Kawasaki Urges Writers to View Self-Publishing As Start-Up Business

KawasakiAPEWRITERS. This week, I listened to a free educational webinar on self-publishing hosted by Ed Gandia of the International Freelancers Academy. Entitled “APE: A Proven Roadmap for Self-Publishing,”  the webinar was presented by NY Times best-selling author and tech-industry guru Guy Kawasaki. It covered key points from the book Kawasaki co-authored with Shawn Welch: “APE: Author, Publisher, Entrepreneur: How to Publish a Book.”

I tuned into this webinar because I had read (and admired!) two of Kawasaki’s previous books. In “The Art of Start,” Kawasaki explains how entrepreneurs plan, pitch, bootstrap and brand new businesses. In “Enchantment: The Art of Changing Minds, Hearts, and Actions,” he contends that in order to achieve a desired outcome, your likability and trustworthiness can be more effective than traditional persuasion or marketing techniques.

In the webinar, Guy explained why he chose to try self-publishing when he wrote about book about Google+ and what lessons he learned in the process.  Kawasaki discussed the pros and cons of self-publishing, some essential productivity tools, and ideas for efficiently “tapping the crowd” for help with developmental editing. He strongly recommended hiring a copy editor for the final manuscript and a professional cover designer.

I just downloaded the book to my Kindle this morning, but here are some key points that struck me during the webinar.

These guys have credibility! This webinar wasn’t produced by a publishing company that sells consulting, conversion, or publicity services to aspiring authors. Rather, it was a dialogue between two writers who have personally experienced the slow, bureaucratic pace of traditional publishing.

Thus, they seemed excited about being able to control their own publishing fates. Kawasaki pointed out that self-published authors maintain control of the content and look of the book and how it is marketed, receive a greater percentage of the revenues, and retain all rights. Plus, the time-to-market is much shorter.

A successful self-publisher must play three roles: Author/Publisher/Entrepreneur (APE). The book’s cover design suggests that APEs are about to wreak havoc on the New York publishing scene.

Self-publishing is like starting a new business. As Kawasaki writes, “Entrepreneurs must create a product, test it, raise money, recruit talent, and find customers at the same time.” In the webinar and book, he explains ways authors can test their work, raise money, hire talent, and start marketing their book soon after they commit to their idea.

Writers should not view self-publishing as a second-rate option. Kawasaki suggests using the term “artisanal publishing” as a way of taking more pride in the process. He likens it to producing small quantities of a high-quality craft beer or fine wine.  Like starting an independent restaurant or artisanal bakery, you have control over the quality of the finished product.

Focus on publishing a great book. Some marketing-focused webinars suggest self-publishing books primarily as way to attract new clients, increase speaking opportunities, and build your personal brand. Kawasaki urged webinar attendees to publish books for the right reasons:

  • to enrich people’s lives
  • to further a cause
  • to meet an intellectual challenge.

He said that if you focus first on producing an excellent book, the secondary benefits will follow.

Listen to the webinar in its entirety on the website of the International Freelancers Academy. If you are seeking some real-world, no-nonsense straight talk about self-publishing a book, I highly recommend it.

LINKS

Webinar Recording: International Freelancers Academy Website: APE—A Proven Roadmap for Self-Publishing

About the International Freelancers Academy

About Guy Kawasaki

 

Team Publishing Platform Offers Alternative to Traditional or Self Publishing

WRITERS. Before deciding whether to seek a traditional publisher for your book or go the self-publishing route, consider a new team-publishing concept introduced by Net Minds.

NetMindsNet Minds is a new crowd-powered publishing platform designed to give authors more rights, project autonomy, and team-building tools. Through the NetMinds software platform, you can select and “hire” the editors, designers, and publicists who seem best qualified to help you produce and market your book. Your team members can either be paid cash, royalties, or a combination of cash and royalties. You and your team determine how quickly the book will be produced and published.

The NetMinds team-publishing approach addresses several problems in today’s tumultuous publishing industry. Authors are frustrated by shrinking advances and unfair royalty rates offered by publishers who also expect them to market and promote their own books. Creative professionals who are skilled in editing, designing, and promoting books either have diminished job security, heavy workloads, and/or low freelance fees.

Many self-published books fail to sell many copies, partly because most authors don’t have the time or full range of skills needed to do everything involved in producing and promoting a top-quality book.

The founders of NetMinds encourage you to organize and run your book project like a new business startup.

Tim Sanders, CEO of Net Minds urges authors to “Take a great idea, build a talented team to help, make deals, develop the product, launch it, and get paid.”

By developing tools to make “book start-ups” possible, Net Minds wants to flip traditional publishing business models to give more rights to the author and greater recognition and rewards to everyone who contributes to the book’s success.

