# Thursday, January 29, 2009
Nonfiction Webinar Participants: Thank You!
Posted by Jane

Thanks to everyone who participated in today's webinar on getting your nonfiction book published. I hope you found the information and the critiques helpful. (And some of you still have critiques coming.)

Here are a few links mentioned in today's seminar you might find helpful:
If you missed any info during the session, or need clarification on any points, feel free to leave a comment here for me to address. And don't forget to look for me on Twitter and Facebook (just mention the webinar when putting in a friend request).

Update: I forgot to mention an excellent resource for those of you asking questions about platform: Get Known Before the Book Deal by Christina Katz. It's a Writer's Digest Book that shows you step-by-step what it takes to build a platform, which is essential for every aspiring author.


Conferences/Events | Getting Published
Thursday, January 29, 2009 3:20:57 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [4] Trackback
# Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Do Writers' Futures Lie in Indie E-Publishing Platforms?
Posted by Jane



The March/April issue of Writer’s Digest magazine hits newsstands in the week ahead; its feature package focuses on self-publishing. While the issue touches on all forms of self-publishing—print as well as digital/electronic—we could do an entire issue devoted to the evolving models for online or digital self-publishing.

We also closed the issue before the partnership announcement between Stanza and Smashwords. You’re probably thinking, Why do I care about the partnership of two companies I’ve never heard of?

True, it wasn’t until I had an iPhone that I became really aware of these two companies and understood what was happening.

Here are the basics:
  • The iPhone is a mobile device that’s used by nearly 20 million people.
  • Stanza is a popular e-book reader you can use on your iPhone (you download it for free directly from your phone).
  • Smashwords is a self-publishing company that publishes e-books only. You can use their service without any upfront cost, plus you can make your book available for as little or as much as you want (even for free).
  • Smashwords + Stanza means your self-published work can be available to millions of people, or at least the 1 million people who have downloaded the Stanza application onto their iPhones, as of January 2009.
Big-picture, what does this mean for writers? We’re starting to see the eradication of distribution barriers to self-published works. If authors can effectively spread the word about their work, then it can be quickly, easily, and inexpensively downloaded on a very popular device.

I find it intoxicating. All of this is quite new, but also instantly transformative. Smashwords debuted in early 2008; Stanza became available on the iPhone in July 2008. (You can see the impact Stanza has had on the reading and publishing community by reviewing the headlines on their news page.)

So I took some time to talk on the phone with Smashwords founder, Mark Coker, as well as Lexcycle’s COO, Neelan Choksi. Here’s some of what they had to say.


Interview with Mark Coker at Smashwords




I’m just now realizing the power of the iPhone and Stanza. I admit, I didn’t really comprehend the e-book universe until recently.

Stanza has become a really powerful reading platform. If you talk to core e-book reading enthusiasts, they'll tell you that the iPhone is nothing new, but I think what we're starting to see is we're expanding beyond those early adopters to the mainstream. Especially with Oprah talking about the Kindle, that opens people's eyes.

Reading on paper is a prejudice we're up against. But when people try it, they have a wow moment, kind of this religious experience. My first experience with the Kindle was on Waikiki beach … and I brought it on my vacation, and I booted it up, and I went to the bookstore, and I downloaded samples of different books. It was easy and within 10 minutes I had purchased my first book. You can bring the bookstore anywhere, you can bring your library anywhere, and you can have your book your way.

E-books still only account for about 1% of all book sales, probably less. There's a lot of upside—it's going to happen, it's going to continue to grow in a big way, regardless of what happens with the traditional print industry.

What we're seeing with e-books is what we saw with blogging several years ago—the same prejudices in the media, but we saw what happened in the blogosphere. There are a lot of talented people in the world, and until some of these technologies came along, they just did not have a voice or a chance to show their talent.

A lot of writers or authors ask me: Will they be able to earn the same kind of living if e-books start to replace traditional print book sales?

Writing is going to become more profitable for more authors. Even if e-books continue to become widely successful, print books aren't going to go away. The authors that are currently successful in print will continue to be successful in print. If you look at the current book industry supply chain, from author to reader, it’s author-agent-editor-publisher-packager-distributor-warehouser-bookstore. There are a lot of costs associated with that supply chain. It's a big cost to ship dead trees. There are a lot of costs that can be cut when you go digital. The costs of producing a digital book, or the costs of producing one more copy, are zero. If the book is going to be professionally edited and vetted by an editor, there are still those costs. But when you eliminate all these other costs, like returns, you can dramatically lower the cost of the book to the customer and at the same time dramatically increase the profitability to the publisher or the author.

