2. The money flows toward the author. If a publisher or
agent is asking you to pay for publication, or to read your manuscript, run,
don’t walk away. Wash and repeat, “The money flows toward the author.” Visit:
http://pred-ed.com
3. Your work is copyrighted from creation, but to fully
protect your rights, file with the U. S Copyright Office. The $35.00 is worth
the peace of mind. (even if pirates will try to ignore it) www.copyright.gov
4. Pirates are scum-suckers you can’t ignore. If you see
your story up on a pirating site, send them a takedown notice. Yes it’s
annoying and it seems never-ending, but if you ignore it, it will get worse.
Join a group that fights piracy. Educate your friends and family about it. You’d
be surprised at how many think the innocent sharing of a song, movie or book
doesn’t hurt anyone, but while a paperback passes from hand to hand, an e-book
could pass from one person’s hands to thousands, who in turn can copy and send
to someone else. Many teenagers don’t realize the implications of sharing one
file, and it runs rampant among them. Educate them. It’s a snowball effect. This
includes downloading music, movies, computer software, anything that can be
pirated. Lead by example, and if you really want to share a story, music, or a
movie with a family member or friend, buy them a copy. Watch those blog posts
too. Often authors use photos that are copyright protected and are not aware.
If it isn’t in the public domain, or you didn’t purchase the right to use it,
tread carefully or you could be infringing on someone’s intellectual rights. If
someone offers to share intellectual media with you, tell them you’ll buy your
own copy. It’s the right thing to do. And one last thing... Keep up to date on
what is going on with laws being put into effect to combat piracy. Not all are
good for the owner’s of intellectual rights. In short—Know thy enemy and the
laws that govern what they can and can not do!
5. Read. If you want to be a published author, or you are
and want to move your career forward, read. Know your genre. Know what is
selling and why. Know what makes a book a good read and what makes a book a not
so good read. Go ahead, read those reviews, but form your own opinion. The more
popular a book, the more trolls it will draw and frankly, not everyone has the
same taste. What one person raves about, another may despise.
6. Ignore the trolls. The comments they make on blogs and
forums are there to draw you out, and if you give into the urge to comment, it
will backfire on you and you better brace yourself for a lamb-basting. You don’t
want to be labeled as “An Author Behaving Badly.”
7. Fifty percent of being a successful author is about
promotion. Your publisher will not do it for you, not unless you’re a NY Times
Bestseller and even then, it has to be in the budget. Don’t like blogging,
talking, networking? You better get used to it. It’s a necessary evil. Get a
website and make it reader friendly. Easy to navigate. Easy to buy your books,
and easy to see what you are working on now. Most of all, keep it up to date
and post something new weekly. Changes will bring your visitors back to see
what’s new. Neglected blogs fall by the wayside. If you have a cover on your
site, please link it to where they can buy it. Think one click sales. Impulse
buying is your friend. Use it to your advantage. When you blog or network, don’t
make it all about promoting your most recent book. Don’t spam your readers. Talk
about your latest project, tips on writing, share amusing stories. Build a
relationship with your readers and they will buy your books. Constantly spam
them, and they will run.
8. Be accessible. Nothing is worse than reading a book you
love and wanting to drop the author an email and tell them how much you adored
it, only to find there is no way to reach out to them. What does this mean?
Have a contact form on your web page, or an email used exclusively for readers
to contact you. Put your website address and links at the bottom of all your
emails. A lot of traffic to your blogs and website come from these. If a publisher or agent has read something of
yours and they just have to talk to you, and they meet with a dead end, they
will stop there. Every now and then they do come looking. It happened to me. Don’t
do yourself a disservice. Be accessible.
9. Be professional. Whenever you post, think about what you’re
saying before you hit send, or publish it to your blog. Readers may not
remember the nice things you said, but they never will forget the nasty things.
Tact at all times. And for God’s sake, ignore the trolls.
10. Critique groups and beta readers are not an option, they
are a necessity. You will need them to help polish your manuscript before you
submit it anywhere. Many a new writer gets a rude awakening when they discover
an editor isn’t there to polish their rough draft. They are there to make a well-written,
already polished story, great. Critters will see things you don’t, and offer
suggestions that may open up avenues you didn’t think about. They help catch
typos and grammar errors, and keep you looking like the professional you are. And
when they do you a favor, be kind and return it.