LINKS

Net Minds: How It Works

Blog Post: Choosing Between Traditional and Alternative Publishing by Tim Sanders

Book on Book Marketing Can Help Independent Authors

A new book entitled “Indie Author Book Marketing Success” is an anthology of articles covering various aspects of book marketing.  Fourteen experts in book marketing cover a variety of marketing tools, including author websites, e-mail marketing, Twitter, virtual book tours, group promotions, paid advertising, and teleseminars. They also address topics such as pre-selling on Amazon and Kindle keywords.

The book was compiled by Shelley Hitz and Heather Hart of Self-Publishing-Coach.com, a website filled with free and low-cost resources that independent authors can use to create, publish, and market their books.

indie-author-book-marketing-success

Contributors include Joel Friedlander, from The Book Designer website, and Laura Pepper Wu from 30 Day Books.

The book can be purchased for $2.99 as a Kindle edition. A 124-page paperback version is available for $9.95.

LINKS

Self-Publishing-Coach.com

Indie Author Book Marketing Success: Proven 5-Star Marketing Techniques from Successful Authors and Book Marketing Experts

 

A Do-it-Yourself Guide to Creating E-Book Covers

doItYourselfBookCoversWRITERS. Brian Jackson, a self-published author, has created an e-book that explains how to use free online tools and inexpensive images to create high-quality book covers. Entitled “Do It Yourself: Book Covers,” the 74-page e-book is available on Amazon for $0.99.

The guide is directed at users of Windows 7, but it has also been used successfully by Mac OS users. Jackson explains how to use a free program called GIMP (Gnu Image Manipulation Program) to combine text, colored boxes, and inexpensive images to produce your own book covers.

While an attractive cover is vital for all types of books, the ability to design your own cover gives you more control over how your finished book will look. It can also save money when publishing free or low-priced books for relatively limited audiences.

After explaining a few basic pointers for book-cover design, Jackson discusses the following topics:

  • Installing and running the GIMP
  • Creating a simple book cover
  • Working with layers and selections
  • Loading fonts and using font effects
  • Buying and manipulating inexpensive images
  • Creating colored boxes
  • Using layer masks
  • Stroking a path
  • Putting it all together

JacksonmanMade200To show the types of results that that can be achieved with the methods outlined in his book, Jackson has created a page showing sample covers that he has designed.

Brian Jackson is a self-published writer of fiction who originally began using GIMP while working for Cisco Systems in Silicon Valley. Now retired, he spends his time writing and publishing.

LINKS

Do-It-Yourself: Book Covers

Samples of the Covers Brian Jackson Designed

GIMP

 

 

First Annual Self-Publishing Conference to Be Held at Writer’s Digest Conference East

WritersDigestConferenceOne way to learn what’s new in writing and publishing is to attend the Writer’s Digest Conference East 2013 at the Sheraton New York Hotel, from Friday, April 5 to Sunday, April 7.  Before the main conference opens at 4 pm on Friday, April 5, you can attend the first annual Self-Publishing Conference or a three-hour boot camp on writing 21st century fiction, writing a novel, or public speaking for writers.

Writer’s Digest Conference

Whether you want to learn more about the craft of writing or are seeking an agent or broader readership for your work, sessions at The Writer’s Conference can help you.

Expert speakers and panelists will explain how to:

  • Pitch your work to an agent
  • Write for big-name publications
  • Build an audience for your work
  • Create great characters
  • Write non-fiction book proposals
  • Create a career out of e-books
  • Use social media to sell books
  • Decide whether to self-publish or find a traditional publisher (or both)

In a session entitled, “The Future of the Writer,” you will get insights into some of the challenges and opportunities facing writers in the years to come. You’ll learn not only what to expect, but also how to prepare and succeed.

Self-Publishing Conference: April 5

During this event from 8:30 am to 3:30 pm, publishers, agents, editors, authors and marketing gurus will share their expertise through sessions entitled:

  • Freemiums, Crowdfunding, and Hybrids: The New Era of Self-Publishing
  • The Complete Package – Why Good Writing Is Only Half the Battle
  • The Agent/Self-Published Author Relationship
  • How Self Published Authors Found Success
  • Legal Issues for Self-Published Authors
  • You Wrote It – How Do You Sell It?
  • The Future of Self-Publishing

Public Speaking for Writers Boot Camp: April 5

This session (12:30 to 3:30 pm) is for authors (or soon-to-be-published authors) who want to generate more book sales from their readings. Former CNN anchor and Equity actor Porter Anderson will explain why strong, live readings can do more to convert fence-sitters into book-buyers than any other marketing tactic.

Whether you will be presenting your work in a bookstore, conference ballroom, campus lecture hall, book fair, or corporate auditorium, you’ll learn how to deliver your work with impact. From what to wear to the Q&A, you will learn how to take control of every appearance and come out with sales.

You will learn:

  • What an audience wants from an author at a reading – and how to give it to them.
  • How to choose what to read.
  • How to rehearse ahead of your reading.
  • How to prep your reading for your listeners.
  • How to present yourself to the audience.
  • How to actually deliver your work and follow it up.

