Archive for the 'Writer as Entreprenuer' Category

More Tips on Self-Publishing

Regular guest blogger Caro Fraser added a comment yesterday to my series on self-publishing. Caro is launching a useful series on her blog with more advice and tips for self-publishing authors. That’s such a great resource that I want to share it with you as a specific blog post.

She writes:

Since I started to go down the self-publishing road, I’ve found that one of the topics which exercises self-publishing authors most is how best to market and publicise their book. I’ve invited the author Mary Cavanagh to submit a series of self-help articles on this subject, and her introductory piece will be published on my blog (www.caro-fraser.com/blog) this coming Monday, September 24th.

Mary deals with everything a self-publishing author needs to know about promoting their work - organising a book launch, preparing a press release, drumming up local interest, getting reviews - in a gutsy, practical way.

I’d like to invite all self-publishing authors out there to read Mary’s pieces and join in the discussion. Please go to the blog, hit subscribe, get the benefit of Mary’s wisdom, and share some of your own experiences.

With luck, we’ll all benefit! Caro

Do go and check it out and if you join the discussion, please mention Fusion View!

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Saturday, September 22nd, 2007 at 1:00am

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Free books

The print on demand revolution has been taken one step further in China where readers can order free, personalised books online - the catch is that they have to agree to advertising being inserted.

According to China Business News:

When selecting which books they want from BookGG, users can choose from a number of sponsors who wish to advertise in the books, and how many adverts they are willing to have. The location of adverts - front, back, middle or in page corners - can also be specified. If users agree to have enough adverts, the books will be provided to them free of charge.

Customers can also ask for books to be customized, for example, by having their names printed on the cover.

Once customers have made their selection, BookGG re-binds the books it acquired from publishers, inserting whatever adverts have been selected, before dispatching them.

You can read the full interview with Shen Bo, the publishing company’s president at China Business News.

Similar “permission”-based business models are taking hold in the mobile phone industry where content providers offer free content to mobile users if they agree to view adverts - or premium versions if the user prefers not to have ads.

Is there a business model for self-publishing authors to find investors/ venture capitalists for their book in exchange for advertising ? Certainly, product placement with funding in fiction has already occured - I think BMW offered prizes for short stories featuring their cars and I seem to recall a famous sex-and-shopping female novelist having designer brands sponsor one of her books (can anyone remember the author and which book it was?).

Photo: thanks to gigijin from flickr.com

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Wednesday, September 19th, 2007 at 1:00am

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Self-Publishing vs. Traditional Publishing

Since my series on the Writer as Entrepreneur earlier this summer, I’ve been noticing posts and online discussions about self-publishing.


There are two podcasts on
The Writing Show that fiercely debate the merits of self-publishing versus traditional publishing. The Writing Show author Paula Berinstein writes:

“A few weeks ago, we heard a contrarian opinion from author Jeff DeRego about the advisability of self-publishing. We got so much response to that show that we’ve put together a panel to weigh in on the self- vs. traditional publishing issue.”

Find out more by going to The Writing Show’s Roundtable #5: Self-Publishing vs. Traditional Publishing Smackdown

Photo: thanks to aspiritedlife.com

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Wednesday, September 5th, 2007 at 1:00am

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Enterprising Writers - Caro Fraser turns to self-publishing

caro This is part of my series on Enterprising Writers, where self-published or other entrepreneurial writers can share their stories and tips.

Caro Fraser is the bestselling author of the Caper Court series, who guestblogged here on Fusion View last year about her novel A World Apart. She has since been writing her new novel, A Breath of Corruption, which she will be self-publishing later this year. She writes here for the first time about why she has chosen to go down the self-publishing route after a successful career along the traditional publishing path.

Caro writes:

As an established author with twelve novels under my belt, I never thought I’d find myself going down the self-publishing road. But two years ago I had a bad experience with a major publisher, involving distribution problems and a resulting fall in sales, and it was proving hard to find a publisher for my new novel, Breath Of Corruption the seventh in the Caper Court series of legal novels. The previous books had all sold well, and since I knew from the huge number of contacts from my website that there was a market for it, self-publishing seemed like the logical route to take. On looking into it, I discovered that at the more expensive end of the self-publishing market, the bulk of the work is done for you, while the cheaper options tend to be more time-consuming. I needed something which left me free to write, so, on a recommendation, I opted for Troubadour Publishing.

For a set fee in the region of £2,500, Troubadour offer a full publishing service, covering typesetting, cover design, author proofs, ISBN registration, and inclusion on Amazon and W H Smith Internet Bookshop. The rate varies depending on the number of copies you decide to have printed, but I worked out that unless I went for the top print-run of 2,000 copies, I would hardly break even. Besides, I’m not looking at selling all those copies straight away. As for storage of all those books, Troubadour charge a monthly fee of £20 for bulk storage of over 500 copies.

On top of that, Troubadour offer a marketing package (£350) which covers an initial marketing campaign, sending out review copies, arranging media coverage and distribution via agents. They’ve also given me my own web page to publicise the book, which links to my website.

Because the novel is part of a series, I wanted to maintain a certain image, so I commissioned a designer, Helen Chapman, who had worked on previous jackets in the series to design the cover. That cost £800 – money well spent, as far as I was concerned, as her work is wonderful, and gives just the right tone and feel to the book.

The overall cost may seem like a lot (I saved £260 reading my own proofs!) but as an author with a track record, it’s important that my end product should be of a high quality. I need to get the book into bookshops, after all, so it has to be of a standard consistent with my previously published novels produced by the big publishing houses.

So far, the corrected proofs are with Troubadour, as is the finished artwork for the jacket, and publication is set for some time this autumn.

I’d like to think there’s a chance that sales will take off, and that I can show the world it can be done without the backing of a big publishing house but, as I said, the chances are that I may not break even on this venture. So why am I doing it? Well, because the book is there, and because there’s a market for it, and whatever else we writers are in this game for, it’s to be read. The feedback I get from my readers when they know there’s a new Caper Court novel in the offing makes it doubly worthwhile.

