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What was I thinking? That was the dumbest thing I ever did...
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I would say it was releasing my 2nd and 3rd books in a rush last year because I took the advice that the quicker you get your books out the better. I really wish I had taken the proper amount of time and planned out a marketing plan for them. Oh well, live and learn.


So lucky I live in Canada :)

ISBN decision is a tough one. It's a lot to invest up front unless you are sure you're going to publish several books.
I know, right Marie. I went through it in a short time too.
Eldon, I am so with you. We are too rushed!! It cost a fortune pulling them back in a fixing all the errors, and you know what? I never learn.
Eldon, I am so with you. We are too rushed!! It cost a fortune pulling them back in a fixing all the errors, and you know what? I never learn.




Wow Viki! I did that once in college with a major research paper. The really bad thing, it was due the next day! Glad it turned out better for you. :)

It's just so damn boring. Keywords, keywords, and more keywords. Categories, categories, and more categories. Writing enticing ad copy. Scheduling promos, and then using an e-megaphone to let everyone know. Etc. etc. etc.
Standard writer's complaint, yes. Once I make the megabucks I'll hire someone to do all this for me.
I'm paying for a publicist to handle my son's release and I have been working for over six weeks full time- exclusively promoting his new book. Even with paying a "professional," I had to do a ton of stuff for him. You will always have to do promotion, I think. (unless your lucky like my son and has a crazy mother who will do it for him.) lol
Honestly though, you do a lot to offer us opportunities and excellent advice. Thank you for all you do for your fellow indie authors, Carole! :)
I like sharing what works and what doesn't. I have tried so many things and have learned what works and what doesn't. The most important thing I learned is to lower all my expectations so I won't be disappointed.
Yes, I'll stand in as your den mother!! Maybe I should call it a pen mother.
Yes, I'll stand in as your den mother!! Maybe I should call it a pen mother.

There are a few places that will publicise erotica yet I look at the form and think "nah they'll only turn me down and I can't take the rejection"
And I can't even fathom if it's worth promoting something on Radish it's such a small audience and I'm such a minuscule percentage of that. Ugh.



You'll know it when you see it ;) Saw one today in a promo email for a cozy mystery *shaking head*


For next time out, here's a tip. You don't need to spend a great deal of money to make an original cover, so long as you have and know how to use a graphics program like Photoshop or GIMP (the latter is open source and available for free). My wife and I run a small press. We use Dreamstime.com for graphics. (Other similar sites are available, but this is the one we like the best.) You create a free account and put a modest amount of money on it (say, $35 or so if I recall) to purchase credits. You can then apply those credits to download graphics you select from a huge library of images that photographers and artists make available. You're buying a license to use the image. Sometimes it takes some searching, but usually we can find something suitable--and high-quality. Let me know if you have any questions about the process.
--Dale


Thanks Dale. That's pretty much what I did with the one above. Photoshop and something I downloaded off one of the sites.
Although I can't use that as the cover on Radish because they don't like words on their covers if you're trying to get listed on their front page. And you only see about a quarter of the graphic as the thumbnail when you're looking at the book lists.

In the late 1990's, I started shopping for an agent for an SF novel I'd written. I had a couple of "close calls," in particular one agent who said she really liked the novel but she was closing down her agency. Then a friend of mine who had some success as writing for local publications said he'd landed an agent for a novel and suggested I sent my work to her. She accepted it, but asked for a small fee (I forget the amount; it was a few hundred but not near a thousand). Because my friend had signed with her, I figured she would be okay, so I sent in my money and signed the contract and waited. We even had a couple of over-dinner meetings.
But (of course) she turned out to be less an agent than a con artist, and after a year of her doing basically nothing to sell my work, I asked for my money back. As if by magic, she found a publisher for me--which turned out to be a vanity press. Of course I didn't sign with them.
What happened next didn't really occur to me until much later. I stopped writing. I mean, I stopped writing. After a few years, I started writing nonfiction for a website I ran, but I didn't write a line of fiction. After maybe six or seven years, I tried a little fiction, but I pretty much hated the process and the results, so I put it aside again.
Basically, I did no real fiction writing for ten years. When I got the idea for The Fibonacci Murders, it took me another year or so to find a story to fit the idea, and when I finished it and handed it to my editor/wife, her first comment was, "Well, I can tell you're out of practice."
I've now written three novels in that series (True Death and Ice on the Bay which should be published late this year), and I'm only now feeling like I've returned to where I probably was before that ten year hiatus.
Moral: Don't stop writing.


ME TOO! I finally linked all my Captain NO Beards and now they are selling!!! It looks lovely too!!

I emailed KDP so that they make the series available as a bundle purchase. Don't even have to format them as a bundle!
I think you should do all your country/period educational books into a series. Would be great for teachers to see them all linked together as a resource.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Fibonacci Murders (other topics)True Death (other topics)
Missing Remnants (other topics)
What was the dumbest thing you did in your writing career?
My biggest gaffe was pressing that darn Publish my Book button without checking the proof. Half of the inside of my book was missing. I send it to Oprah, of course. Guess what happened...she never picked me for her book club.