I don’t often
post links to stranger’s blogs on my own blog, but I would like to take the
opportunity to share with you the following link.
Please read this
if you are an Indie author or Indie publisher: http://jmgregoirebooks.com/ 2014/01/03/open-letter-to- indie-authors/
This woman is very eloquent in pointing out
the black cloud in Indie publishing. I’ve spoken about this here before, and I
thought it only fitting to show you another blog about this. I would like to
say that what I’m about to write in this blog, is what I’ve experienced myself
in the writing world, this is how I came to these conclusions. Not because I
want to be snarky, but because I want to be honest about my path as a writer.
If you want to walk a different path, be my guest -I respect different opinions-
and assume that you are a sane adult who knows what they are doing.
After my last post someone told me I should inspire
new writers, rather than critique. I would like to say the following.
“If you are not serious about writing, I see
no need to inspire you. If you can’t take criticism, the writing world is not
the place you want to be. Trust me, it's filled with critique.”
I don’t want to discourage people to write. In
fact, I want to encourage people. Writing is the most wonderful thing in the
world. And there is no shame in only wanting to write as a hobby, and have your
friends and family read your work. I won’t look down on you, and most other
writers won’t either. It’s all good and a bag of chips, as I like to say.
Should you choose that you want be a
professional writer, that changes things, and you’ll need to have a
professional attitude.
Many of my points have already been made by
J.M. Gregoire, so I’ll try not to be too repetitive.
There is a bit of a ‘vague’ description about
Indies, so I would like to give you my definition of the word. To me it’s not
just self-published authors. Indies are all the people who publish
independently from big publishing houses. That includes a lot of small presses.
Now, first off, I want to take some of the
stigma off the word ‘Indies’, because some people have made it a ‘dirty word’,
and I don’t think it should be. I really applaud independent presses and self
publishers who take their job serious. Who have a plan, who hire a good editor
and do all the work. It is a LOT of work
and it costs quite a bit of money to get your business started. They don’t
deserve this bad name.
But there are a lot of publishers, writers,
editors, proof readers etc out there who may mean well, but don’t quite know
what they are doing. There is more to publishing than just putting words on a
page and putting them on Amazon.
A lot of people don’t think there is. And they
can get quite indignant about this, and there will be the argument “Who decides
what quality is?”. I’ve heard it all before. Trust me, you can tell the difference.
Having a lot of style / spelling/ grammar mistakes in your novel is not
quality. There is a reason why I’m addicted to my editor *smirk*
I’ve heard people say that if you are a good
writer, you shouldn’t need an editor. Remarks like that always make me want to
sigh, or even ‘facepalm’. It’s like saying the CEO shouldn’t need other people
working for him, because he has to know how to do his job right.
There are a lot of starry-eyed ideas about
writing. And to be honest, when I first started, I was pretty starry-eyed too.
I thought I would just have to write a good manuscript and send it to an agent,
and the world would be a wonderful place.
It isn’t
Sorry, hate to be the bearer of bad news, but
that’s not how it works. There’s maybe that one lucky person who got there that
way. Everyone thinks they can be the next Stephanie Meyer, but in fact, most
writers have to work very hard and very long and many years before they get any
recognition. Even those who are traditionally published. Indie publishers have
to work three times as hard. Where the traditionally published author has an
expert team to back them up, the indie publisher has to create their own team,
who will need to learn ‘the ropes’. And everything costs money too, from your
cover, to your editor… there are dollars attached to it all. And a big chunk of
the money you earn from sales will go to Amazon or other places. Don’t expect
to make more than a few dollars (if that) from each book you sell. Some people don’t
even make that. So it will often take more than a thousand books to earn back
the money you spent. There are a lot of people out there that will take several
years to sell a thousand books.
Am I crushing your dream? I’m sorry, I really
don’t mean to. But it’s good to know reality. I didn’t, and to be honest, it’s
caused me to struggle a bit in the beginning. I wondered what I got myself into.
Another point is to really check the publisher
you go with. In the beginning we all just want to get our work out there, but
not all publishers have a bigger plan. Some might not do your work justice, and
though it’s nice to be published, it won’t help you to get noticed by the right
people if your work is featured in the wrong places. A fair amount of
publishers are no different from self publishing, only you either need to give
up a cut of your money, or not get any money at all. Some publishers are really
good at getting your name out there, so do some research, maybe talk to other
authors that worked with them before. Don’t be afraid to ask sharp questions,
this is your work after all!
But there is a bright side to this too… you
get to do what you love. And it is the best job in the world, living in your
own fantasy *grin*.
So now you know all this, and you still want
to be a writer (yay you) and you have this work of yours ready that is a
diamond in the rough… I’m going to tell you: “Have others look at it.” Not just
friends. Your friends will love your work. My friends did, my first manuscript
(terrible, terrible thing) went down quite well with my friends. I tried to
send it to agents and they weren’t interested. I wondered why, until a year and
a half later, when I learned a lot about writing and saw all the mistakes that
were in my work.
My mission for 2014 /2015 is to find an agent,
as some of you may know. This will probably take me quite some time, I’m trying
to prepare myself for that. I now know that I can’t just send any unedited
manuscript to agents anymore. That’s a lesson I learned the hard way. It’s nice
that I have some talent, but I need hard work to make my work come together.
If you’re going to self publish, make sure
your work is very clean. Not every reader will pick up on it, but a lot of them
will. And a manuscript that isn’t polished will often feel ‘wrong’ to readers,
even if they can’t put their finger on it. Put too much work out there that isn’t
good, and you will get a bad reputation. You don’t want that. I’ve seen it
happen to writers, and it’s depressing. Of course you can always recover again
with using a penname, but would you really want to go through all that?
Besides the writing you need to have a plan. I
was completely unprepared for the marketing element of writing, but that is
very much a part of the process now. Even if you do go ‘traditional’, you will
still need to know a bit about marketing. You need to put yourself out there.
The days where you can sit in your room and just write books all day while your
publisher makes sure that you are a bestseller, are over. You need to prove
yourself. Even established authors like Neil Gaiman are on social media to keep
a connection with their fans.
Don’t get discouraged (see, I can be
encouraging) when you don’t have an instant fan base. Those take long to build.
It doesn’t help that there are thousands and thousands of writers out there,
all trying to get a fan base. What also doesn’t help that there are people who
give Indie writers a bad name. Because there are so many spelling/ grammar
mistakes in a lot of books, readers tend to shy away from Indies, and stick to
the authors or publishers they do know. It makes it harder for the Indie publishers
who are taking it serious to get discovered. This can be quite frustrating at
times.
But if you did everything right… that
following will come. It will be slow at first, and maybe in the beginning (like
me) you have no idea that you actually have a following. They’re there, believe
me *grin*
Be that writer
that impresses the reader. Create beautiful worlds and even more beautiful
stories. And like the author of the blog I posted said: Don’t put your work out
there until it’s finished. It won’t do you any good. Get people with a good
(dare I say professional) eye to look at your work and tell you that it’s ready
to go out in the world.
When you do, it’ll
be a blast!
If I sounded
preachy… I’m sorry. Remember I'm just recounting my own observations and experiences in this business. I'm still learning (I don't think I'll ever stop in this business) and why not take advantage of the things I've learned so far?
I wish
everyone a lot of luck in this world, and I hope that you will feel confident
enough to produce great work.
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