It’s also been an interesting and productive experience so far. Being with a big publishing house, one is cushioned against the hard realities of actually publicising and selling one’s work. I used to complete a novel, send it off to my agent, who then sent it off to my editor, and I’d more or less forget about it till publication. Self-publishing means having to do a lot more work – getting out there, speaking to bookshops to persuade them to stock the book, and generally self-promoting myself in a way I’d never have dreamed of five years ago. I think that’s a healthy thing. I’m even starting my own blog on my website in a few weeks, as a way of keeping in contact with my readership, letting them know about my new work and other ventures. So for me, self-publishing has extended the creative process, brought me closer to the realities of marketing my work, and it also means I’m engaging with my readership in a closer and much more satisfying way. What it means in terms of sales and maintaining my profile, I’ve yet to discover.

I you want to follow my fortunes, and find out how it all goes once the book is published this autumn, you can go to my website www.caro-fraser.com . Once the blog is up and running in two or three weeks’ time, I’d welcome feedback from readers and other writers.

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Wednesday, August 1st, 2007 at 1:00am

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Enterprising Writers - Chrissie Gittins

Following on from my series last week on The Writer as Entrepreneur, in conjunction with Mslexia magazine, I received this email from self-published children’s book author Chrissie Gittins.

If you are an Enterprising Writer, check out my invitation to share your enterprising story and get in touch to showcase your story on Fusion View.

~~~~~~

Dear Yang-May,

I was very interested to read your article on self publishing in Mslexia
today. I self published my two children’s poetry collections as
mainstream publishers are reluctatnt to take on newish children’s poets -
though they use my poems in their anthologies. Both my collections were
shortlisted for the only prize for a children’s poetry book - the CLPE
Poetry Award, and the second was also a Poetry Book Society Choice for the
Children’s Poetry Bookshelf. ’I Don’t Want an Avocado’ has sold
5,800 copies so far since October, and I’m about to reprint ’Now You
See Me, Now You …’.

I thought you might like to hear about this little-known world of
children’s poetry. I’m also booked to talk about self-publishing at the
Lancaster Literature Festival in November - I shall go armed with your
article!

There are more details about my books, should you be interested, on my
website - www.chrissiegittins.co.uk

Best of wishes and thanks for a great read,
Chrissie

~~~~~~

Chrissie’s website lists a great number of her other books and activities and if you’re in the UK, you can catch her at one of her many events around the country. She’s certainly very dynamic and energetic in managing her career as a writer beyond the written word - through radio, personal appearances, involvement in the Arvon Foundation and running poetry workshops.

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Wednesday, July 18th, 2007 at 2:00am

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Entrepreneur - Interview with Preethi Nair, author of Gypsy Masala (Podcast)

a href=”http://www.mslexia.co.uk/”>mslexia.gif

My article “The Writer as Entreprenuer” is published this month by Mslexia, the UK literary journal for women writers. Researching the article, I interviewed three self-published authors, Preethi Nair, Mark Blayney and Julie Noble as well as former Managing Buyer at Waterstone’s, the UK book chain, now Commercial Director of The Friday Project, the UK publisher of books derived from blogs. They shared with me masses of invaluable information about the process of self-publishing as well generously telling me their personal stories.

With the agreement of Mslexia and my interviewees, I am posting onto Fusion View my research for the article.

Today, I am pleased to upload a podcast of the telephone interview I did with Preethi Nair, author of Gypsy Masala. Click on the grey player below to listen.


The other resources relating to my article for Mslexia are posted as follows:
Tue 10 July - Interview with Julie Noble, author of Talli’s Secret.
Wed 11 July - Interview with Scott Pack, book publishing insider
Yesterday, Thurs 12 July - Interview with Mark Blayney, author of Two Kinds of Silence

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Over the course of this last week, you’ll have gained some insight into the challenges of self-publishing your own novel, thanks to Mark Blayney, Julie Noble and Scott Pack, all of whom took the time to answer my questions in a great deal of detail.

It all sounds easy as a concept. Write your book. Set yourself up as a publisher. Get some copies of your book printed. Then selll them.

But - once you’ve got your pile of printed books - all 10,000 copies of them, sitting in your hallway - what do you do with them? What does it take to shift your stock? Do you have the skills and energy to turn from writer into business person and get out there to sell your books? Can you ever make a profit?

Preethi’s story is the stuff of legends. She really took self-publishing entrepreneurship to extraordinary heights by creating a fictitious persona in the form of publicist Pru Menon to publicise her self-published novel Gypsy Masala. She was so good at the job, she was even shortlisted for an industry award for publicist of the year.

Preethi tells us her story in her own words in this special Fusion View podcast.

.

.

Click on the grey player and the end of this post to listen to the interview (approx. 55 mins).