Another thing that gets me excited about Smashwords is the lower cost of books. Most of the books are $3, many are free. Print books averaging $14.95 are unaffordable to the vast majority of people on this earth. It's really cool to think that if we can lower the cost of books, then we can lower the barrier to unleash a new era of literacy and culture and information sharing.

We'll always have commercial books and we need them, and we need a way for authors to profit from their works.

Longer term, like a year or two, my hope is that Smashwords will start attracting some established authors who choose to go the independent route for their next book or choose to keep the digital rights and publish it on their own.

For authors who choose to self-publish, are e-books a better option?

Print is a very important format. Authors should provide to the consumer whatever the consumer wants to have. Authors should continue to publish in print and also publish in a digital format.

The biggest threat facing all authors is obscurity. This is another exciting thing about digital books, making them accessible in an entirely different way. I think is print wonderful—but they're different things.

Books have always been sold via word of mouth. The Internet is an ideal word of mouth tool. We've added simple things to make it easy for people to share their books on social networks. If the book is truly great, it can find an audience.

In the next five years, I think it's fair to say we're going to see fewer bookstores out there. As bookstores disappear, it reduces exposure opportunities for authors who are lucky enough to be part of that system. And it also hurts publishers. It's happening already today—we're going to see fewer bookstores, few publishers, and publishers publishing few books, at least under the traditional system. So I think we're going to see publishers making more interesting use of digital, more use of POD, and more authors aspiring to be independent from the beginning.

Our focus as a digital publishing platform is to provide all authors the tools they need to publish, promote, and sell their books and we hope that it’s an enabling force to unleash a torrent of new talented content out there. I can't stress it enough, though: Authors need to be realistic. This is not a get-rich quick thing. It's always been difficult to sell a book, and as an indie author, it's even more difficult. Authors who invest their time and energy into this will be rewarded for it.


Interview with Neelan Choksi, COO of Lexcycle (creator of Stanza)




I see a lot about reader response and awareness of e-books, but I wonder if writers or authors also understand what’s happening, and are using the iPhone and Stanza?


The writers are pretty cognizant of what's going on, or at least they're learning about it. There's enough mainstreaming of what's happened. As soon as you get Oprah talking about the Kindle and by extension e-books, you've just mainstreamed the whole thing. I do believe that writers are very aware of it, and it may be going from genre to genre at different paces. For example, sci-fi and romance, as is often the case, are leading the charge. We first read about Stanza and romance on someone's blog; they had gotten an early edition from an author using Stanza on their iPhone. That’s one example; there's a lot of examples, where individuals are starting to figure it out.

We get pretty regular e-mails or calls or conversations with authors. With Random House, there's a promotion happening and a bunch of others are doing the same promotion. They went to about a half dozen of their authors and said: We can make your backlist titles available on Stanza for free, plus an excerpt of your upcoming book for free, and it will be a way of getting new readers learning about you as an author. Cory Doctorow made that model unbelievably famous.

And example of another conversation I had with an author—with everything that's happening in the big houses from a publishing perspective—there's all of this upheaval. Part of what's happening is that the blockbuster authors will always get the attention of the publishers, but there's a level that now just aren't. More than 300,000 copies of this author’s book will sell, and his comment was that he didn't believe his next book was going to get the attention from his publisher. He was thinking about creating his own publishing house. I mentioned Smashwords to him, here's a really interesting model. How many books would you have had to sell with your original publisher to make the same money as you would with Smashwords?

Some big author is going to go this indie route, either as a threat, or as something they truly believe in. Someone's going to do it simply because the numbers make sense.

None of this would have happened if digital publishing hadn't reached this inflection point. The numbers still aren't that big ($44 million sold in the United States), and aren't particularly compelling when compared to the traditional industry. But I think a million isn't a number that anyone expected us to have at this point.

Can you give any insight into what genres or categories are selling the best through Stanza onto the iPhone?

I fully expect the breakdown to look just like the rest of America’s book sales. Right now, there's a lot of interest in politics and government and Obama.

