Blog Archive

Showing posts with label eBooks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eBooks. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Writing at any Age, Guest Blog Post from John Yeoman


Today I am turning over my blog to John Yeoman who writes The Wicked Writing Blog and runs the Writer’s Village website. He has two MA’s and a PhD in Creative Writing and has been writing and publishing for decades. Now here’s John in his own words…

If your novel has been banging on agents’ doors for years and got nowhere take heart from Berwick Coates, an English author who this week nailed down a $130,000 deal and a two-book contract at age 80.

His historical thriller The Last Conquest was snapped up by one of the world’s largest publishers Simon & Schuster after Coates had failed to impress agents with several previous novels. “They were clearly not being read,” he said.

A retired history teacher, Coates succeeded only when he caught the eye of agent Jim Gill, who was recommended to him by a fellow author. Now Coates is finishing his second novel The Last Viking and can hope to see both in book stores at an age when most authors might have given up
or resorted to vanity publishing.

There’s nothing new about novelists in their Silver Age gaining a major publishing deal. P D James recently published her 19th novel at age 93. But it’s almost unprecedented for a debut author. Only Mary Wesley, whose debut novel The Camomile Lawn was published in 1984, comes close to Coates in age but she was merely 72 at the time.

As authors, what can we learn from Coates’ success?

1. Coates persisted with what he loved best.

After repeated failures with historical fiction he was urged by his son to write a contemporary novel replete with “sex and violence”. It too flopped. So he returned to what he knew and loved. And won.


2. He was introduced to an agent by an established author.
That’s the ideal route. “Mary Brown, whom you represent, suggested I approach you.” Any personal introduction is better than a cold call. (No doubt Jim Gill will now be overwhelmed by debut novelists who start their cover letters with a reference to Berwick Coates.)

3. Any age is the right age to submit a novel.
Carolyn Gill had her first best-selling novel Don’t Knock The Corners Off published at age 14. Susan Hill was an established name before her 18th birthday. But old authors often have the advantage of being able to exhume a dozen previous failures from their sock drawer, resubmit them and see them lauded in reviews - once their debut work has achieved success.

Coates’ achievement also highlights the wisdom of pursuing the traditional agent-publisher route, unless you can devote 18 hours a day to selling your novel yourself. Success in self-publishing lies 10% in talent, 90% in marketing. Perhaps Coates realized that, at age 80, he no longer had the energy to promote a self-published eBook with the passion of a John Locke, Amanda Hocking or Hugh Howie.

Moral: Keep knocking on agents’ doors. Write several novels. Then you can choose which you submit via the traditional route and which you self-publish. Sell a million eBooks under your own imprint and publishers will come knocking on your door.

John provides wonderful tips on his website and blog. He even offers FREE courses in writing. If you would like to learn more about writing, here's the link to his website  http://www.writers-village.org/

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Giving Away Books to Sell Books - Part 2 of 2


Today we'll be continuing with the second part of E.G. Lewis's detailing of his experiences with KDP select. Please read on...

In our previous post we discussed the KDP Select program, its promotional opportunities, and the preparations I made for my Free Days Campaign. With everything in place, there was nothing to do bet sit back and watch things unfold.

 GIVING AWAY PROMISES
I’ve created two graphs. The first details the cumulative total of free eBooks downloaded over the two-day promotional period by hour. The downloads totaled 21,200. With the exception of a couple of spikes, the hour-by-hour downloads generally showed a steady increase. I can’t explain why we had those two outliers around the middle of the second day. It may have something to do with the timing of tweets, Face Book posts and simply time differences.

Rather than throw numbers at you, let’s first try to bring them into focus by comparing them to what other books were doing during the same period. On the second day, Promises reached its highest ranking, placing 6th among the top 100 free books on Kindle. It held that position all day and well into evening. It also ranked 2nd in the Romantic Suspense category and 3rd in Contemporary Fiction.

