Tag Archives: indie publishing

Indie publishing one year in

Sometimes, “independence” = “freedom”

Tomorrow will be my book’s first birthday (of course, I uploaded it a few days in advance, and the print version a month in advance for proofs, but I still consider June 5 the “birthday”). When I announced my first novel last year, I wrote about how I feel about indie publishing. Most of what I said there is still true, except that I’m no longer sure I’m interested in working with a trade publisher, and I’ve shifted in my approach to indie publishing (more on that in a minute).

somerville independence day fireworks

The results

This blog isn’t really about my self-publishing journey, but I love seeing hard data out there. So here’s how the first year of indie publishing has gone for those first two books:

  • I’ve sold nearly 1700 copies of I, Spy
  • I’ve given away over 5000 copies of Mr. Nice Spy (so many that I really stopped keeping track).
  • I’ve published four more books—one more novella, one more novel, and two nonfiction books. I haven’t advertised these hardly at all, and they’ve done fairly well considering.

By far, the most successful times I’ve had have been when I ran ads at Bookbub and Ereader News Today—but there have also been random peaks at full price, selling 50 or 100 copies in a day. I originally wrote a novella as a “freebie” to generate interest in the novels (and as a little lagniappe for people who’ve read the novels, if they don’t mind spoilers). The freebie has done well, obviously, spending over six months on the free best”sellers” lists, but I can’t really see a correlation between “sales” of that book and sales of my later books, so it doesn’t seem to have worked in that sense.

A less measurable result has been the response. I’ve had some really great, encouraging feedback (and a few less so; I’ve stopped reading reviews, so I don’t really keep up on them anymore). Having both of my novels named among the five Whitney finalists was a big honor, a daydream possibility that might have idly wandered through my mind once. I did not expect to win, and I didn’t, but that honor has lead to some other positives—I believe it’s helped my print sales through my distributor (though we’ll have to see how returns pan out), and it got me reviews through a local newspaper, even being featured in the print edition.

But in the end, it always comes back to what I knew even before I started publishing: I write because I love it. If I don’t love it, I’ve learned, I need to stop writing for a while. You know, aside from the drudgery of nitty-gritty line edits.

The feels

Oh the feels. As with all publishing, I don’t think anyone’s truly prepared for the emotional roller coaster. One day you’re up because you got a great review or sold another book; the next you’re down because of a bad review or stinking writer envy.

(Stinking writer envy.)

R1-29

Self-publishing has the notable drawback of not having a team of people who’ve at least endorsed your book as good. Though maybe not. It seems sometimes that benefit has probably already had its effect by the time most trade published books hit the shelves. Sales—generally within the first few weeks—are still regarded as the true measure of a book’s worth to a publisher. Sometimes, I fall into that same mentality, like my book’s (virtual) shelflife is over and I failed.

But I haven’t failed. I’ve got nothing but time, and my book isn’t going away unless I decide to kill it. Time is on my side, because every sale for the rest of forever “counts.” Toward, you know, nothing. My wallet. Whatever I want.

But again, the drawbacks and benefits aren’t all so easy to measure as dollar signs. Several times a week, I am either directly or indirectly informed of how bad self-published books are. When I’ve worked on (and paid for) the best book and most professional presentation possible, it hurts to be told that because of the route I chose to take to share my work, my book is automatically bad. Cue that emotional roller coaster.

The future: would I trade publish?

On the other hand, almost as frequently, I am either directly or indirectly informed of something a trade publisher has done that makes me so, so, so glad to not have gone that route. Anything from silly, careless mistakes to blatant disregard for their authors to hearing a trade published author worry about finding a home for their next work reminds me that I never, ever, ever have to do that. (Happy dance.)

The silly mistakes and mistreatment aren’t the biggest reason I’m glad to be indie—and that reason hasn’t changed over the last year. I still retain full control and full rights to my work. I make my editorial decisions, right or wrong. I pick my covers and my designer. I haven’t assigned my copyright to anyone for the next thirty-five minutes, let alone thirty-five years. I don’t need anyone else’s approval or authorization to share my work.