Remember this company is about a year old. The desktop version of Stanza for Mac was basically supposed to take content and covert and upload it to a Kindle, primarily for people's personal documents. The iPhone Stanza app released in July 2008 with just free books—a strategic decision because we felt there would be push back. … We thought the best thing was to put no barriers in the way of adoption.

What’s been the biggest surprise for you?

We had no anticipation we would hit 1 million downloads in 5.5 months. The adoption has probably been one of the biggest surprises of all.

The industry itself right now is in a situation that all ships rise with the tide. Maybe really the surprise was how much marketing Amazon was going to do, how much marketing Sony was going to do, and all of the new devices that are coming out. … It just feels like there's so much momentum behind it.

Also, one of our most commented on features is the simple fact that when you reopen Stanza on iPhone, it takes you right back to the last page you were on and the last book you were in. You don't have a problem with reading five pages worth of material while standing the grocery store line. You get immediately back to where you were, and you know as soon as you shut it down or take a call, you know when you open up Stanza, you'll go back to that same spot. It's a bookmark essentially.

We've done a survey on our site and the primary places that people read using stanza are (1) bed (2) commuting (3) waiting areas.

That was a big surprise for a lot of people, iPhone use in bed.

—————

I'd love your comments about your experience either reading e-books or writing/selling/promoting e-books. What's most exciting about it, and if you're a writer, what causes you the most worry?

Digitization & New Technology | Getting Published | Industry News & Trends | Self-Publishing | WD Magazine
Wednesday, January 28, 2009 1:36:51 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [2] Trackback
# Tuesday, January 27, 2009
BUT I Can't Curl Up With an E-Book in Bed (and Other Fake Arguments Against the Future)
Posted by Jane


Can you dramatically and meaningfully improve your life overnight with one purchase?

I did.

I am now on Day 11 of my New Improved Life With iPhone.

I used to poo-poo all-in-one mobile devices. My thinking was that if I wanted to take a picture, I wanted my camera. If I wanted to read e-mail or surf the web, I wanted my laptop. If I wanted to listen to music, ... etc.

I don't know where this inane thinking came from. Perhaps I can be forgiven, because at that time no device like the iPhone existed.

I have also been skeptical of e-book devices and reading on mobiles, despite the trends that I see in the rest of the world (primarily Japan). I used to trot out the same cliches as everyone else: you can't curl up with an e-book, you can't flip through it easily or take notes, or my favorite, "there's just something about the feel of paper."

Well, let me tell you, there's just something about the feel of an iPhone, and I keep it within arm's reach when I sleep. (In fact, The Conductor asked me last night, as I climbed into bed, if I had properly tucked in my iPhone. Indeed I had!)

Here's an example of all the ways I used my iPhone this past Saturday, when I day-tripped to see a friend in Jeffersonville, Ind.:
  • Woke up to the alarm I had set
  • Text-messaged with my friend to confirm arrival time
  • Input my destination address into iPhone, to get live GPS directions
  • Played music and podcasts through hook-up in car
  • Played music through friend's stereo system, and also just from the device
  • Had my picture taken in Jeffersonville and e-mailed it (see below)
  • Checked e-mail
During this trip, I could have also:
  • Taken phone calls obviously, but I don't like talking on the phone
  • Checked and made additions to my work/personal calendar
  • Used instant messaging systems like AIM
  • Updated my Facebook or Twitter status
  • Posted to my blog
  • Read an e-book
  • Caught up on my Google Reader feeds
  • Played more cowbell (see here)
  • Found the best place to have dinner and a drink in Jeffersonville
Do I read in bed with my iPhone? Absolutely.
Will people read digital books in bed? Of course.

Will print books continue? Yes, but I tend to agree with Seth Godin on his proclamation that books will become souvenirs.

So I want to know: Who else cuddles with their iPhone?


Digitization & New Technology | Fun
Tuesday, January 27, 2009 4:30:21 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [4] Trackback
Monthly News from Glimmer Train
Posted by Jane

logo01.jpgGlimmer Train has just chosen the winning stories of their November Short Story Award for New Writers competition.
 
First place
Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig of Austin, TX, wins $1200 for “Monkeys of the Sea”. Her story will be published in the Spring 2010 issue of Glimmer Train Stories, out in February 2010.
 
