for people who already have some knowledge of the subject matter. That wouldn’t really address the question I keep getting, which is “Where do I START?”
Selling a book in the e publishing world has just as many steps and pitfalls as going the traditional route. Even though in the early days of e pub (like, last year!) a few people got lucky by just throwing a book up on KDP simply because there was so little competition out there, those days are over. The competition is fierce. There’s no question that launching into e publishing without having a clue what you’re doing is not going to get you very far.
On the other hand, there is no way to learn this stuff without being hands-on about it.
This isn’t a great time for me to start a new blog series on e publishing (as evidenced by how far I’ve gotten on my supposed series on series writing, hah!!). I am scrambling on a deadline for my latest paranormal while working on the sequel to Huntress Moon (nothing is more important that), getting ready to sell my house in the fall, and oh, right – I’m going to Australia in two weeks to do a workshop and panels and signings for the the Romance Writers of Australia National Conference.
I made myself tired just WRITING all of that.
No, not a good time to take on anything else.
But I MIGHT be able to get this rolling for some of you with, dare I say it? – SHORTER and more targeted blog posts.
It’s tempting to just say: Go read Joe Konrath’s Newbie’s Guide to Publishing blog, in reverse order, from 2006 on. And maybe that is the best advice I could possibly give. Then you’d get it all as it actually unfolded from the actual leader of the revolution. I should actually take that advice myself, but, you know, the time thing.
It is a lot to sort through (and for God’s sake, if you do it, don’t get lost in the Comments!).
And there’s something equally basic that you need to do if you are thinking of e publishing.
Get an e reader. And USE it.
I have to say that because it is astonishing to me when I hear authors talking about e publishing who don’t even read on an e reader. Reading an e book on your laptop or phone is not going to do it. You will fool yourself that you get it when actually you don’t have a clue. There is NO WAY you are going to understand the incredible sea change that has occurred if you are not using the technology and understanding why and how readers are buying. You can’t. And I think once you’ve experienced the thrill of having an entire library in the palm of your hand, the delicious indulgence of being able to download ANY BOOK YOU WANT, INSTANTLY, you’ll understand why this is the greatest invention since the wheel, and why as an author OF COURSE you want to make your books available this way.
Which e reader? No contest. If you’re an author looking to make a living, you must get and understand a Kindle. I'm sorry if there are people who don't like that answer but that IS the answer. I do not know of one author who is making a living at self-publishing who is not doing it primarily through the Amazon platform. And all the authors I know who are making good money on Nook and Kobo sales launched themselves with Amazon. (More on this here: To Nook or Not to Nook?). I’m being basic here and that is as basic as it gets.
An e reader is easy to operate, you’ll see. So once you have one, what you want to do is start buying books. Or sampling them, it doesn’t matter, and sampling is totally free (Sampling: in the Amazon store, you can download several chapters of any book to your Kindle for free. If you do not have an Amazon Store account, you need to set one up. It's easy.). Sampling is an important thing to learn – among other things it will teach you volumes about your own writing, and what has to go in your FIRST CHAPTERS). But it’s also a no-cost to learn the device and experience e reading.
You want to sample books that are in your own genre, and you want to sample a lot of self-published books as well as traditionally published books . The 99 cent ones (brace yourself...) the $2.99 ones, the $3.99 ones, and the $9.99 and yike, $12.99 traditionally published ones. Try authors you haven’t heard of whose books sound interesting. (Don’t forget Huntress Moon, or any of the fine titles you can simply click through to sample if you just look to the right of this blog...).
Take an hour and download and read twenty samples in a row, and take notes. Did you want to keep reading at the end of the sample, or could you not get through it at all? Is there a difference between 99 cent books, $2.99 ones, $3.99 ones, and the $9.99 or $12.99 ones put out by traditional publishers? If there is a difference, what IS the difference? Would you pay $12.99 for an e book? If so, which authors would you pay it for, and which wouldn't you?
Wade into the market and see what’s out there. Get the lay of the land, and ask questions here.
So there, I’ve given you a couple of practical tasks that will get your feet wet.
You didn’t think you were going to learn this overnight, did you?
I hope not. Get a grip. E publishing is a full-time job, just like traditional publishing is. But if you don’t start now, a year from now you’ll still be asking, “Where do I start?”
- Alex
Huntress Moon, on sale now: $3.99
A driven FBI agent is on the hunt for that most rare of all killers: a female serial.
But lists of resources are most helpful for people who already have some knowledge of the subject matter. That wouldn’t really address the question I keep getting, which is “Where do I START?”