You can also receive this and future Fusion View Podcasts free via iTunes. podcastLogo.gif

~~~~~~~~~~~

Further resources:

Preethi Nair

Mslexia

Photo: thanks to preethinair.com

Listen Now:


icon for podpress  Standard Podcast: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (321)

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Friday, July 13th, 2007 at 2:00am

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Entrepreneur - Interview with Mark Blayney, author of Two Kinds of Silence

mslexia.gif

My article “The Writer as Entreprenuer” is published this month by Mslexia, the UK literary journal for women writers. Researching the article, I interviewed three self-published authors, Preethi Nair, Mark Blayney and Julie Noble as well as former Managing Buyer at Waterstone’s, the UK book chain, now Commercial Director of The Friday Project, the UK publisher of books derived from blogs. They shared with me masses of invaluable information about the process of self-publishing as well generously telling me their personal stories.

With the agreement of Mslexia and my interviewees, I am posting onto Fusion View my research for the article.

I’m posting today my email interview with Mark Blayney, author of Two Kinds of Silence


The other resources relating to my article for Mslexia are posted as follows:

Tue 10 July - Interview with Julie Noble, author of Talli’s Secret.
Yesterday, Wed 11 July - Interview with Scott Pack, book publishing insider
Fri 13 July - Podcast of my telephone interview with Preethi Nair, author of Gypsy Masala

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

mark-blayney.jpg # Why did you self-publish?

Like most people considering self-publishing, I’d been submitting manuscripts for years to publishers and agents. I got the occasional encouraging letter, but mostly just the standard rejection slips. I initially thought, if I can produce a book, it would show some entrepreneurial spirit and might distinguish me from the slush pile the next time I submitted something.

# How did you go about self-publishing your novel? Did you use print on demand? If not, where did you store all the stock?

I used a ‘real’ printer – Cromwell Press in Trowbridge, who were very amenable to my modest little project! They didn’t mind the small print run; they were very friendly. I stored the stock in my mum’s garage – she raised an eyebrow to begin with, but 1,000 books in shrinkwrap doesn’t actually take up that much room. Well that’s what I told her anyway, and it’s too late when the truck turns up!

# How much did you spend? (If you are prepared to say…)

It cost me £3,000 for both books. But I took my own cover photos, a friend helped me with the design (a nightmare, really, getting the cover printer-ready) and I typeset it myself. If I had got someone else to design and typeset it, that cost would probably have at least doubled. It helps to have a reasonably short book – the price from the printer goes up noticeably for each 32 pages. I originally meant to publish the second book a year after the first, but there was a discount from the printer for running them together.

# How did you get the book into bookshops? (I’m particularly interested in this bit as it seems to require strong sales skills, persistence and stamina/ resilience that many writers would shy away from)

It was daunting and I didn’t enjoy it. Put a suit on, pretend you’re someone else, and try to be confident and polite at the same time. Local bookshops are very encouraging if you’re friendly and not too pushy – start with them, in an every increasing circle from your home! Trying to get into Waterstones or WHSmiths – I would say don’t even bother (but I’d be willing for someone to contradict me). Ottakars was the only chain who were positive towards me, and we know what’s happened to them. Independent bookshops will champion you as well, because they’re always looking for some competitive advantage over the chains - as long as they’re convinced the books will actually sell.

# What marketing did you do?

I made up some publicity materials – A3 sized boards with a large image of the cover, ‘Local author’ along the top and my endorsements from Beryl Bainbridge and John Bayley along the bottom. Don’t think that the bookshops ‘won’t want that kind of thing,’ because they were pleased I’d done it – it meant they put the stock in the windows, which helped me sell quite a few. If you add value to the bookshop by doing some of their work for them, they’ll be more positive towards you.

I made my own leaflets with ordering details on them – reasonably primitive, but they looked ok. You could pay someone to do that if you had a spare £100. (Looking back, the swearing I did at my printer would probably have been worth the investment. It took forever getting it right, so that you could fold the piece of paper into 3!)

Viral marketing is probably your best asset. People you speak to on the bus, in the lunch queue, in the pub, at a wedding… Most people prick their ears up with interest when you say you’re a writer, because they think it’s glamorous. Most people who showed an interest, bought the book.

I’m ashamed to admit I never got round to setting up a web site. I think that’s the obvious thing that will help these days.

# Do you have a background in business? What is your day job?

I was editing marketing papers, and when the company toyed with the idea of publishing books, I jumped at it. It gave me the contacts and the experience. If you are serious about publishing your own book, you could do a lot worse than getting a job with a publisher – it’ll show you what’s involved, how to plan the process (allow twice as long for each stage as you’d expect!) and what *not* to do. These days I’m a business writer (as Mark Stuart, because there’s another Mark Blayney who writes business books).

# What qualities and skills do you think a writer needs to have to become their own publisher, publicist, sales rep and distributor?

You need to be much more pushy, charming, energetic, thick-skinned and confident than I am. That’s the paradox – if we had all those skills we probably wouldn’t be writers, we’d be successful estate agents driving BMWs. But they’re not the qualities or values I suspect most of your readers will share. So… if you are going to self-publish… you have to pretend for a while. Energy is the key, and a willingness to take the knock-backs without being disheartened.

# How did “Two Kinds of Silence” come to the attention of the Somerset Maugham Award judges?

Pure cheek. I submitted it to them. As the publisher I was ‘Mark Stuart,’ publishing a book by ‘Mark Blayney’. So the answer is… fraud. When I was awarded the prize I panicked. What if there’s a rule that says you can’t be the publisher and the author? Fortunately they awarded it on merit – it was brave of them, really, to stick their necks out for an unheard-of writer and what was, frankly, a made-up publisher. It surprised me at the time and it still surprises me now. I’d like to meet the judges, I owe them a few pints.

# What returns did you make on your investment (financial or otherwise)?

I made a good profit on ‘Two Kinds of Silence’, but only because of the interest generated by the prize. ‘Conversations with Magic Stones’, after three years, I’ve broken even. I didn’t do it to make money, I saw it as a way of trying to lift the next book from proper publishers’ slush-pile; and as a satisfying thing to do; the books are on the shelf, and they look the way I want them to look.

# What have you been writing since “Two Kinds of Silence”? Are they being published in the “conventional” way ie by a “conventional” publisher?

I’ve finished a novel, ‘Carnival of Humans’. It’s set over a week in Budapest and is about characters’ pasts coming back to haunt them in different ways. There’s also a very unusual magic realism ending featuring an unexpected aggressor invading the city. Unfortunately I’ve been through three different agents in the last year, gone with the advice they’ve given me, and nothing has come of it. I’m about to agent it myself and see what happens. I’ll be content to self-publish again one day if no one’s interested.

# Do you see a trend towards self-publishing?

Yes, in that publishers are reducing their output, particularly of fiction and especially of new authors. And technology is making it easier not only to publish a book, but distribute it as well – the internet can bypass bookshops. When the technology advances to the point where people can make professional-looking books at home and sell them online, publishers might have a fight on their hands. On the other hand – Amazon make it very difficult for small publishers to make money, and Amazon is the only really viable non-bookshop channel to get decent sales from, unless you viral market your own web site successfully enough. That’s possible given enough time. But self-publishing will never really give Penguin and Faber a run for their money because customers will continue to value the brand of the traditional publisher. Rightly so, because whereas there are some gems being self-published, there’s also a lot of rubbish. The established publisher will always be the customer’s seal of quality.

# What would you say to those who still have a snobbery around self-publishing - ie who mistake it for vanity publishing?

The proof is in the eating. ‘There are good books and there are bad books – that is all.’ It doesn’t matter, in the final analysis, who they’re published by. All you’re lacking is the back-up of a third party; but then, ‘real’ publishers pour out an awful lot of rubbish as well. People who look down on self-publishing are confusing ‘quality’ with ‘commercial viability’. But it also helps to make it look professional - if it’s stapled together and looks ‘hand-made’, that inevitably reduces the customer’s perception of its quality, however good the content.