11. When you receive good advice, share it. You were not
always a published author, and sometimes you had to learn things the hard way,
and at one time someone may have given you good advice that made all the
difference in your career. Go ahead, help another writer out. What goes around,
comes around, and we are all in this together.
12. Publishing credits aren’t necessary to get an agent, but
most won’t look at your story if you don’t have them. To get the big contracts
you have to have an agent. To get an agent you have to have publishing credits and
a well-honed knowledge of how to write a damn good story. Go out and write some
shorts and get them published, build your credits, learn your craft, and then
go back, wiser, published and seasoned. It will make a difference in the way
you are received.
13. It’s not in print. So what. Stop stressing over it,
already. Just because you can’t sign a physical copy doesn’t mean you can’t
sign a t-shirt with the cover of your book on it (which also makes a great
walking billboard), trading cards, a postcard, or Kindlegraph. All you need is
a sharpie and your imagination. You’re still a published author. So, wear that
badge with pride and stop fretting about if it will be in print, or not. E-publishing
is the future. Those that adapt, will survive. Be a survivor and don’t let that
your novel is an e-book, discourage you. You’re e-published and have the
biggest audience out there, don’t restrict your promotion to four walls and a
ceiling. Brick and mortar is nice, but the average author sells 4-5 books at a
signing—if they are lucky. Readers who shop for e-books buy an average of three
books at a time and you are not even sitting in front of them. Direct them to
your site and one-click buy links and nifty promotional flash they will love
and can collect.
14. Your voice is your own. Unique or subtle, it’s your
voice. Don’t try to write with a voice that doesn’t belong to you. Have faith
you will tell the story you need to tell, and do it the way you were meant to.
Embrace who you are and what you love to write, and the rest will fall into
place.
15. Finish one story before you start another. (This is a
lesson I’m still working on.) It’s easy to get distracted by the voices in your
head and the dynamic ideas that come to you while you dream, or during a boring
business meeting. Write the idea down, save it to an idea file and then get
your ass back on task, because your breakout novel will never get written if
you keep flitting from partially finished novel to partially finished novel.
16. Romance isn’t any easier to write than any other genre.
It is a common misconception that some genres are easier to write than others.
This is not true. It is however true, if you write what you’re comfortable with
and love and read that genre, it comes easier. Don’t try to force a horror
story out of your muse if she is an erotic romance girl. It won’t work, and you’ll
get frustrated.
17. Congratulations, you’re a published author and fair game. Thicken your hide. If you can’t take critiques on your manuscript
before you get a contract, you won’t be able to take the flaying your editor
gives you when he or she gets a hold of it. I had a manuscript I thought I’d
scrubbed clean, that bled red ink by the time my editor went through the first
pass. And that’s just the beginning. Once you publish, your work is out there
for review and not everyone is going to love it and they are going to share
what they didn’t like with the world, whether you want them to or not. A great
way to blow off steam is to get a rant buddy you privately let it all out to.
Keep it between you and let it go.
18. Raise the stakes. Make the situation as unpleasant for
your characters as you can. They can’t grow if they don’t start at dirt level.
Always ask yourself, what will happen if my hero or heroine don’t succeed, and
then make the consequences worse. High stakes=high tension, and a book your
readers won’t be able to put down.
19. Be kind to your agent and editors. They work hard. Don’t
email or call them constantly for updates, your book isn’t the only one on
their desk. Take the time to thank them for all they do. We all need to hear
that once in a while, and editors don’t get nearly enough credit and praise for
what they do.
20. Write because you love it. Publish because you want to
share that love.
Have a great weekend,
D L
7 comments:
Great advice, DL! I'm working on some of that. LOL about finishing one manuscript before you start another.
All the best!
LOL. My Achille's heel.
I laughed at 15! long and hard!!! You know why, Ms Jackson! But good advice there - even when you don't follow it yourself.
Excellent advice!
Wonderful! Although, I too am still working on that 1 at a time thing. Last month I was editing 1, revising another & brainstorming a 3rd. It was CRAZY and made my head hurt!
Yeah, and I admitted it Barbara, but I am working on that one. LOL
I really am!
Post a Comment