Attendees should bring two pages of their own work to read (either from a work in progress or from published material). You will experience reading on your feet and get feedback from your peers and session leader Porter Anderson.

For more details on this boot camp, and the other two boot camps on April 5, see the Conference schedule.

Discounts are available to attendees who register by Friday, February 15.

LINKS
Writer’s Digest Conference 2013

Self-Publishing Conference

Schedule: Writer’s Digest Conference

 

Self-Published Authors Say ‘Don’t Overcharge for E-Books’

Keeping your e-book prices low can help you attract more readers. That was the key theme of the January 24 episode of the Self Publishing Podcast hosted by three entrepreneurial authors: Sean Platt, Johnny B. Truant and David Wright.

SPPodcastLogoTruant believes $2.99 is the perfect price for a novella length e-book: “You may charge $9.00 for a book and get some customers. But you may be able to sell four times as many books at three dollars. And that’s win-win. You get more readers and more money.”

Truant made the comments in response to a question from a regular listener to the SPP who wanted to charge over $20 for his e-book.

“You’d be crazy to charge that much, because Amazon slashes your royalty rate if you charge over $9.99,” Sean Platt said. “Overpricing your e-books means you lose, and your readers lose.”

Platt believes authors are best to follow Amazon’s incentives on pricing: “For e-books between $2.99 and $9.99, Amazon pays a 70 percent royalty to authors. At all other price points, the royalty drops to 35 percent. That’s why we believe $2.99 is the optimum price for short to mid-length e-books.”

“In any case, most readers are reluctant to spend more than ten bucks on an e-book,” said Truant. “David Wright and I charge $9.99 only when we can offer massive value to our readers, such as with the combined bundle of Yesterday’s Gone Season’s One and Two. Once you get above $9.99 you’re screwing your commission structure on Amazon. That’s lose-lose.”

David Wright urges authors to pay attention to readers’ opinions on pricing: “The value is what your audience thinks it’s worth. We’ve found a pricing structure that’s right for us and our readers.”

Platt and Wright soared to fame on Amazon with their serialized thriller, Yesterday’s Gone, which has received over 500 five-star reviews on Amazon.com and Amazon UK. They have since gone on to write five more serials, including Z 2134, Monstrous, WhiteSpace, Available Darkness and ForNevermore.

Johnny B. Truant is the author of the Fat Vampire series of novellas. He is also co-author of the Unicorn Western series, together with Sean Platt.

The Self Publishing Podcast is broadcast for download every Thursday on iTunes and at selfpublishingpodcast.com.

LINK

About Self-Publishing Podcast

Yesterday’s Gone: Season One

Fat Vampire

 

BookBaby Clients Get Discounts on Professional Editing

WRITERS.  As an avid reader (and self-publishing supporter), I still notice a distinct difference in quality between a book from a traditional publisher and a self-published book by a first-time author. From the opening sentence to the closing paragraphs books from traditional publishers seem more polished, coherent, and emotionally engaging.

As an experienced editor myself, I attribute this obvious difference in readability to the unseen hand of an editing pro. Many self-published authors don’t understand that editing involves much more than correcting grammar, spelling, and typos. Even if your English-teacher friend agrees to look over your manuscript before you publish it, you probably won’t get the type of book-editing expertise you need to increase the odds that your book will succeed, both in terms of sales and positive reviews.

To make professional editing services more affordable and accessible, BookBaby has teamed up with FirstEditing, a global firm with more than 30 professional editors. Since 1994, FirstEditing has collaborated with authors around the world on over 250,000 manuscripts—offering technical editing, developmental editing, reduction editing, and proofreading.  BookBaby clients can now receive a 17% discount on any of the editing services offered by FirstEditing.

“Editing can make all the difference,” says BookBaby president Brian Felsen. “Will your book connect emotionally with readers and keep them turning the pages? Or will it fall flat?” He notes that while independent authors like being able to design, publish, distribute, and promote their own books, “It’s been difficult for authors to get a reputable editor to look at their manuscripts if they don’t have connections or a big budget.”

BookBaby Logo“The copy editor with whom I worked was insightful, professional, meticulous, and just plain good,” says BookBaby author Shelly Reuben, whose books have been nominated for Edgar, Prometheus, and Falcon awards. “He was in tune with the style and theme of my book, and while not trying to impose his own sensibility, was able to point out places where I had undermined the writing by being repetitious or stylistically inconsistent.“

If you have doubts about the value of the editing process, FirstEditing will edit a sample from your manuscript for free—and within 24 hours!

“I’m thrilled about this partnership,” says Felsen. “FirstEditing’s prices are already among the lowest quotes in the business for such top-rate service. Now, BookBaby authors will get an additional 17% off, allowing them to get their book edited in less than two weeks, without having to blow through their production or marketing budgets before the book even comes out!”

LINKS

Book Editing Services from BookBaby and FirstEditing

About BookBaby

About First Editing