# What is your advice to writers who may be thinking of self-publishing?

I would exhaust the regular channels first. But if you really think your book is good, and publishers are still saying no, then go for it. Have a sensible print run – I did 500 of each book, and that was more than enough. Be prepared to do lots of marketing and running around, and don’t be disheartened by the negative voices. And make sure you have a regular job on the side!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Further resources

Mark doesn’t currently have a website yet - though it will be ready in early August (www.markblayney.com). You can find out more via the Guardian article about Mark winning the Somerset Maugham prize

Mslexia

Photo: thanks to the guardianunlimited.co.uk

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Thursday, July 12th, 2007 at 2:00am

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Entreprenuer - Interview with Scott Pack, book publishing insider

mslexia.gif

My article “The Writer as Entreprenuer” is published this month by Mslexia, the UK literary journal for women writers. Researching the article, I interviewed three self-published authors, Preethi Nair, Mark Blayney and Julie Noble as well as former Managing Buyer at Waterstone’s, the UK book chain, now Commercial Director of The Friday Project, the UK publisher of books derived from blogs. They shared with me masses of invaluable information about the process of self-publishing as well generously telling me their personal stories.

With the agreement of Mslexia and my interviewees, I am posting onto Fusion View my research for the article.

Today, I am posting below my email interview with Scott Pack - see below.


The other resources relating to my article for Mslexia are posted as follows:

Yesterday, Tue 10 July - Interview with Julie Noble, author of Talli’s Secret.
Thurs 12 July - Interview with Mark Blayney, author of Two Kinds of Silence
Fri 13 July - Podcast of my telephone interview with Preethi Nair, author of Gypsy Masala

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



# What are bookshops looking for when they buy a book?

I can only really speak from the perspective of a big high street retailer. I spent 6 years as Buying Manager at Waterstone’s so know quite a bit about that but suspect you may get a different answer if you asked someone from a smaller chain, or even an individual bookseller in a store.

For me, the rule of thumb when selecting a book to buy was simply this: will our customers like it? The best buyers are able to spot the books that will appeal to their customers more often than not. Sometimes this is easy - an author with a proven track record in your stores is highly likely to sell well again. Where it becomes harder, and where the real skill comes in, is identifying a book from a new or unknown writer which your customers will love and thank you for recommending to them. This is nearly always a question of judgement.

Personally, I used two criteria when making a call on a new writer. Do they tell a good story and do they excite me with their writing? This doesn’t mean the book has to be all plot and exciting twists; the best storytellers are often more subtle than that and excite with the way they use language. The same criteria can be used for non-fiction but with an understanding regarding the contraints of the subject matter.

On a more practical note, and bearing in mind self-published authors, it is important the the production values of the book are high. It needs to look the part with an attractive jacket, in keeping with the genre, proper typesetting etc. Customers respond to books that look and feel nice, so why offer them anything else?

# How should an author approach a bookshop with their stock? (eg phone first? Just turn up? Who should they speak to?)

This seems so basic but is a very good question, and one that many authors are desperate to have answered. When we set up a consultancy service at The Friday Project a few months back, part of the thinking behind it was that small publishers and self-published authors might want to pick the brains of someone who had spent time in a key position at a major retailer. Fortunately this has proved to be the case and we are advising a number of clients on just this sort of thing. We even produced an information pack with top tips and I would be happy to pick out some of the key points that may be of use.

The most sensible approach to a major retailer is to email the relevant buyer upfront and ask them if you could send them a copy of your book. They would have to be extremely rude to say no, and that then gives you an opening. You send in your book with a covering letter that can say ‘As requested, here is a copy of ….’. That gets you in the door and, if the buyer does their job properly, and your book is any good, you can progress things from there.

When it comes to individual bookshops it is usually best to send in a copy of your book with a short covering letter. If you phone or turn up out of the blue you are almost guaranteed to do so at the worst possible time. Always send work for the attention of the manager.

# What should they emphasise in their sales pitch?

The book, the book, the book. What is it that makes your book worth reading? Highlight any passages you feel are particularly good. Chances are the person you give it to will not read the whole thing so make sure they read the best bits.

# Do you have any advice about how authors should present themselves in the sales pitch?

It is the book they need to worry about, the best sales pitches work long after any meeting or phone call as they rely on the buyer or bookseller actually reading the book itself. Don’t be too pushy, just ask the person to read a chunk of the book. That is all you can expect really.

# Are bookstores seeing an increase in self-published authors pitching direct?

They certainly are, although not as much as you would think. When I was at Waterstone’s I created a role called (rather boringly) Independent Publisher Coordinator. Their job was to deal with small publishers and self-published authors with a view to advising them on the best way to sell their books but also to spot any significant talent that we could promote and sell.

# Are bookstores generally open to authors selling their own books or do they prefer to deal with publisher’s sales reps?

Most major chains really can’t be bothered to deal with self-published authors directly and, as I write, the Independent Publisher Coordinator role at Waterstone’s is vacant. I hope they fill it as it was a great benefit to the business. Individual stores often feel likewise but most independent shops are happy to sell self-published books if they like them, and especially if the authors are local.

# What qualities and skills do you think an author needs to succeed in selling their own books?

Well, number one is to have written a bloody good book. Booksellers and head office buyers know a good book when they read one, regardless of who published it. I have read countless ‘huge’ new books from major publishers which cost a fortune that were simply not very good. Likewise, I have read lots of self-published work that should have been in the bestseller charts with a major publisher behind them. If you can win someone over with your writing then the job is almost done.

That aside, it helps to be confident and be prepared to self-publicise. Local press and media are great avenues to promote your work and if you have the right presentation skills they will be happy to accomodate you. It also helps to be friendly and accessible to your readers.

But do avoid being overly pushy. Don’t tell me your book is the best thing since Life Of Pi as it almost certainly isn’t. Do be polite and ask the buyer or shop for advice on how best to sell your book, they will usually be forthcoming even if they don’t select it to sell themselves.

# Are you seeing a trend towards self-publishing?

God yes, it is all over the place. Most of it is rubbish, let’s be honest, but more and more titles are proving to be genuinely good.


# You are now Commercial Director at The Friday Project. How does The Friday Project fit into the current publishing market? How might it help authors who may have a book that doesn’t quite fit into the traditional book publishing market?

In some ways we are highly cutting edge and innovative. In others we are remarkably traditional. So, rather than follow the usual author/agent submission route for sourcing our books we explore the internet for talent, and the internet increasingly comes to us. This gives us an almost infinite pool of writing and ideas to dip into. However, once we have found that talent, that great writer or great book, we then publish it in a very traditional way.

We pride ourselves on risk-taking and have already published many books that no one else would have dared to do. I would like to think that anyone outside of the mainstream could find a home with us. As previously mentioned, we also have a consultancy service which is mainly used by small publishers and self-published authors. We advise then on many areas but the most popular is how to get retailers to consider their books and hopefully to sell lots of them. So, we hope we are able to help authors both as publishers and advisors.