Second place
Stephen McCabe of Oshkosh, WI, wins $500 for “The Net of Blue Angels"

Third place
Marco Fernando Navarro of Flushing, NY, wins $300 for “Enough”
 
A PDF of the Top 25 winners can be found here. This competition is held twice a year and is open to any writer who has not had fiction appear in a print publication with a circulation greater than 5,000. Click here for guidelines.
 
Also: Family Matters competition deadline soon approaching! (January 31) Glimmer Train hosts this competition quarterly for stories about family, and first place brings $1200 plus publication in the journal.  It’s open to all writers, and the word count range is 500-12,000. Click here for guidelines.

--
 

If you didn't know, Writer's Digest partnered with Glimmer Train to publish two compilation volumes of the best stuff from their Writers Ask newsletter. Be sure to check them out.
 


General | Getting Published
Tuesday, January 27, 2009 1:37:45 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] Trackback
# Monday, January 26, 2009
The Essential Components of an (Unpublished) Author's Website
Posted by Jane



Over at Harper Studio's blog, The 26th Story, they recently discussed what constitutes a really meaningful author website. They give an excellent big-picture view of how a website is like an extension or operation of your platform, and continues to serve the needs of your audience just like anything else you do.

The post also mentions some wonderful examples of author websites. But here's the catch: These are sites by authors who already have a great degree of success (e.g., Tim Ferriss, John Hodgman).

What about writers who are just starting out, have no publishing deal, and are still developing their platform?

It's one of the most difficult questions I ever attempt to answer. And that's because much of it depends on your genre, expertise, and comfort level with technology. And your unique talents: what makes you remarkable.

This is an important concept: being remarkable (The Seth Godin Concept), especially for aspiring writers trying to catch anyone's attention, in an industry that's full of enormous dreams. But, consider:
  • What do people remark on when they meet you and encounter your work?
  • How are you currently making a difference?
  • How do you currently get attention? (in the ways that you want!)
  • How are you currently making waves? (again, in a good way?)
  • How have you been successful at making waves in the past?
  • What kind of practice is enjoyable for you (and NOT like work)?
  • What could you continue practicing and consider it yet another form of play? Something you can practice because it's really your passion, and not a marketing scheme?
You need to find where your passion and skills intersect with the marketplace. A website might not be exactly the right tool to show people what you have to offer, but it can at least point people to the right place. (E.g., if your real skill is live radio or film, your site catalogs your work and ensures people can find your radio shows or films. Or it offers transcripts of your shows. Or gives people an opportunity to request certain features or exclusive notifications.)

Even if you're not yet published, you can have a very successful website that helps you build a platform and get a book deal, if that's what you want. But it has to be something that makes sense for who you are and what you want to accomplish.

Thanks to Vanessa Wieland on the Market Books staff for pointing me to the 26th Story item!

Photo credit: Hadassah28


Building Readership | Getting Published | Marketing & Self-Promotion
Monday, January 26, 2009 2:04:36 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [4] Trackback
# Friday, January 23, 2009
Red Heart :: Black Heart Writing Contest
Posted by Jane



You heard it here first: For the first time in 2009, Writer's Digest is hosting a Valentine's Day writing contest. We're calling it the Red Heart :: Black Heart writing contest, and you can enter for free. Soon we'll have an official page with all the details, but here's the early scoop.

Basic idea
Do you feel like you have a red heart at this time of year, or a black heart? We want your poems, essays, and letters about love and heartbreak—your highest moments and your lowest. And we promise we won’t tell you how to feel about this very controversial holiday of the year. Just choose the most appropriate category of submission:
  1. Love Poem
  2. Black-Hearted Love Poem
  3. Love Letter
  4. Rejection Letter (and we don’t mean the editor/agent kind)
  5. Essay on Love at First Sight
  6. Essay on Love Lost
Winners and Prizes
The Writer’s Digest staff will choose the best entries from each of the six categories, and post them on the WritersDigest.com forum no later than February 10, 2009. The entry with the most votes on the forum by February 12, 2009, at 5 p.m., determines the contest winner.

The winner will receive a $250 shopping spree to the Writer’s Digest Store. Plus Writer’s Digest Publisher Jane Friedman will send the winner a Whitman’s Sampler with a personal, red-heart note of congratulations. The best entry in each category will receive a free 1-year subscription to WritersMarket.com and 50% off any course from WritersOnlineWorkshops.

