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whoelscher

Anne R. Allen's Blog: Indie or Traditional Publishing? Don't Take Sides: Take Your Time - 1 views

  • “The biggest challenge [to authors today] is self-restraint. Publishing tools, like Smashwords make it fast, free and easy for any writer anywhere in the world to publish. But we don’t make it easy to write a great book. Many writers, intoxicated by the freedom to self-publish, will often release their book before it’s ready.”
whoelscher

The Man Who Took on Amazon and Saved a Bookstore - Forbes - 0 views

  • double digit sales growth month by month over the last year.
  • Imagine for a moment what it would feel like if people walked into your company and used the lobby to call your competitors and buy their products. That’s standard consumer behavior in a bookstore.
  • To truly compete, he would also have to solve consumer’s expectations for instant gratification and delivery.
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  • Essentially, Jeff installed a printing press to close the inventory gap with Amazon.  The Espresso Book Machine sits in the middle of Harvard Book Store like a hi-tech visitor to an earlier era.
  • can print nearly five million titles including Google Books that are in the public domain, as well as out of print titles. We’re talking beautiful, perfect bound paperbacks indistinguishable from books produced by major publishing houses.
  • can print that book for you in approximately four minutes.
  • get any book delivered the same day by an eco-friendly Metroped “pedal-truck,” or a bicycle, as I like to call them.
  • fanatical attention to customer service
  • Ultimately the bookstore exists to serve a community
whoelscher

Rethinking Book Marketing: Why Discovery Matters More | Write NonFiction in November - 0 views

  • authors have to realize that sometimes the efforts they make to promote their books…well…simply don’t have the hoped for impact. Why? Because these days readers spend most of their time in Cyberspace searching out information on their interests and seeking out the advice of experts and opinions of others. In the process, they may—or may not—discover you and your book.
  • why authors might need to stop focusing so much attention on marketing and rely more on discovery
whoelscher

5 Most Dangerous Career Pitfalls For New Writers - 0 views

  • Many editors of literary journals don’t want work that has been published anywhere—even online. Even on a blog. Even on Facebook.
  • lit mag editors will likely refuse to consider the individual works for publication, citing the fact that they were previously published.
whoelscher

A Book Editor Speaks: The Challenge of the First Chapters - The Book Designer - 0 views

  • Yet the first chapter remains basically what it was when they began—before they fell into the rhythm, before the text fully took shape.
  • This is where the right freelance editor will help your manuscript grab readers’ and agents’ attention and put it in balance.
  • Once they’ve seen the whole manuscript—or at least a detailed synopsis (which I often ask for, and is worth doing anyway, since it is often requested by agents), editors can see what is relevant to readers and what will overwhelm readers before they’ve fully committed to reading your book.
whoelscher

How publishers gave Amazon a stick to beat them with - Tech News and Analysis - 0 views

  • A big part of that control stems from Amazon’s ownership of the Kindle, the leading e-book reader, and that books bought for the device have DRM built in. Stross argues that this effectively locks many e-book buyers into the device, since it’s virtually impossible to read Kindle books on other devices
  • Publishers — and some authors, especially those who control the Authors Guild, which has fought every attempt by Google and others to open up the book market — have been so obsessed with piracy and locking down their products that they have allowed Amazon to take control of their fate
  • even if you take advantage of Amazon’s self-publishing options to avoid having to get a traditional publishing deal, you’ve really just exchanged one corporate overlord for another.
whoelscher

Somebody please tell me the path to survival for the illustrated book business - The Sh... - 0 views

  • When they’re illustrated to better explain, such as showing you how to knit a stitch or make a candle or a piece of jewelry, wouldn’t a video be a better option most of the time?
  • Books are illustrated for two reasons: beauty or explanatory purpose, more the latter than the former.
  • But the illustrated books are in the single-digit percentages most of the time, with some of the more successful categories in the very low double-digits.
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  • This is in the US — two years or more after the launch of the iPad and Nook Color and nearly a year after the launch of the Kindle Fire. Poor sales of illustrated ebooks can no longer be attributed to a lack of devices that can deliver them effectively.
  • If the book you’re reading on an iPad or Kindle Fire or Nexus 7 gets boring or you get tired of it, you can switch to a movie, The New York Times, your favorite song, or Angry Birds with the same device. Or the chime on your iPhone will ring taking you out of your book to answer an email.
  • For the publisher of illustrated books, the book also must compete with media accomplishing the same purpose (how many new instructional videos of knitting stitches or jewelry-making techniques are posted to YouTube every day?) But they can’t do it for the same price, because that price is free.
  • So the illustrated book publisher not only has to learn how to make videos (a skill they were never previously required to possess), they also have to come up with a business model that enables their videos to be part of a priced commercial product, competing with legions of them that are free. And they have to finance a substantial creative component that isn’t contributing value to the print version at all.
  • Relevant piece of anecdata: I remember being told by somebody at Wiley a couple of years ago that a large portfolio of photographs added measurable revenue on their travel sites. For very little cost, they could make a selection of photographs available for browsing. People clicked through them pulling up a new ad each time they did. That’s the “illustrated book publishing” of the future, but it starts with having the audience.
whoelscher

Author, Jody Hedlund: Write Tight: 3 Pieces of Advice I Wish I'd Known Earlier - 0 views

  • Before I write a scene, I envision a stage and my characters upon it. Who would want to go to a play and watch the actors meander around the stage talking to themselves or reflecting on problems while eating, getting ready, shopping, driving in the car, talking on the phone, etc.?
    • whoelscher
       