~~~~~~~~~~~~

Further resources:

The Friday Project

Scott Pack’s Blog

Mslexia

Pictures: thanks to waterstones.com and thefridayproject.co.uk

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Wednesday, July 11th, 2007 at 2:00am

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Enterprising Writers - Share Your Story!

Are you a writer who has self-published your book? What was your experience of trying to market it? Dealing with the printers? Trying to get it taken by bookshop? What tales from the trenches do you have to tell?

Or are you a writer who has been published the traditional way and taken an active part in marketing your book - even beyond the call of duty? What stories do you have to tell about what it takes to sell, sell, sell your book?

This week on my blog, to coincide with the publication of my article about The Writer as Entrepreneur in the July edition of Mslexia, the journal for women writers, I’m posting up my interviews with three self-published writers and a publishing industry insider.

As part of this innovative magazine/ blog initiative, I’d like to open up the discussion to you. If you have a story about your publishing or self-publishing experiences that is related to the business, marketing or entrepreneurial side of the being a writer, I’d love to hear it. Please email me your story and if it’s suitable, I’ll publish it on Fusion View.

This invitation is for enterprising writers who’ve achieved their success through their own hard work and dedication on the business side of publishing their book. I want to celebrate the power of the individual!

And in particular, I’d be very interested to hear from you if you’ve used social media like blogging, podcasting, online video, Facebook, MySpace etc as part of your marketing campaign.

Fusion View has a global readership and is read by 8,000 unique visitors a month, totalling over 13,000 monthly hits. It has recently been featured on BBC Radio and is read by writers, poets, film-makers, photographers, other creatives and publishing industry insiders - as well as many book lovers and avid readers. If you’re an enterprising writer, I don’t need to tell you that this is a great opportunity to raise your profile as part of the Fusion View community!

The closing date for submissions is the 31st July 2007. Please read my Guestblogger Submission Guidelines.

Additional inspiration

Success Stories

Movie Trailers for Books

Photo: of stock trading frenzy thanks to theonion.com

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Tuesday, July 10th, 2007 at 2:01am

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Entrepreneur - Interview with Julie Noble, author of “Talli’s Secret”

mslexia.gif

My article “The Writer as Entreprenuer” is published this month by Mslexia, the UK literary journal for women writers. Researching the article, I interviewed three self-published authors, Preethi Nair, Mark Blayney and Julie Noble as well as former Managing Buyer at Waterstone’s, the UK book chain, now Commercial Director of The Friday Project, the UK publisher of books derived from blogs. They shared with me masses of invaluable information about the process of self-publishing as well generously telling me their personal stories.

Mslexia
is a fantastic quarterly journal for women writers, with news about what’s happening in the UK publishing industry and topical features which are hugely relevant to all writers and women writers in particular. It cost just over £18 for an annual subscription if you are in the UK and is really worth that minimal cost. It is published in hard copy and will be posted to you once a quarter. I was a subscriber for years before they invited me to write the Entrepreneur article and it really kept me abreast of all the hot issues for writers in an in-depth and informed way.

I am thrilled to be able to offer readers and writers alike, this additional resource, in conjunction with Mslexia - the full text of the email interviews with Mark, Julie and Scott as well as a podcast of my telephone interview with Preethi are now available on Fusion View to co-incide with the publication of my article in the magazine - see the category in the sidebar marked “Writer as Entreprenuer”. All materials are published here with the agreement of Mslexia and my interviewees.