Red Heart :: Black Heart Compilation
The Writer’s Digest staff will select the best entries from this contest for a Red Heart-Black Heart compilation, available for free as a download at WritersDigest.com.

Length guidelines
1 poem, up to 30 lines
1 letter, up to 750 words
1 essay, up to 750 words

Deadline: February 6, 2009

How to submit your work
No fee to enter. All work must be original and the author must own all rights to the work. Click here to send your work via e-mail (no attachments!); be sure to include the full text in the body of the e-mail—no attachments! Only one entry per e-mail message, please. Entries beyond the word count or with attachments will be disregarded. We’re sorry, but we can’t confirm receipt of submissions.

The fine print
Writer’s Digest retains one-time nonexclusive publication rights to the best entries, to be published in a Writer’s Digest compilation. All rights remain with the author. All decisions of the editors are final.

Photo credit: carbonnyc

Conferences/Events | Fun
Friday, January 23, 2009 5:11:32 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] Trackback
# Thursday, January 22, 2009
Craft a Salable Nonfiction Hook
Posted by Jane



As promised, I am critiquing two nonfiction book concepts that were submitted in the comments of my post yesterday. (Background: If you're one of the first 50 people to sign up for my webinar on Jan. 29, you'll get a personalized critique of your book's hook, up to 100 words. So far, we have about 7 seats left until we reach 50. You can register here.)

Here's a nonfiction book concept submitted by Deborah:
Have you ever wanted to do something but told yourself it wasn’t possible? In “Honey, This Isn’t Walden,” you’ll read the story of a woman who dragged her professor-husband and three kids to 32 acres in the middle of nowhere to start a 19th century homestead. With no background in animal husbandry or farming, the family starts raising goats, pigs, chickens, and other animals, as they try to grow their own food in an organic garden. After laughing, crying, and shaking your head as you read about their mistakes, you’ll wonder what’s stopping you from doing what you’ve always wanted.
Here's the first stage of revision; I have made up some details that may not necessarily be true but can be adjusted as needed.
“Honey, This Isn’t Walden": How a wife and mother of three, without any experience in rural life, takes her urban and professorial family to live on 32 acres in Nowhere, Kansas, where they undertake animal husbandry and organic gardening.
Step two would be figuring out more specifically from the author what big thing CHANGED for the family. While it can be a lesson about doing what you've always wanted, there does need to be some kind of story arc where we have a major conflict that has to be resolved (not just a series of charming anecdotes). Is a broken marriage repaired? Do kids kick drug habits? These are dramatic examples, but you get the idea. Or, if this book really is just a series of charming anecdotes, it will be tougher to sell—and will need a catchier or more intriguing title, like "How Animal Husbandry Brings Families Together." (A more intriguing title in general is recommended.)

Here's a nonfiction book concept submitted by Cathy:
In "Thrifty Girl: Tips and Survival Strategies for Guilt-Free Spending in the Real World," Ms. Shouse, a Chartered Financial Consultant with 16 years experience, and more importantly a mom and wife seeking economic sanity, advises to stop thinking of money management as a dirty word but to seek an enlightened view of finances.
"They call it personal finance because it's personal and so-called experts should stop telling people what they can and can't do," she says. "My methods teaches readers to achieve their unique money goals by design and have a ball doing it."
Here's how I would revise; again I'm taking liberties with the actual book content to illustrate how to improve.
"Stop Listening to the Financial Experts: An Action Plan for Guilt-Free Spending in the Real World" offers a customizable 12-point plan that encourages you to ignore the finance experts and spend in areas that matter to you—putting the "personal" back in personal finance. Authored by a financial consultant with 16 years of experience, this book shows you how to take a more enlightened path to money management that doesn't feel dirty, accomplishes your unique long-term goals, and leaves you at peace at the end of the day. You might even have fun while doing it.
The key here is to focus on concrete benefits the book is going to deliver. The author's credentials (in a nonfiction book hook this brief) should only be mentioned as a way to clarify the author's authority or expertise. I also amended the title to be more attention-grabbing, because for me, the best thing about this book's positioning is that it will teach you how to manage your money based on personal qualities you have, and not some strange, alien economic or financial principles you're not familiar with and might not comprehend.