Unfortunately, over the last year, I’ve lost what little faith I once had in trade publishers. Last year, I felt like I was releasing a niche book and hoped to connect with my niche audience. A year later, I honestly feel like I dodged a bullet in not accepting an offer from a publisher (extended waaay back in 2011; more on that another time). I’ve really refined how I see that niche (not quite the one I thought I was releasing to, but pretty close).

More than that, though, I’ve realized that I regard publishing not only from the viewpoint of a businessperson and a writer, but as an artisan.

To borrow an example from another craft, I knit. I love it. A few of the things I’m most proud of are gifts for my family, and when I’m knitting for them, I almost always take the time and the care to undo mistakes, to make things the right way, to get all my decreases leaning the right direction (which is hard because I knit sort of “backwards”). I’m pretty proud of the results:



(Hang on. Have to take a minute to marvel at how much those baby girls have grown up: the one on pink will be 6 next month, the one on purple will be 4 tomorrow and the one on yellow is 1. Man.) (My husband and son are pictured from a couple weeks ago, so just the usual amount of marveling for them 😉 .)

We’ve all seen or heard horror stories of some awful ugly sweater knitted by someone’s apparently half-blind grandma. But does that mean all hand knit items are crap?

Of course not! Would anyone seriously argue that? No! People pay for the privilege of owning and wearing hand knit items. (As a reference, I made a lace shawl very like the above for a niece in December. The yarn cost <$10. I looked up how much people were selling that exact shawl for on Etsy: $100.)

I view my books much like I view these crafts (without the $100 price tag). I’ve taken the care and the time (and the capital) to handcraft the best books I can. People will always deride the acrylic abominations of visually-and-sartorially-challenged (but well meaning!) grannies, but that doesn’t mean that everything hand made is garbage. And people will always deride the unedited drafts that some people throw on Amazon, but that doesn’t mean I should give up or feel like my stuff is garbage because I truly, lovingly crafted each scene and didn’t wait for someone else’s endorsement/permission to share it.

I still struggle for approval, even from myself, but in the end, I realize more and more, I do this for myself. I’m a perfectionist, and I would hand craft these books with care even if no one read them. Getting paid a little bit to share my writing is a privilege. And as I’m only a year in, I hope that privilege will continue to increase with time.

What do you think? How has your opinion of indie publishing changed over the last year?

Photo credits: Fireworks—Matt; masks—MFer Photography; both via Flickr/CC
Knitting photos by me

Indie author resources blog fest!

Today is the day! Link up here!

When you publish your own works, everything comes down to you. You have to find and hire the editors, proofreaders, cover designer, interior designer, e-book formatter . . . it can be daunting to line up all those other professionals to make your book come to life at last.

I read many great blogs on self-publishing, and I’m not looking to change the overall focus of my blog. However, I do really want to acknowledge the amazing support staff I’ve worked with in producing my books. So I’m putting together the . . . Indie Author Resources Blog Fest!

indie resources blog fest

Today, Monday, January 20, if you’re an indie author—or if you just happen to know of an editor, cover designer or other publishing professional who does quality work—post about them on your blog, and come back here to link up below!

How to participate

Indie author resources blog fest1. The theme is Indie author resources. It’s all about showing some love for all those people who helped make your book great. So who do you put in your post?

  • Editors—content, copy, line, and proof
  • Designers—cover, interior, e-book, and other promotional graphics
  • Formatters—e-book, print
  • Printers—print-on-demand, short run, long run, promotional materials
  • Any other professionals who helped make your book the best it could be!

Be sure to include links to their websites!

2. If you’re not (yet?) an indie author, but you know exactly who you’d hire, please join in!

3. If you wouldn’t recommend their work, don’t include the person in your post.

4. Post your resources on your blog January 20, 2014, and add it to the Mr. Linky here. Link your post back to the blogfest on here so your readers can read other entries, too. (The best link is http://JordanMcCollum.com/indie-resources/ )

5. Read, enjoy, and comment on other entries!

6. The index! After the blog fest, I’ll be compiling a list of the recommended professionals for ease of use. I’ll link back to all posts, of course!