Selling a book in the e publishing world has just as many steps and pitfalls as going the traditional route. Even though in the early days of e pub (like, last year!) a few people got lucky by just throwing a book up on KDP simply because there was so little competition out there, those days are over. The competition is fierce. There’s no question that launching into e publishing without having a clue what you’re doing is not going to get you very far.
On the other hand, there is no way to learn this stuff without being hands-on about it.
This isn’t a great time for me to start a new blog series on e publishing (as evidenced by how far I’ve gotten on my supposed series on series writing, hah!!). I am scrambling on a deadline for my latest paranormal while working on the sequel to Huntress Moon (nothing is more important that), getting ready to sell my house in the fall, and oh, right – I’m going to Australia in two weeks to do a workshop and panels and signings for the the Romance Writers of Australia National Conference.
I made myself tired just WRITING all of that.
No, not a good time to take on anything else.
But I MIGHT be able to get this rolling for some of you with, dare I say it? – SHORTER and more targeted blog posts.
It’s tempting to just say: Go read Joe Konrath’s Newbie’s Guide to Publishing blog, in reverse order, from 2006 on. And maybe that is the best advice I could possibly give. Then you’d get it all as it actually unfolded from the actual leader of the revolution. I should actually take that advice myself, but, you know, the time thing.
It is a lot to sort through (and for God’s sake, if you do it, don’t get lost in the Comments!).
And there’s something equally basic that you need to do if you are thinking of e publishing.
Get an e reader. And USE it.
I have to say that because it is astonishing to me when I hear authors talking about e publishing who don’t even read on an e reader. Reading an e book on your laptop or phone is not going to do it. You will fool yourself that you get it when actually you don’t have a clue. There is NO WAY you are going to understand the incredible sea change that has occurred if you are not using the technology and understanding why and how readers are buying. You can’t. And I think once you’ve experienced the thrill of having an entire library in the palm of your hand, the delicious indulgence of being able to download ANY BOOK YOU WANT, INSTANTLY, you’ll understand why this is the greatest invention since the wheel, and why as an author OF COURSE you want to make your books available this way.
Which e reader? No contest. If you’re an author looking to make a living, you must get and understand a Kindle. I'm sorry if there are people who don't like that answer but that IS the answer. I do not know of one author who is making a living at self-publishing who is not doing it primarily through the Amazon platform. And all the authors I know who are making good money on Nook and Kobo sales launched themselves with Amazon. (More on this here: To Nook or Not to Nook?). I’m being basic here and that is as basic as it gets.
An e reader is easy to operate, you’ll see. So once you have one, what you want to do is start buying books. Or sampling them, it doesn’t matter, and sampling is totally free (Sampling: in the Amazon store, you can download several chapters of any book to your Kindle for free. If you do not have an Amazon Store account, you need to set one up. It's easy.). Sampling is an important thing to learn – among other things it will teach you volumes about your own writing, and what has to go in your FIRST CHAPTERS). But it’s also a no-cost to learn the device and experience e reading.
You want to sample books that are in your own genre, and you want to sample a lot of self-published books as well as traditionally published books . The 99 cent ones (brace yourself...) the $2.99 ones, the $3.99 ones, and the $9.99 and yike, $12.99 traditionally published ones. Try authors you haven’t heard of whose books sound interesting. (Don’t forget Huntress Moon, or any of the fine titles you can simply click through to sample if you just look to the right of this blog...).
Take an hour and download and read twenty samples in a row, and take notes. Did you want to keep reading at the end of the sample, or could you not get through it at all? Is there a difference between 99 cent books, $2.99 ones, $3.99 ones, and the $9.99 or $12.99 ones put out by traditional publishers? If there is a difference, what IS the difference? Would you pay $12.99 for an e book? If so, which authors would you pay it for, and which wouldn't you?
Wade into the market and see what’s out there. Get the lay of the land, and ask questions here.
So there, I’ve given you a couple of practical tasks that will get your feet wet.
You didn’t think you were going to learn this overnight, did you?
I hope not. Get a grip. E publishing is a full-time job, just like traditional publishing is. But if you don’t start now, a year from now you’ll still be asking, “Where do I start?”
- Alex
Huntress Moon, on sale now: $3.99
A driven FBI agent is on the hunt for that most rare of all killers: a female serial.
Published on August 02, 2012 08:57
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If I were to add anything to this, I'd say, if you e publish for the first time, make sure to sample your own work to make sure it turned out the way you wanted. I had to revise mine several times before I got it the way I wanted and published. So definitely download a copy of your own book and read it to make sure it's correct. Don't just go off of Amazon's sneak peek at the book. The formating of one to the other is different. Use that e reader to read your own work first!