Tag Archives: authors

BABS #blogsoc Google Hangout with Todd Sattersten

Today BABS Organizer Anne Hill held the first BABS Hangout, a new series of lunch time meetings on Google+. Todd Sattersten, O’Reilly Media author, spoke about the whole process of self publishing as a way to develop your project. Here is an excerpt straight from the Hangout.

Todd Sattersten talking about “Every Book is a Startup” on the Google Hangout run by Anne Hill for Bay Area Bloggers Society.

I’ve never talked about it as a book. I call it a project. It’s amazing what happens when you say “book” and what meaning people bring to that idea. Definitive: all ideas completely thought out. I tried to be very clear up front that this was a work in progress and we’re changing it as we go along.

Is change intrinsic to the process I’m using? Yes. There’s no way to avoid the idea that I am not waiting until I’m done to get this out. I can’t say speed is driving it, because it’s taken more than a year. But I think what ends up happening is that ideas in their nascent state attract a certain kind of reader. They tend to attract innovators and early adopters. As you move through that phase, books that tend to scale and get very popular have to appeal to a wider audience. So there was a set of people that this book was not for them. They wanted something complete.

So we tried as much as possible to price it to reduce the risk for the reader. We started at 1.99 and then made the promise that updates would go to early readers for free. I don’t know how to get around the complaint “I want this thing fully baked.” It wasn’t the intent from the start, so I just take those with a grain of salt.

///

Much insight was offered in this thirty minute interview attended by BABS Members who gained entry via the BABS site here:

Bay Area Bloggers Society

Tune in for future Google Hangouts with O’Reilly Media authors. The next one is in early September with Sarah Milstein, on Twitter for Authors. These are part of our year of Authors Go Public meetings supporting the process of modern publishing.

Watch the hashtag on Twitter for posts about these meetings. We are using #blogsoc, which is needing an adjustment as there is a new startup by that very name. Search also for #blogsociety for conversations among BABS members.

Suzanna Stinnett

Founder, Bay Area Bloggers Society

Vampires love the soft necks of Independent Authors

 

 

 

 

 

As you enter the diversity that is independent publishing, you may be approached by a blood-sucking consortium that hopes you won’t know they are all under the umbrella of “Author Solutions.” They are not a solution.

Thanks to Emily Seuss and her blog, Seuss Pieces, I can steer you around this mess and maybe save you several hundred dollars and a couple of years of pointless anticipation.

Author Solutions, which is @authorsolutions on Twitter, bought a publishing company I worked with ten years ago: Trafford. I loved Trafford. Their mascot was a big white dog named Tyhe and I interacted with the owner and a small staff. Together we got my book, “Open Here,” into print-on-demand, and it was a thrilling experience.

–Flash of dark cape–
Things have changed. Trafford was bought by Author Solutions. Now that I know what happened, I know why I started getting these spammy calls from Trafford. Night and day. I used up a lot of time I could have been spending at the movies or staring at my manuscript, trying to convince them that I wasn’t interested. Not only was I not interested, that book wasn’t even supposed to be for sale. I had taken it off the market years ago, and somehow it had returned and even been put into Kindle without any notice from Trafford.

That’s how Author Solutions works. Spam, behind-the-scenes actions on your content, you get the picture.

Author Solutions owns a lot of the e-publishing and print-on-demand world. I recommend you read about the class actions and complaints against iUniverse, XLibris, and Trafford. Here are a whole herd of other relatives of Author Solutions which also should be avoided. No, more than that. They should be actively boycotted. More than that, we should make sure our circles know to stay away from these companies. Okay?

Writer’s Digest also has connections to Author Solutions. They shouldn’t.

Take a deep breath and read the scope of this travesty:

PARENT/HOLDING COMPANIES:
Bertram Capital
Author Solutions

BOOKS:

Author House

iUniverse

XLibris

Trafford

Palibrio

Abbott Press

Balboa  (Hay House-branded line)

WestBow  (Thomas Nelson-branded line)

Inspiring Voices  (Guideposts Magazine-branded line)

Legacy Keepers
MODERN MEDIA:

FuseFrame   (Previously Author Solutions Films)

Pitchfest   (Authors pay to come pitch their stories for film adaptations)

Author Learning Center  (Online learning tool hoping you’ll forget to cancel your credit card after the free trial ends)

WordClay  (Abandoned ebook imprint)

BookTango  (New ebook imprint)

AuthorHive (Book Marketing)
MISCELLANEOUS ASSOCIATIONS/PARTNERSHIPS:

Meredith Vieira Productions

Kirkus Reviews

Clarion ForeWord Reviews

BlueInk Reviews
Join our group at Bay Area Bloggers Society if you want to learn the tools yourself, in person, with people in your community:

See you out there.

Suzanna Stinnett

Go read: Emily Seuss on Seuss Pieces

Bridge over the river Kindle

stone bridge with red leaves

Authors publishing on Kindle are growing ever more savvy about how and when to build their readership. (This is a major element of the massive transition from old publishing models to an indie-dominant new world for authors). How do we bring readers across the bridge?

I’m the founder of Bay Area Bloggers Society, a large and growing membership of bloggers and authors who meet in person around the San Francisco Bay area. Our group is chock-full of amazing brains and talent, many published and self-published authors, and many beautiful, informative blogs. Starting in April, we are hosting a year-long series called “Authors Go Public.” We’ll celebrate the many newly published books (and older ones too), and make sure everyone knows how to proceed from their particular spot on the publishing and marketing merry-go-round. You can learn more on the website by clicking here: Bay Area Bloggers Society. And take a look at the two books at the end of this post. Both of these are being used by BABS members to get their own publishing empire growing.