RIDING THE WAVE — FOLLOW-UP SALES
Okay, so you’ve worked hard, done everything right, and promoted like crazy. Now comes the reward. My second graph tracks the after effects of the promotion, the resulting sales and borrows. In the first post I mentioned our attempt to cross-promote Promises and Lost. I tracked the number sold and borrowed for both books to see if it worked.

I had someone else’s stats and they reported follow-up sales of 2.37% of the free copies downloaded and borrows of 0.46%. I adopted those percentages and my goal became 503 copies of Promises sold and 98 copies borrowed. My free campaign ran 4/11-4/12/12, making Day One on the sales graph Friday the 13th, 2012. Fortunately, I’m not superstitious. During the next 16 days we sold 550 copies of Promises, or 2.59% and it was borrowed 134 times, or 0.63%. At its peak, Promises ranked 19th in paid Romantic Suspense and 37th in Contemporary Fiction. We exceeded both goals.

The brightest spot in the picture was the surge in sales of Lost. This was, after all, a book that wasn’t directly promoted. During that same 16 day period, Kindle users bought 138 copies of Lost and borrowed it four times, giving us a grand total of 826 paid transactions. Looking at it another way, without Lost we would have exceeded our combined goal by 13.8%. With Lost, we exceeded it by 37.4%.

I also wanted to know if this campaign boosted sales of my Seeds of Christianity Series and/or my Nonfiction titles. [We automatically include a link list in each eBook to all other eBooks. If you aren’t doing this, you should.] The Nonfiction titles couldn’t be evaluated since two of the three are seasonal. However, April sales of the Seeds Series were three times an average month, which makes one assume this is due to the Promises/Lost promotion.

FINAL THOUGHTS
The returns from a KDP Select campaign came very quickly. The three vertical red lines on the graph record the cumulative percentage of total sales of Promises after 3, 5 and 9 days. I believe the reason for the rapid falloff in sales can be traced back to Amazon’s ranking system. Many people peruse the top 100 lists, etc. Being in them makes the sales more or less self-sustaining, and dropping out of them leads to further declines. This is the same phenomena I mentioned in regards to free downloads.

It’s also interesting that on two occasions sales of Lost equaled those of Promises and on two other days Lost outsold it. The one unanswered question is why 138 people were willing to purchase Lost, but only four borrowed it when borrowing is free.

What all this means for the future is hard to say. But I do know one thing; most companies advertise their products continuously. If you have free days, don’t let them go to waste.

Sites Advertising Free Kindle Promotions in No Particular Order)
All Things Kindle (FaceBook)    http://www.facebook.com/allthingskindle?sk=wall
Pixel of Ink   http://www.pixelofink.com
Kindle Boards (under Book Bazaar)   http://www.kindleboards.com
Digital Book Today   http://www.digitalbooktoday.com
World Literary CafĂ©   http://www.worldliterarycafe.com
Free Ebook Deal (FaceBook)   http://www.facebook.com/freeebookdeal?sk=wall
Free Kindle Books & Tips (FaceBook)  http://www.facebook.com/fkbooksandtips?sk=wall
 
Christian Specific Sites:
Inspired Reads   http://www.inspiredreads.com
Family Fiction – Christian Books  http://www.facebook.com/FamilyFiction
Christian Fiction Gathering (FaceBook)
Christian Fiction (FaceBook)  https://www.facebook.com/#!/ChristianFiction

A detailed search will surely turn up additional sites willing to plug your promotion. Also be sure to create an event on GoodReads, do FaceBook posts, and mention it on your Blog, Twitter, etc.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Update with Author, Lisa Grace on Books and Movies

It’s been about a year since my previous interview with you. At that time it was before the book, Angel in the Shadows, was published in the eBook format. How have the sales been for the eBook as opposed to the print edition?
At the end of 2010, I was named to Strategic Publishing’s Top 50 authors group for having high sales. I released Angel in the Shadows, Book 1 as an eBook on Amazon May 23rd, 2011 and followed with Angel in the Storm, Book 2 on July 1, 2011.