So, in short: on January 20, write a blog post about an e-book professional, link back here in your post, and sign up on the linky.

Join in now!

Thank you to everyone who signed up in advance (you can find that list here). Please be sure to link up today with the link DIRECTLY TO YOUR POST, i.e. http://yourblog.blogspot.com/2014/01/indie-author-resources.html.

Again, DO NOT PUT IN YOUR PLAIN BLOG URL (http://yourblog.blogspot.com). If someone comes back to click on your link in a month, they won’t be able to find your post and they will leave your blog frustrated and disappointed!!

FULL URLs, PLEASE!!!

(Sorry for the difficulty; the linky’s host crashed. It’s back now, but if we’ve lost your link, please re-enter!

Spread the word

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Original Yellow Pages photo by Phossil via Flickr/CC

The hardest part of self-publishing?

Lots of challenges litter the path of indie publishing. Editing, cover design, formatting, interior design, marketing & promotion, building your own validation, bad reviews, confidence, sales numbers—there are pitfalls every step of the way.

the Book of ChangesAll those things have been hurdles for me over the last month. But the hardest part of self-publishing for me is often leaving it alone.

I think it’s good and even right to fix minor issues like typos, perhaps even inadvertent, minor inconsistencies. But anything more than that, and you run the risk of the slippery slope of perpetual editing.

Author Ally Carter (one of my faves!) said it well in a recent Q&A:

Do you ever re-read your own books?

Not if I can help it. That sounds like my definition of torture—reading something I can’t fix if and when I find mistakes or things I just want to change. And, believe me, I would want to change things. All the things!

Ally is trade published, so she most likely doesn’t have the opportunity to change her works. Can you imagine the torture if you can change things? And if you can, should you?

In the new publishing paradigm, there might not be such a thing as a “finished” book. We can edit forever. And while, again, fixing typos is good, having 8 (or 800) various editions of your book out there just feels wrong. I think there has to be a point where we decide our books are truly polished enough—not to give up too soon and call it good, but to recognize that we’ve produced a finished product to the best of our (and all our helpers’) ability, and share it with readers without shame.

What do you think? How much are you willing to change once you’ve hit “Publish”?

Photo by Nikki L.

TBR Tuesday: INDIEpendence Day Blogfest

Happy INDIEpendence Day!

The book

I thought and thought about what indie published book I could highlight today, and finally I remembered ones that I just recently got during their free promotions. I heard about them direct from the author, Dene Low, who happened to teach the one creative writing class I took in college. Years later, I ran into her at a writers’ conference and looked up her books.

When she mentioned these freebies on Twitter, I snapped them right up! They’re regularly $3.99 on Kindle, so even full price, they’re a bargain!

Crimson Blues Write Like Your Brain Works
Thirty-year-old lawyer Amanda Taylor moves to a small town after winning a sensational criminal case that got national attention. She’s tired of criminal law and just wants to settle into private practice in a place that will allow her to recoup her energies and her belief in human beings. However, although she loves her new home, after she meets her handsome neighbor, Kevin Blakely, she realizes that something isn’t right in the town. Kevin has been brought in from another state to be the new county school district supervisor. He thinks it’s so he can bring the school district into the technological age, but he becomes suspicious when the district budget doesn’t add up and certain members of the school board, who had welcomed him with open arms, begin to distance themselves from him. When he realizes he has been set up to be the scapegoat in a case of fraud and embezzlement, he goes to the only lawyer who isn’t part of the good old boy network in town—Amanda. As the case becomes more complicated, so do Amanda’s and Kevin’s feelings for each other. Learn how to write more easily, more creatively, and more effectively by taking advantage of the way your brain is hardwired to use language. You can write thousands of words a day by using this system and knowing the strategies that will appeal most effectively to your readers. You can learn how to revise easily and with purpose. I’ve done the research so you can have access to my knowledge and thirty years of experience without having to go through all of the work I did. By using my writing system, you can be more productive and inventive and strategic as you write.