I will be posting up these resources over the course of this week:

Today, 10 July - Interview with Julie Noble, author of Talli’s Secret, see below
Wed 11 July - Interview with Scott Pack, ex-Managing Buyer at Waterstone’s and now Commercial Director of The Friday Project
Thurs 12 July - Interview with Mark Blayney, author of Two Kinds of Silence
Fri 13 July - Podcast of my telephone interview with Preethi Nair, author of Gypsy Masala

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

tallis.jpgThe following is my email interview with Julie Noble, author of “Talli’s Secret”, a story about Cassie, a girl with dyspraxia and dyslexia struggling with family and school life. On a school trip to Haworth Parsonage, the home of the Brontes, a strange figure on the stairs calling herself Talli takes a mysterious interest in Cassie. Julie studied psychology and literature and Lancaster University and has worked on television programmes such as “Heartbeat” and “The Royal”. Part of the inspiration for “Talli’s Secret”, Julie’s first book, came from the fact that one of her three children, her son Jonathan, struggles everyday with dyspraxia and dyslexia.

Incidentally, it’s Julie’s birthday today as well - so Happy Birthday to you, Julie!

# Why did you self-publish?

All the usual reasons: impossibility of getting contracts with either an agent or publisher despite good recommendations, prize-winning work and determination. I have had the manuscripts I sent out returned, often unopened or by return with standard rejection letters pushed in: “our lists are full etc; limited number of books being published”, etc then two people in my area (Both men) self-published the year before I did; one has since gone on to gain acclaim, fame and fortune (GP Taylor) the other made enough locally to create a reputation as an author. I bought copies of both their books, also aimed at children, as my first book was, and I had to recognise that my languishing manuscript was at least as good as theirs, if not better. To their credit, they were both encouraging, though GP Taylor much more so, even before his reputation really took off, and he kindly allowed me to use his recommendation on the back of my blurb.

# How did you go about self-publishing your novel? Did you use print on demand? If not, where did you store all the stock?

See Advice for how I researched which publisher to use;
We had all 3,000 books delivered here, took the dining table out, and filled the front room with boxes! Getting the dining table back was a real achievement. Now we just have a few boxes left under the stairs, and that’s because I had to stop marketing to deal with family issues last year, otherwise they’d all have been long gone.

# How much did you spend? (If you are prepared to say…)

Several thousand pounds. We had to remortgage the house to do it….

# How did you get the book into bookshops? (I’m particularly interested in this bit as it seems to require strong sales skills, persistence and stamina/ resilience that many writers would shy away from)

(SEE ADVICE points 9 10 15 20 for practical and note responding to “qualities/skills” question for reaction from booksellers)

You’re right about the tough stuff, and it’s not always easy, which is why I didn’t get all the books sold when my family life became very difficult, but really if you’ve got something you believe in, and you can convince people, perhaps by offering a free inspection copy as we did, and they see how good it is, then you’re in; you don’t need to treat them as the enemy because after all, deep down, they want the same as you - they want to sell the books!

# What marketing did you do?

Everything possible: See advice section below for more details

# Do you have a background in business? What is your day job?

Mother of 3 (with another on the way). I have an excellent grasp of budgeting, bringing up children on a limited income, balancing what needs to be paid right now with what can wait, etc, and I worked in a bank, though I hated the sales I liked problem solving. Also I was a self-employed childminder when the children were small.
I don’t think you need a business mind or background, if you can manage a household budget, chop and change credit cards to keep on the interest free, that sort of thing, you can do it!

# Do you consider your writing career as a business/ profession? What activities do you pursue to maintain your career as a writer? eg teaching creative writing etc.; networking

Yes I absolutely consider my writing career as a profession although many times it seemed to be labour of love rather than providing financial rewards! I remind myself that once the books I am currently writing and revising eventually get published they will build my reputation and give recompense to the time spent on them. As with all Arts Careers you are not drawn into writing because of the possibility of financial gain, but rather because of the impossibility of doing anything else! I love writing - it is as necessary to me as breathing and it helps me make sense of the world - and every time I get another job offered such as teaching a poetry workshop or running a drama workshop for either adults or children, I am grateful that I am able to do something that I enjoy so much and get paid for it. At the moment I am encouraging a group of 11 year-olds to finish their first book in a six-month project with two schools in the area and when the Heads came to see me begin the first workshop it was clear that I was going to enjoy it as much as the children did! This enthusiasm also invigorates other areas of my life. I have given talks to parent groups about the aspects of my book as relating to my son’s learning difficulties and I have been able to offer encouragement to many parents and children who are facing the same things my son and I have faced, this in itself is an inspiration to keep writing especially when you meet people who have been affected by reading your work and inspired to begin their own! I maintain a professional approach to my writing setting aside particular hours to work and refusing to take long coffee breaks, watch daytime TV or go shopping with friends when it is my work time, and this discipline helps other people to recognise that I am actually working.

# What qualities do you think you discovered in yourself during this experience? If you have a background in business, do you think that helped you handle the business aspects of self-publishing? If not, what other skills did you bring to the experience?

julie-noble-photo.jpg My biggest skill in dealing with bookshops was quiet determination laden with humility because I suspect they have to deal with a lot of people who think they’re going to be “the next big thing”. When I went in with a self-published novel and they started out to rubbish them I would just quietly and determinedly show them my book, talk about it, and without being arrogant let them see how good it was. I found that quiet and polite determination did very well - one columnist reviewer once e-mailed to say he’d never met any one so persistent and that I was just this side of annoying, but he published a grudging but good review and later admitted that he wanted to publish himself but was not getting anywhere; he still keeps in touch from time to time, so I can’t have been that bad!

# What qualities and skills do you think a writer needs to have to become their own publisher, publicist, sales rep and distributor? Also, what qualities and skills would a writer need to maintain their career as a writer apart from just writing?

The following should cover all qualities and skills for everything….