Was there a big surge in sales or just moderate?
Sales were great from the beginning with several hundred being bought every month. By August, Book 1 made it to #1 on the Teen Horror bestseller’s list on Amazon where it stayed for several weeks. I took a screen shot of that.

December 2011 was a great month with over 12,000 people downloading Angel in the Shadows. That’s my record to beat right now. Self-publishing eBooks is one of the best decisions I ever made.

Was it easier to write the second book?
Yes. And I’ve gotten better as an author. It’s a better book.

Is this a stand alone book or would you have to read book 1 to understand who the characters are?
It helps to read book 1 first as it is a continuing saga.

You’ve also got the 3rd installment coming out soon, Angel in the Ice. How do you find time to write 3 books in so short a time?
Well, I wrote book 1 in 2009. I did add 2,000 words and re-edited it before I put it up as an eBook in 2010, so it is a better read than the hardcover. I write full time, so four books in three years, isn’t that much.

I also have a collection of flash fiction I’m putting up this summer. I write flash fiction for fun when I need a break from writing novels.

I also participated in Nichol O’Dell’s cookbook, Novel Morsels. It’s based on sixty two different books and contains original recipes the characters may have eaten. It’s only 99 cents.

What book or books do you have in the works?
Several. I’m finishing edits on Angel in the Ice, which should be up for sale by the second week in February 2012. I plan on releasing The 15th Star in March. That one took a year to write. My flash fiction book I’ll release in April.

I have three more in the works -- a non-fiction author marketing book, the first in my YA Feudal Land series, and the first in Society of the D. E. A. D.

Then in my history-mystery line I have a second one tentatively titled The Devonshire Treasure. If I write 2,000 words a day, I can complete them all, and have time to edit.

I understand the first two books have been optioned for a movie. How did that come about? Where are you in the process? Who handled the negotiations – you or an agent?
When I made it to #1 in Teen Horror on Amazon and stayed there for several weeks, I had two movie producers call who had read the books. I went with the larger one. We’re in the final stages of negotiation so now it’s just a matter of finalizing the paperwork.. I asked Elaine P. English, an entertainment lawyer out of Washington D. C., (who came highly recommended from other authors) to represent me. She also works as a literary agent, (although not for me) so she is familiar with both ends of the deal.

What surprised you most about the process good/bad?
I was shocked I still couldn’t get an agent even with a legitimate movie contract in hand from a production company that has worked for Steven Spielberg as well as five academy award winning movies.

I was also surprised at how my contract is so different from the ones I saw on the internet. Mine is twenty-five pages long. Of course it is for two books with a possibility for the third. As a result, I am writing a book about my experiences to help other authors attract movie deals and then to know what to expect along the way.

Do you first do an outline for your books or are you write more “seat of the pants” writer?
Oh, I’m a planner. I write an outline, then plan scenes, one for each eight hundred words. You can read more about my process and sixteen other authors’ by buying K. M. Weiland’s book entitled, Outlining Your Novel Map Your Way To Success. It’s only $2.99 and the link is in the title. I have a cover credit on that as a contributing author

I couldn’t write 2,000 words a day if I didn’t know where I was going. Now characters do cause me to deviate, but with an outline, I always know how to get back on track.

Three years ago would you have thought you would be this far in your writing process now? What plans do you have for the future with your books? Anything else you’d like to add?
The most exciting thing, of course, is the movie deal. Yes, in my wildest dreams I could see things like this happening. I have to pinch myself that it’s real. My goal now is to write such exciting books I can get movie deals for all of them.

I would like to get a traditional paperback contract for all my series too, with a nice advance. I would like to make enough so I can retire my husband. I’m not quite there yet.
I plan on writing enough high quality books until I get there. I have so many tales to tell.

That's is for today's interview, but if you would like to buy Lisa's books or learn more about her writing, click here.