I’ve previously read Dene’s trade published MG novel, Petronella Saves Nearly Everyone: The Entomological Tales of Augustus T. Percival. It was nominated for an Edgar Award (I can hardly believe someone I sort-of know was nominated for an Edgar!), and it’s absolutely adorable! It also happens to be $3.99 on Kindle. I’m really looking forward to both of Dene’s books on my electronic TBR!

The Giveaway!

I’m giving away your choice of one copy of Dene Low’s Kindle e-books! You must leave a comment on this blog post AND fill out the Rafflecopter below to enter, and additional entries are available through the Rafflecopter!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

You may enter through July 8th; winner will be announced here July 9th & contacted via e-mail.

Join the blogfest!

Want to join in the INDIEpendence Day blogfest? Here’s how it works:

  1. PICK A BOOK: Pick an indie (self-published or small press) book that you either HAVE READ AND LOVED or WANT TO READ.
  2. WRITE A POST: On INDIEpendence day (July 2nd), write a post about that book. It can be a review, an interview with the author, or simply a post highlighting the book. In your post, be sure to include: 1) HOW you found out about the book and 2) WHY you liked it (or WHY you want to read it). Make it easy for people to sample your indie author by providing buy links as well.
  3. DO A GIVEAWAY (optional): You can give away swag, or a copy of the indie book you’re highlighting, or don’t do a giveaway at all – it’s up to you!
  4. IMPORTANT: you may NOT highlight your own novel or one of the Indelible’s novels (this is a Pay It Forward event!)
  5. GO TO GOODREADS (optional): Add the Indie book or books you’re featuring to our ever-growing INDIEpendence Day List.

Which of Dene’s books would you pick? What indie published books are on your TBR??

INDIEpendence Day!

I love to support independent publishers—self-published or small press—and my friends in the Indelibles, so you know I’ll be participating in the INDIEpendence Day Blogfest next week!

Want to join? Here’s how:

  1. PICK A BOOK: Pick an indie (self-published or small press) book that you either HAVE READ AND LOVED or WANT TO READ.
  2. WRITE A POST: On INDIEpendence day (July 2nd), write a post about that book. It can be a review, an interview with the author, or simply a post highlighting the book. In your post, be sure to include: 1) HOW you found out about the book and 2) WHY you liked it (or WHY you want to read it). Make it easy for people to sample your indie author by providing buy links as well.
  3. DO A GIVEAWAY (optional): You can give away swag, or a copy of the indie book you’re highlighting, or don’t do a giveaway at all – it’s up to you!
  4. IMPORTANT: you may NOT highlight your own novel or one of the Indelible’s novels (this is a Pay It Forward event!)
  5. GO TO GOODREADS (optional): Add the Indie book or books you’re featuring to our ever-growing INDIEpendence Day List.

For extra incentive, the Indelibles will be giving away a $10 Kindle gift card (to be used on Indie books!) to a random host from the participating blogs!

(Also, if anybody wanted to highlight I, Spy, I wouldn’t say no. Just sayin’ 😉 .)

Are you down for INDIEpendence Day?

The truth about how I feel about going indie

This entry is part 13 of 14 in the series My writing journey

Friday I got to reveal the cover of my first published novel, and last week in my writing journey I talked about quitting writing and getting an offer of publication. The timing of those blog posts is coincidental—in fact, there’s a much bigger leap between those two steps than it would seem.

That offer was not for I, Spy. I’m actually publishing I, Spy under my own imprint, Durham Crest Books.

The decision to go indie

Independence, OR, signIt’s definitely not easy to decide to “go indie” in publishing. It’s much, much easier to let someone else take all the financial risk. And for a while I was very tempted to let someone else take that on. However, it’s also much, much easier to go indie than it is to get an agent and a trade publishing contract at a large house.