While recognising you are a writer who can work alone for long periods and single-handedly create complicated plots, and become totally involved in the characters within, you must also be outgoing, approachable, obliging, hard working and effervescent when called on to be so (meeting public and teaching, book signings, media appearances etc). You must be diplomatic and a good sales negotiator (bookshops, esp big wholesalers like Gardners) and someone who can make contacts with people in the media and maintained them by remembering to ask about them and by forming a proper relationship. You need to be patient yet single-minded in pursuit of your writing career while admitting that some improvements can always be made (think Proust). Think that you may well have to bear criticism and possible jealous reactions if you have any success whatsoever, or if you have written anything worthwhile, or even if you haven’t, but you’ve tried. You have to prepare to be competitive and to be passed over time and time again for “the next big thing,” knowing full well that however good you are it is unlikely it will ever be you! You have to believe in yourself –remember Emily Dickinson writing and putting away but still producing the best she could despite knowing that she would never see the success in her own lifetime. You have to cope with rejection letters from editors who have never read a word you have written apart from the greeting ‘Dear Sir or Madam’. You have to maintain a sense of purpose and finally you have to believe despite masses of evidence to the contrary (in the thousands of words published every year) that you have a message that the world needs to hear! If you can do all this you can successfully self publish whatever you choose to write.

# What returns did you make on your investment (financial or otherwise)?

Okay, I’ll be honest, financially it’s not a big money spinner, unless you hit jackpot and get taken on by someone else, but I did make most of the outlay back, in dribs and drabs, though as I would not take into account distribution/marketing and publicity costs, probably not, but we got about £500 for the two charities, and I wasn’t in debt at the end of it!
Otherwise the returns were huge!

I wanted to raise awareness of dyspraxia and dyslexia because of the experiences of my son and the publication of this book did have an enormous effect on his education because I gave one to his school and the teachers that read it were so impressed that they bought copies of it for each other and took far more of an interest in Jonathon’s problems. Many said it was the first time they had been able to see the conditions from the child’s point of view, and very many other teachers have since been in touch to say it is affected them and their pupils. I have been told that it has frequently been read out in class. Most people, old and young, could identify with my heroine Cassie’s difficulties and remembered somebody to be like that. I have also had very many phone calls and letters from people with dyspraxia or dyslexia, or members of their families, who had suffered and found comfort from this book; also people who had experienced bereavement found it accurate and useful. Many readers got in touch to tell me how this book made them cry (usually in the same part that made me cry when I wrote and revised it!) A really wonderful return was when I got a huge folder of work from a school in Derby, from a class who had done an entire project on Talli’s Secret, lasting weeks. The children had drawn pictures of my characters, made cartoons with their likes and dislikes, and imagined monologues. To receive this response to the world I had created was a great gift. I also had excellent reviews from such eminent organisations as the Bronte Society, the Dyslexia Institute and the Dyspraxia Foundation, as well as reaching the Whitbread Book Awards long list (though I was told afterwards self published books may be subject to the snobbery/isolation factor, which may have been a reason for it not to get any further, though I never followed it up because the same day as that news arrived my family life was completely turned inside out and I had to put the book business on hold while I saved my children, and myself.)
The random quotes and e-mails from complete strangers on amazon.com gave me another boost, and the genuine enjoyment of my story by all the readers I have heard from (and as a percentage of responses against sales I would guess I’ve got a higher rate than some of the greats!) gave me a return on my investment in the form of something that money could never buy - it made me realise that I really was an author, because my work reached other people and touched them, my characters, plucked from my imagination, lived for other people, and that knowledge has changed my writing and given me more confidence to declare myself a writer. Also, I received a payment from the PLR for my book’s library loans, which made me immensely proud. I am more fulfilled by my writing than anything else I’ve ever done, it makes me believe in myself, which as a woman, and especially one who has done a lot of childcare, (which for some reason demeans in this society, we don’t revere motherhood at all), is a necessary part of developing as an author.

# Do you see a trend towards self-publishing?

Yes; more and more publishers want guaranteed returns and so are aiming at Blockbusting bestsellers, often celebrity/TV based or part of an established genre. We need the entrepreneurs and adventurers to ensure that writing develops and expands, especially for women. It’s still harder to break into publishing: we shouldn’t sell ourselves short.

# What would you say to those who still have a snobbery around self-publishing - ie who mistake it for vanity publishing?

(see notes in response to q about skills/qualities for bookseller reactions)

I’m afraid its difficult because so much of the work self-published would benefit from an editor’s eye – I know mine would have done, but necessity is the mother of invention, so in the event I had to ask friends and family to help, where a professional would have made other comments I’m sure. Yet the reviews I received, even from Professional publications recognised the quality of my writing regardless, and it has been exceptionally well received. My book won one prize (Writing Magazine/David St John Thomas self-publishing Award) and was longlisted for the Whitbread, therefore its quality should not be dismissed. I am not alone, and the increasing success of self-published works has got to make a difference, and professional production will help that. Most of the ‘dross’ produced by the vanity press disappears without much of a fuss, whereas a well-written book properly presented, marketed and distributed can do better than some of the published works from ‘proper’ publishers!

ADVICE SECTION

# What is your advice to writers who may be thinking of self-publishing?

Go for it-but do it well! Here are some practical points:

1) Research your market carefully when you are revising your novel and aim to match the standard of the genre you are writing in:
look at covers/blurb/length and ask –honestly- how do you compare to the professionals?

2) Spend some time looking at self-publishing publishers rather than vanity press or basic printers; ask for a sample of a published book; feel free to ask questions about ISBN, the British Library requirements etc as well as text style/paper quality and cover design. A good publisher will be able to answer all your questions.

3) Think about what angle to use to pitch the book to the news agencies, and make first contacts with reporters e.g. Talli’s Secret is raising the profile of, and money for, the Dyslexia Institute and the Dyspraxia Foundation, reporters were interested in learning more about both conditions, but also about the fact that we remortgaged the house to pay for the publishing! Offer free copies for competition prizes etc it’s an excellent form of advertising!

