Tuesday, March 10, 2020
Patience The modern authorââ¬â¢s lost virtue
Patience The modern authorââ¬â¢s lost virtue Patience: The modern authorââ¬â¢s lost virtue In our last article, we enumerated the different qualities successful indie authors usually have: theyââ¬â¢re great writers, entrepreneurial-minded, good at marketing, etc. But hereââ¬â¢s one quality only a select few possess: patience.The rise of self-publishing has brought with it the decline of this all-important virtue. There always seems to be a rush- to write, to get the next book out, to sell it. Weââ¬â¢re in the pre-ordering, pre-promoting, pre-emptive stage of publishing. And if youââ¬â¢re like us, racing against the clock is starting to feel preposterous.Even established writers are ruled by the clock. Letââ¬â¢s consider Hugh Howeyââ¬â¢s website: the first thing you see is this little widget indicating his progress on his upcoming books. I almost want to bet on which bar is going to be filled first, and thatââ¬â¢s just one author! Why is this ââ¬Å"raceâ⬠so characteristic of self-publishing? Well, first, because indie authors are in charge of all the work- including how quickly pages go to print (concretely or digitally). The pace of a bookââ¬â¢s release used to be determined by a publishing house; indies donââ¬â¢t face that controlling force.The second big reason is financial. Self-publishing authors donââ¬â¢t get advances. They are only able to earn money when the book is out and selling. A sense of urgency is a foregone conclusion, until you realize that your first book wonââ¬â¢t sell as well as you hoped (gaining market traction is no quick or easy task). So you feel an even greater sense of urgency to churn out book #2â⬠¦and 3â⬠¦and so on and so forth.This can be perfectly fine and even prove advantageous, but can easily ruin all your hard work: with urgency comes precipitation. Whatââ¬â¢s precipitation? Well, it can be Joanna Penn ordering several thousand print copies of he r first non-fiction book before knowing how to market it, for example. Or in most less-extreme cases, releasing a first book that hasnââ¬â¢t been copy edited or proofread- or one full of formatting issues.When you enter the self-publishing race and start producing content at a fast pace, you can miss out on great opportunities- and Iââ¬â¢m not even talking about the opportunity to simply spend more time on each book (before releasing it) to make it better.Iââ¬â¢m talking about marketing opportunities. Iââ¬â¢m talking about something that might sound like a sacrilege to many indie authors: sitting on finished work. I first thought of this when reading the excellent blog post by Hugh Howey on ââ¬Å"The Liliana Nirvana Techniqueâ⬠, which basically consists of ââ¬Å"publishing 5 works at onceâ⬠and the 6th one shortly after.If you go through the comments below the post, you can get a sense of how crazy this sounds to many indie authors. However, when you think ab out it, it makes sense: by ââ¬Å"floodingâ⬠Amazon all at once with your work, you dramatically increase your exposure; your books get linked to each other, ââ¬Å"every sale leading to recommendations for 4 or 5 more of your worksâ⬠, and readers looking for content see your name everywhere.Sure, this means your readers have to wait longer for your next book, but if theyââ¬â¢re already your readers, the only thing youââ¬â¢re creating is anticipation and suspense (just as you should have done in your narrative)! Case in point: How many of us are chomping at the bit just to pre-order The Winds of Winter?The good thing is that all this ââ¬Å"theoretical thinkingâ⬠has actually been validated by several of ââ¬Å"Lilianaââ¬â¢s peersâ⬠, as Hugh puts it. It takes guts to sit on a book (let alone 4 or 5), but patience is a virtue even in a digital age.
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