Small publishers are definitely another option, but for me, going indie is what I want. Every author has to think through this decision for his/her career and comfort level, but here’s what helped me make this decision:

  • The book itself—often, if a book isn’t something that fits neatly under a genre & marketing label, or it doesn’t have a big hook (or if people just don’t seem to see it!), agents and editors can be more hesitant about taking on that kind of risk. (Smaller presses may be an exception.) That doesn’t mean no one will buy it or there’s no audience.
  • To me, it seems that most (not all) small presses have such a limited reach that it’s not substantially better than self-publishing—especially considering how much bookstores seem to be struggling, and knowing that small presses would have a very hard time getting placement, co-op, etc.
  • Unless you are a BIG NAME or a BIG BOOK (and at a BIG HOUSE with a BIG BUDGET), 99% of the time, the vast majority of marketing falls to the author, no matter who pays for printing.
  • I’ve been running a very small business online for several years, and have very few expenses—meaning I have the capital to invest in self-publishing.
  • I have friends who’ve been there and done that, and models for success (that are attainable, I hope!). I’m part of a writers’ support group and there are dozens of successful self-publishers there who are selling thousands of books every month. I can see it happening to people I know, and I can pick their brains for advice.
  • The biggest issue for me: keeping control of my book, both creatively and legally. I know I can get exactly what I want. Some publishers are better about rights, author input, control, etc., than others, but it’s a huge weight off my mind not to have to worry about getting stuck in a crazy contract, or with a cover or a compulsory editorial “suggestion” I don’t like. (I mean, heck, I get to choose whether I use serial commas or not! [Not.])

There are drawbacks, of course. I have total control, but I also have total responsibility. If I can’t think of a title, I’m stuck. (Well, partially true—I always have my friends who are eager to help!) I’m assuming the full risk, financial, emotional (very real), etc.

Going indie vs. self publishing

There’s no codified definition of “indie publishing,” and everyone from small publishers to self-publishers use the term. To me, the difference between plain old “self-publishing” and “indie publishing” is all about the outlook.

So why do I consider myself “indie”?

  • I’m willing to invest in money and time to produce the best possible product.
  • I set up an entire business to support this venture.
  • But most of all, I’m in this for the long haul. I’m not self-publishing hoping that I’ll sell a bajillion copies of this one book and have New York banging down my door to buy this book and everything else I ever write. I don’t believe for a minute that indie publishing is a fast track to a contract or any other form of success. It’s work, and I’m willing to put in that work.

I’m not going to rule out trade publishing. Sometimes as I’m sitting here hyphenating my entire book by hand, I do wish I had someone else to handle this stuff for me. But for right now, I’m making multi-year projections for publishing in at least two series. The prevailing wisdom is that most indie publishers don’t really see great success until they have multiple books on the market, so I’m planning for that. (My planning calendar goes into 2016 and includes books that have been sitting around collecting dust as well as books I haven’t even written yet!)

What about my publisher?

Things are on hold with my publisher for now. One day I might be ready to talk about why. We’ll see.

The truth about how I feel about going indie

fireworksTwo years ago, I would never have expected to self-publish. It’s a hard decision to go indie, and to be honest, I do still second guess the choice. Despite the money I’ve put into editing and covers and ISBNs, it’s not too late to pull the plug and run and hide.

It’s very scary to put yourself out there, and there is still a bit of a stigma associated with self-publishing. There are certain avenues that are simply not open to an independently published person, no matter how professional and talented and successful, that are open to any trade publisher, no matter how unprofessional or feckless or unsuccessful. In some ways, I’m letting part of my dream go as I do this. Sometimes, even though I’m doing everything right and crossing every t and dotting every i, I feel like I must be cheating, that this is less legit.

But in the end, I think I’m reaching for the larger dream. No, I don’t have a high-powered agent or an eleven-figure advance or PW and Kirkus banging down my door for a review. I probably wouldn’t say no to any of those things (depending on the strings with that advance 😉 ).But I’m not going to let the lack of those things hold me back from the real goal—reaching readers. Getting my books out there. Making something I’m proud of.

And as one wise friend (who I totally can’t remember who it was, sorry!) pointed out, having the backing of a trade publisher usually entails less financial risk, but in the end, it doesn’t guarantee success. You can fail either way, and putting yourself out there is always scary. I won’t let that fear win.

What do you think? What publishing path are you pursuing now? How did you decide what’s right for you? Come share your writing journey!

Photo credits: Independence—Doug Kerr, fireworks—Joel