It’s a great place to ask questions and meet more people who are actively writing and publishing today.

Suzanna Stinnett
Bay Area Bloggers Society
@Brainmaker on Twitter

 

KDP Select, Authors and Giants

giant stone carving of face with open mouth

Within a few hours of receiving the email from Amazon about KDP Select, I had a dozen more emails from clients and associates. Not the first time we’re startled by the stark light coming from O Most Powerful Amazon.

So off we march into two general camps.

Camp 1. Amazon-Centric Authors
You’ll find me here. It’s not that I don’t want my books available in all digital readers. I do. But I have only so much time to upload, groom and market on an individual platform. They all take time. Amazon provides such robust tools for authors, I haven’t made it through all the ways I can market in their system. My books are selling well in Kindle and I need every possible remaining hour to write. At this point I have zero investment in any other platform.

Camp 2. Other Authors
Members of the other camp tell a variety of stories. They may have gotten into Smashwords, or Nook, or the iBookStore, and be very invested in one or more of those platforms. If they are established anywhere besides Kindle, it’s going to be a tough decision to remove books from platforms and make them exclusive to KDP Select.

What I Did and Why
As soon as I grokked what Amazon was offering, I went straight to PubIt (that’s Nook) and removed the two books I had managed to load there. That took a big three minutes including taking a look at my sales record which, of course, was still at “zero” since I have not had time to groom or market for the Nook.

The Why
For 90 days I am more than glad to experiment. Do you get that the half a million dollars set aside for December is divvied out among the authors who participate in KDP Select? This is the first 90 day window. There will never be fewer authors participating than there are right now. I hope you don’t do what I did. Get it?

The Future
We’ll see how all this lending goes. Yes, there are huge ramifications floating in the Amazon-colored sky. What is happening to the whole lending system? I grew up in Carnegie libraries. What about Amazon’s ever-growing clout in publishing? Sure, it’s dangerous ground. Eyes wide open. Amazon is formidable and doesn’t seem to care much about rules. For now, however, they need authors, so I’m being fed well at the table of giants.

The Challenge
It’s the same challenge in every corner, people. To thrive today as authors, we need to be intrepid experimenters. We need to keep our eyes on our readership and our hearts in the next (ever better) book. As a lifelong writer, my experimental time and energy is going to the place where I find the biggest readership and the most respectable royalties. And for both of those, I say it’s about time.

Suzanna Stinnett

Bay Area Bloggers Society and ePub Clubs

Join the Independent Authors Network

Join World Literary Cafe

A Royalty of One’s Own

2 people with umbrellas walking away

The Writers Have Left the Building

Writers may now begin to inform the publishing industry. Do we want to do that?

Writers who have stabilized their income through digital publishing can start telling publishers and the pool of professionals contained in that industry how to work with writers. We can ask for what we want.

As part of that new conversation, we can feed back what we are learning about our readers and how to engage them. How to keep readers and writers happy.

It’s really different to say what you want when you’ve got what you need.

Writers are in the driver’s seat now. And the roads aren’t particularly friendly toward the old school.

Publishers, blinded by self-serving ignorance and hobbled by greed, have made few friends of writers in recent decades. There’s a big dollop of hostility on the publishing pie as the world seems to turn its back on the traditions of the industry. The last few months have seen stories of publishers holding white-fisted to the rules they think still apply, like preventing authors from playing in digital publishing on their own.

Publishers seem to be turning out their own lights, going dreadfully stupid while writers get smarter by the hour.

What’s happened in the last months — we can barely call it years — is that writers have figured out how to live without publishers. I’ve been a self publishing advocate since the 80s, drinking from the fountain of Dan Poynter from his very first book. It’s not new to me. The opportunities now presenting are quite different from anything that came before. The biggest difference was mentioned in Sunday’s New York Times article on Amazon’s newest blow to publishers, “…only one relationship matters now: The one between writers and readers.”

Writers are in control now as long as they realize that readers are in control.

What am I proposing? That we abide by the 21st century mandate: Collaborate. Recognize interdependence and value all the players from a position of self-realization.

What do we have to gain? The best of what publishing can bring to the table. Brilliant editors, agents, forms of distribution and marketing. Recognition. Even as writers discover these are all available outside the “industry,” I see value in the bank of accomplishments, the deep understanding of book design and reader experience, still alive in the remains of the publishing nest.

As a writer who loves self publishing, I’ve worked hard to put my best-edited work up on Kindle. I am turning a profit, unlike the results of my traditionally published print book. I see this as a thrilling time to be a writer — probably the best time ever. But I also love print and I think it warrants a special place in our future. I think it can be valued for what it is: a sensory, artful form of delivering pages. Publishers might want to be involved in that. Writers might find more satisfying success by collaborating with talented professionals who once rode elevators to their offices.

Amazon’s recent actions to publish authors directly threw a real skull-crusher to the traditional publishing industry. Authors should beware, though, as Amazon’s tremendous service to authors can easily take a dark turn. Their focus on “end-to-end” publishing starting with “development of the writing” makes me feel like a cloud just blocked the sun on a cold day. But I see where they get the idea: That’s what traditional publishers did once upon a time. Could writers advocate for great editors and designers for their Amazon books? We don’t want Amazon to be the next Decider, now, do we?

That’s another reason why I think we should invite all the players, old and new, to the dance. Let’s keep looking at how we can two-step together for mutual benefit.

What might writers tell publishers?

It’s the giant neon sign of modern living: What has been unsustainable is now ceasing to exist. That’s just math. What innovative collaboration rises in its wake, however, is up to us.

Suzanna Stinnett