Now that I've given my two cents, what do you think? How could these be further improved? (Sometimes I miss some real obvious improvements!)

Photo credit: Kevin Dooley


Craft & Technique | Getting Published
Thursday, January 22, 2009 6:11:07 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [3] Trackback
HarperCollins Offers Contracts to Its Community Site Writers
Posted by Jane



This is a pretty big deal: HarperCollins has signed not one, but three authors who participate on their community site Authonomy. The news was announced on the Authonomy blog under the title "The Publishing Contracts Have Begun." Summaries of the three author stories:
  • Author can't get traditionally published, so he self-publishes and has some local success. He then places his book on Authonomy and gets noticed by community members and a HarperCollins editor.
  • Author posts work on Authonomy and is noticed by the community. Signed for a three-book deal.
  • Author posts work on Authonomy, and it is noticed an agent who regularly browses the site for new talent. Agent sells it to the publisher.
Has anyone been participating on Authonomy? What do you think? It is a very intoxicating idea to think that, if you work really has a stand-out quality and value, it may get noticed on this community site. A favorite thing editors and agents like to say is: Quality always rises to the top. Perhaps this site helps that happen for more writers, more often, more quickly?

Getting Published | Industry News & Trends | Marketing & Self-Promotion
Thursday, January 22, 2009 12:55:25 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [2] Trackback
# Wednesday, January 21, 2009
Get a Makeover for Your Nonfiction Book Concept
Posted by Jane



My most popular writing conference session in 2008 was all about creating high-powered nonfiction book concepts. Most people concentrate on writing the proposal, but don't realize that without a salable and compelling hook to anchor it, you can have the best proposal in the word, but it won't sell.

Because it's such a popular session, I'm offering it through WritersOnlineWorkshops as a 90-minute webinar on January 29 ($79 fee), where I'll be speaking in live time about how to create a great selling handle for your book. During the webinar, I'll live-critique the first 25 concepts submitted by registrants, plus give the next 25 registrants an offline critique. Consider it an extreme makeover for your nonfiction book. You can register here.

To give my blog readers a sneak preview of what this is like, if you leave a summary of your nonfiction book (100 words or less) in the comments section, I'll choose one or two to critique on this blog tomorrow.

Photo credit: Striatic

Conferences/Events | Getting Published | Marketing & Self-Promotion
Wednesday, January 21, 2009 11:48:48 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [6] Trackback
# Tuesday, January 20, 2009
8 Articles/Posts All Writers Should Have Read in 2008
Posted by Jane

The eBook Problem and The eBook Solution (Booksquare)
Read it for a basic understanding of the issues related to e-book publishing and distribution. When Kassia Krozser leads by saying that e-books will not be the next big thing, though, that's not really the point of the article. Just keep reading.

Story vs. Book: The Future of Publishing (Booksquare)
Another from Krozser that offers a perspective on why the traditional publishing industry must change its model to survive, and how the author's role changes too.

Essential Points in the Free Debate (Tools of Change for Publishing)
I tell writers that giving stuff away for free is not to be feared. It always results in more sales for the physical book or for other products. This article has a nice summary of the overall free debate; this issue is just going to become more important.

A Book Publisher's Manifesto for the 21st Century (The Digitalist)
When you click the link, you'll find a blog post that will prompt you to download a PDF that contains the manifesto. It's probably the most comprehensive article of the year on how publishing will change.

The 21st Century Writer (The Futurist)
An article about the future of publishing that focuses squarely on the author's point of view.

The Kindle and The iPhone Dance (Publishing Frontier)
An easy to understand dissection of these two devices from a book perspective.

50 Steps to Establishing a Consistent Social Media Practice (Chris Brogan)
Social media expert Chris Brogan offers a checklist that's invaluable to any author building an online platform.

How Content Marketing Will Shake the Tree (Chris Brogan)
Another great post from Chris Brogan that can help authors understand how to use their content to both sell books and build a platform. It's geared toward businesses, but easily adapted by individuals.

What articles did you read in 2008 that you still remember or have kept handy?
Share in the comments section.