4) Get a recommendation for the back of the book - from someone whose opinion would be listened to! It is particularly valuable for getting your book into bookshops, as some buyers are sceptical about self publishing. We were lucky that Graham Taylor sent us: “this is one of the best books I have ever read. It keeps you turning the pages from start to finish. I was lost in Talli’s world and didn’t want to come back.’ GP Taylor Author of the New York Times best-sellers

5) Plan the book launch,
i)try to tie in with local cultural/historical events e.g Talli’s Secret has the Brontës in it, so we opted to launch it at the Robin Hood’s Bay Victorian Weekend.
ii)draw prospective book buyers in with a gimmick, preferably something free! It needn’t be expensive- we had a calligraphy workshop with ‘Victorian’ bookmarks made by staining cardboard with tea!

6) Talk to people about the book Is anybody experienced or knowledgeable? Especially useful for the local contacts/ networking information you need.

7) Design and order flyers: bookshops like them and they also used for giving people to put up at events/ on noticeboards etc,

8) Prepare press releases- find personalised angles for each approach

9) Search for suitable outlets
i) the internet (if not from home use the library which is often cheaper
ii) Yellow Pages/ telephone directories - libraries stock these for various areas.

10) Approach Book Shops Independent bookshops can be hesitant with self-published books, offer to send a sample, and also guarantee that the books are only being provided on a sale or return (SOR) basis. Get contact details for the major book buyers for the chains well in advance. Be ready with e-mail confirmations of all the details e.g. the publisher, the subject, the price, market it was aimed at, references etc

11) Set up a website Look at info in Mslexia and book websites to get ideas, i.e: www.tallissecret.com. If you’re not a computer wizard, don’t worry, find one in your contacts.

12) Arrange a post office box - more professional when giving out the business address on the radio etc.

13) Go online and register on websites where you can post information ie “Friends Reunited”, University alumni news, sites relative to the content of your book.

14) Find regional literary newsletters/arts listings magazines. These types of publications are very useful for getting your name known, e.g The Yorkshire Word Editor likes to include information about self-published books and is very encouraging, asking me to do the ‘masthead’.

15) Design/print duplicated customer record sheets your contact details/ customer’s information/number of books taken/ commission rate.

16) Launch Book with media coverage, e.g radio/tv,

The launch serves several purposes:
Proves that self-publishing is a viable option
Tells the world about the book via media coverage/ social networking
Sells books!

17) Address all the envelopes ready for sample books that need to be sent asap

18) Enjoy the achievement - and concentrate on getting the books out there!

19)make sure plenty of people know about it, enlist family and friends to put posters up/ radio- event guides or interviews/ television/ newspaper everything you can think of. Take photographs to put on website/ send to media etc

20) Deliver the books to the outlets along with customer record sheets - both sign and keep a copy, and flyers. Don’t forget the library!

21) Send out review copies to newspapers/magazines/radio or tv programmes that you

i) think would be interested
ii) are a fan of
iii) never heard of till you started all this!
Get contact names by telephoning or emailing first, so that the book receives a more favourable impression when it lands on somebody’s desk.

22) Scour pages of Mslexia/ magazines/ websites for competitions you can enter. Fun to try and if you win- more media coverage!

23) Who else is there? Approach schools, Writer’s Groups, book groups, bookshops for book signings, Writer in residence in a business (the more unusual the better, from a media point of view), meet the author, workshops with drama or writing?

24) Keep optimistic and keep going! Obviously, the more effort you put in, the more you learn, the greater your chance of success!


# Anything else you’d like to share about your experiences/ about being a writer that would be useful for other writers, especially women writers to hear about.

Speaking from personal experience I believe that my ability to write and convey a range of emotions and trap them into words has saved my sanity, particularly over the last 15 months. As many writers have discovered (esp. the Brontes) the ability to escape into another world can mean the difference between accepting a difficult reality and being oppressed by it, or revelling in a world where you are in charge to a certain extent, for if like me your books are character-driven rather than plot-driven you’ll find you can be as little in charge in your literary existence as in your real-life!

As a woman and mother of three (and soon four) children I have found the greatest hindrance to my work is my own attitude towards it. So often I’d constantly place the children’s needs, wants and desires (including a definite desire not have to do any domestic chores) above my need to write, but unfortunately it was instilled into me at an early age that mothers must be self sacrificing to the point of martyrdom. This does not make any one happy nor is it good for the children to be given such an example. This is why it is very important to maintain a very business like approach to your work, especially if you’re a mother with the bulk of the domestic arrangements on your own shoulders. If you tell yourself, your children and everyone else that what you’re doing is a ‘proper’ job, you can carve out writing time without feeling guilty that most of the rooms in their house haven’t been dusted since Christmas and the children’s clothes need ironing (you just drape them on a hanger and shove them in the wardrobe). Then you have to recognise that you need to set aside time not just for writing a book but for thinking through and studying all the good works such as the classics, or rediscovering little known women authors and examining texts to see what works for certain writers and what doesn’t.

If you can act business like about your writing (and convincing yourself can be as hard as convincing everyone else) you’re most of the way there, which is why self-publishing Talli’s Secret was such a success for me.

I know there are plenty of stories about people who have not begun writing until late in life and still make a terrific success of it and though we all can find comfort in this while we wait for recognition in the meantime don’t give up trying! Write to the best of your ability, keep learning and keep sending things out and you can do it, I bet you!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

To find out more about Julie and “Talli’s Secret”, go to www.tallissecret.com

To find out more about Mslexia, go to www.mslexia.co.uk

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Tuesday, July 10th, 2007 at 1:00am

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Fusion View is created by Yang-May Ooi, author of The Flame Tree and Mindgame, legal thrillers set in Malaysia and London, first published by Hodder & Stoughton.

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