Building Readership | Digitization & New Technology | Getting Published | Industry News & Trends | Marketing & Self-Promotion
Tuesday, January 20, 2009 3:37:48 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [2] Trackback
# Friday, January 16, 2009
Cool Map of Digital Landscape!
Posted by Jane

While reading Mark Coker's blog (for Smashwords), I stumbled upon this wonderful map of the digital publishing landscape. Even though it's in Spanish, it offers an amazing visual of the new publishing universe. It also makes me want to run out and buy an iPhone, though that's also encouraged by my recent research into ebook readers on mobile devices!

(The Spanish blog originating this map is here. Go there for the large version.)


Digitization & New Technology | Industry News & Trends
Friday, January 16, 2009 10:52:46 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1] Trackback
# Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Using Twitter: Do You Have Tips?
Posted by Jane



After perusing this directory of publishing industry people on Twitter, I finally created a Twitter account for the Writer's Digest community (@WritersDigest if you would like to follow, and @JaneFriedman if you would like to specifically follow me).

I have been quite lax in using Twitter; right now I prefer Facebook and blogging. If I consistently and thoroughly followed everyone I'm interested in (probably more than several hundred people), I sense it would be like drinking from a fire hose—and would I be able to accomplish anything if distracted every 5-10 minutes by updates?

I wonder how both unpublished and published writers are using Twitter. Do you have a Twitter account? Are you actively using it? And if so, has it changed anything about your writing and publishing life? What tips do you have for other writers?

Building Readership | Digitization & New Technology | Industry News & Trends | Marketing & Self-Promotion
Wednesday, January 14, 2009 10:50:14 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [6] Trackback
# Tuesday, January 13, 2009
Information on Writer's Digest Webinars
Posted by Jane

New in 2009, Writer's Digest is launching a series of webinars (which you may have seen me post about last week). Each webinar has a specific benefit or focus, like how to land an agent or how to write a nonfiction book proposal—the kind of sessions you attend at a writers conference.

At first, I wasn't sure if writers would respond well to webinars, but so far, we've been thrilled with the response. We completely filled the initial webinar (offered for free) on how to get published in tough times, and our first paid webinar this Thursday is nearly full (how to land an agent by Chuck Sambuchino, see his blog post here; it also includes a link to register.)

We now have a page up at WritersDigest.com that describes all of our upcoming sessions this spring
. Soon we'll have it updated to show what's on tap for the entire year. Here's a brief overview:
January 15
How to Land a Literary Agent (editor Chuck Sambuchino), 60m, $99

January 29
3 Secrets to Getting Your Nonfiction Book Published (Jane Friedman), 90m, $129

February 12
You Can Write Children's Books (editor Alice Pope), 60m, $99

February 26
Self-Publishing 101 (Jane Friedman), 90m, $129

March 12
The First 5 Minutes: How Editors Evaluate Your Manuscript (Joe Stollenwerk), 60m, $99

March 26
How to Negotiate Any Book Publishing Contract (Jane Friedman), 90m, $129
What you can do in a WD webinar:
  • Hear the presenter in speak in real time on the topic (through your computer or on the phone)
  • See any visuals the presenter wants to share (e.g., PowerPoint presention)
  • Interact with the presenter and other attendees of the webinar
  • Ask the presenter questions in real time
  • Receive any relevant materials from the presentation after it has concluded
If you have reliable Internet access, you should be able to easily participate in a webinar; it is all run through your Web browser—and by phone if you want to call in.


Agents | Conferences/Events | Getting Published | Self-Publishing
Tuesday, January 13, 2009 2:47:06 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] Trackback
E-Queries Are Outperforming Snail Mail Queries — in Professionalism and Author Platform
Posted by Jane

This past week, Kelly has been reviewing a few months' worth of snail mail submissions to Writer's Digest Books. The stack was becoming so large it had nearly taken over her desk. Now she's finally whittled down the prospects to three writers (some agented) that she will request further information from.

But she had a notable realization coming out of this hours-long review of query packages:
  • We respond very quickly to e-queries, but snail mail queries can sit for months.
  • Snail-mail query writers are less professional and less aware of industry practices than writers who query us via e-mail.
There are still many agents and editors who strongly prefer snail-mail queries, and refuse to accept e-queries. However, each year that passes, I see more and more acceptance and preference for the e-query, and we're even seeing the end of paper-based submissions at some publications/agencies.

In the Writer's Digest Books guidelines, we say that we strongly prefer electronic submissions and encourage writers to contact us via e-mail. My work e-mail address is incredibly available to anyone who cares to look for it. (Do a Google search on "Jane Friedman Writer's Digest" and you'll see what I mean. I've made my e-mail address public at PublishersMarketplace.)

For me, this means:
  • Anyone who snail mails me hasn't done their research on how I prefer to be contacted, or how Writer's Digest prefers to be contacted.
  • Anyone who calls me has blatantly ignored the guidelines that say, "No phone calls." This is why I rarely, if ever, return phone calls of writers who query by phone.
  • Anyone who is uncomfortable with online research and communication probably isn't someone I want to work with. It might indicate a writer with no online platform or community.
On a somewhat lighter and bizarre take: I've included a couple images of strange query letters we received.





F+W Life | Getting Published
Tuesday, January 13, 2009 1:43:48 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] Trackback
# Monday, January 12, 2009
Will You Be at the Presidential Inauguration? Write & Publish About It
Posted by Jane



The March/April 2009 issue of Writer's Digest magazine (which will soon be available to subscribers and on-sale at newsstands) focuses on self-publishing, and includes mention of some innovative publishing models that are starting to heat up. One of them is WeBook, which is a little difficult to explain (they call it "the home of community-sourced books), but here's a perfect example of the power of this model:

WeBook, in honor of the presidential inauguration, is publishing a collection of Obama inauguration stories, "told by real people in their own words." You can submit your story anytime between January 20, 2009 – Midnight EST January 21, 2009, at WeBook.com, and WeBook wil publish the book within two weeks using digital printing by CreateSpace (an Amazon company), and sell it for $9.99. All profits from the project are donated to 826 National, and WeBook is asking contributors to the collection to donate their royalties as well.

Clikc here for the full detail.

You have to sign-up with WeBook to submit your story for consideration, and if your story is selected, you'll have to sign a publishing agreement stipulating how you will be paid and what rights are being purchased. (I was not able to find a copy of such an agreement, but be sure to read any publishing contract carefully before signing.)

Digitization & New Technology | Getting Published | Industry News & Trends | Self-Publishing | WD Magazine
Monday, January 12, 2009 2:14:09 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] Trackback
Monthly News from Glimmer Train
Posted by Jane

logo01.jpg Glimmer Train has recently chosen the winning stories of their October Family Matters competition.
 
First place
Karen Outen of Upper Marlboro, MD, wins $1200 for  “Inside the Universe of His Parents”.  Her story will be published in the Spring 2010 issue of Glimmer Train Stories, out in February 2010.
 
Second place
Dana Kinstler of Tivoli, NY, wins $500 for “Eclipse”.  Her story will also be published in an upcoming issue of Glimmer Train Stories, increasing her prize to $700.
 
Third place
Luke Fiske of Cold Spring, NY, wins $300 for “Beautiful Jewish Women Will Sleep with You for Free”.

A PDF of the Top 25 winners can be found here. This quarterly competition is open to all writers for stories about family, with a word count range of 500-12,000. Click here for guidelines.

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If you didn't know, Writer's Digest partnered with Glimmer Train to publish two compilation volumes of the best stuff from their Writers Ask newsletter. Be sure to check them out.
 




Industry News & Trends
Monday, January 12, 2009 11:43:51 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] Trackback
My Favorite WD Book From 2008 (Or: The Last WD Book I Edited in Full)
Posted by Jane



Before I took on management of the Writer's Digest brand community, the last book I fully acquired, edited, and released—as an editor—was Get Known Before the Book Deal by Christina Katz, from the Fall 2008 list of Writer's Digest Books.

In some ways, it is a culmination of everything I wish all writers knew from Day 1. And it's everything I've been telling writers at conferences for several years now. Every writer who dreams of book publication (and even those who do have a book published) must learn the lessons in this book to sustain a successful career as an author. I find myself recommending it again and again, and am relieved to finally have a concrete resource to point people to.

Joe Wikert, publishing professional and blogger, recommended this book highly and interviewed author Christina Katz on his blog. Along with that link, I'll provide a few others of interest, to help you get a sense of why you need this book.
You can also watch this promotional video that the author created:

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And even more links!!

Building Readership | Excerpts | Getting Published | Marketing & Self-Promotion | New Titles From Writer's Digest
Monday, January 12, 2009 10:50:13 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] Trackback
# Thursday, January 08, 2009


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