      Great advice.
whoelscher

How to Survive in the Age of Amazon by Janaka Stucky - 0 views

  • Unless bookstores can not only acknowledge their role as beacons of culture, but really embrace that role and market themselves as such—as long as they try in vain to compete with one of the world’s largest retailers at its own game—they will slowly lose ground as they steadily morph into increasingly bizarre hybrids of book-music stores, bookstore-cafes, and bookstore–tapas restaurants, until they simply become businesses that sell the latest quirky breakout novel on the side to customers who’d rather pay $15 for a sandwich and a cup of coffee than for a book.
  • Here in the Boston area, two bookstores have managed to not only survive but thrive: the Harvard Bookstore (not affiliated with Harvard University) in Cambridge and Brookline Booksmith in Brookline.
  • they also sell a great selection of used titles at lower prices.
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  • robust websites that offer options
  • interesting and revelatory staff selections
  • host over 100 readings a year
  • A well-read staff that can anticipate their customers’ interests are one of the greatest assets any bookstore can have.
  • This is where the almighty in-store event comes into play, and it’s really at the heart of what distinguishes a bookstore from an online retailer, what makes a bookstore a center for culture in its community, unlike a Walgreens.
  • Poetry, the least profitable and most esoteric of all the genres, can save the bookstore.
whoelscher

Write Every Day: Writing Tips for the Uninspired Authorpreneur « The Savvy Au... - 0 views

  • Don’t worry about making word counts each day.
  • writing in a notebook instead of a word processor
  • a weekly writing day/coffee with a friend.
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  • write 3 – 4 times a week . . . not every day
  • a writer retreat 4 times a year (or more).
whoelscher

In E-Book War, the Independent Publishers Strike Back | mediaIDEAS - 0 views

  • the nine independent publishers who finally took a stand: Abrams Books, Chronicle Books, Grove/Atlantic Inc. Chicago Review Press, Inc, New Directions Publishing Corp., W.W. Norton & Company, Perseus Books Group (where I work), the Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, and Workman Publishing.
  • the independent publishers asserted that, “in aggregate, according to market data published by Nielsen BookScan the independents accounted for approximately 49 percent of total trade book sales nationwide in 2011.” A significant portion of those sales were through Amazon, which is why their decision to challenge the settlement and incur the possible wrath of this retailing giant is cou rageous.
  • If the agency model is effectively banned, Amazon will have the ability to price whole categories of e-books below cost in a way that is likely to drive out competition from other less deep-pocketed booksellers as well as brick and mortar booksellers.
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  • By effectively banning the agency model for the settling publishers, the proposed settlements would harm rather than enhance competition–enabling one large retailer (Amazon) to regain a monopoly or near monopoly position through below-cost pricing.
whoelscher

Melville House Books » Amazon's earnings fall hugely … again … Will investors... - 0 views

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    Amazon's earnings fall hugely … again … Will investors rebel?
whoelscher

Your Efforts Snowball Over Time | Jane Friedman - 0 views

  • Jane was an early adopter but didn’t understand it initially and so abandoned it. Once she had figured it out, she loved it and used it strategically. Her early start was part of the growth of her account.
  • tweets 3-6 times per day and doesn’t use it very conversationally
Debera Daniel

| The Afro-American Newspapers | Your Community. Your History. Your News. - 0 views

  •  
    Afro Charities was incorporated as a 501-C3 nonprofit organization in 1963, however the official mission of Afro Charities is rooted in the Afro American Newspapers' longstanding dedication to community service. From the inception of its founding in 1892 by John H. Murphy Sr., the company took on the responsibility of uplifting the African American community through charitable programs.
whoelscher

Author Websites, Branding And CopyWriting With James Chartrand From Men With Pens | The... - 0 views

  • Brilliant website design and why it’s so important for authors. James mentions some of her favorite authors who have ugly and terrible websites. BUT if the author is established, it doesn’t matter. New authors don’t have this luxury. We have to stand out in the market. We have competition. The author website is a way to connect. It’s critical to make a good impression and a personal connection. You can only do this through your web presence and social media. Bring them back to reading your work, so they will read your books, enjoy them and tell their friends. Chris Guillebeau, author of the recent $100 Startup tells how it was easy for him to get a book deal as he had an established platform online. Read more in James’ guest article - Is your website hurting your writing?
  • A bad choice of colors can kill first impressions.
  • A mystery might be greys and blacks, whereas a go-getting kickass non-fiction book might be red and modern white.
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  • The book can’t sell itself.
whoelscher

Why We Blog, and Tips To Keep Us Inspired | Book Publishing Coach - 0 views

  • Content is King
  • If non-fiction, create stand-alone pieces  anywhere from 300-700 words per post. If fiction, craft a stand-alone episode with a provocative title.
  • Set up some Google Alerts to see who else is writing in your niche.
whoelscher

Melville House Books » Reasons not to self-publish: a defense of small presses - 0 views

  • “I don’t want to be Amazon’s Bitch.” Who would?
whoelscher

Writer Unboxed » The No. 1 Overlooked Skill for Every Author - 0 views

  • The skill is copywriting.
  • A query letter is not a straightforward description of your work. It’s a sales letter. It should be persuasive and seduce the agent into requesting your work.
  • And this is why writers struggle with queries, because they can’t bridge the gap between writing to entertain (or inform or inspire) and writing to persuade. It’s a different mindset, and it requires an ability to look at one’s work as a product that has a selling point.
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  • Think about the titles of your site pages, too. Are the titles clear within a few seconds, telling visitors what content resides on your site? Don’t count on cutesy, vague, or artistic headlines to spark curiosity. It most often leads to content that goes unread.
  • How do you catch people’s attention in 140 words or less? Good copywriting.
  • For fiction, never outline the entire story. You tease the reader; you raise questions that you don’t answer.
whoelscher

On the death of book publishers and other middlemen - Tech News and Analysis - 0 views

  • the internet is potentially lethal to middlemen.
  • more profitable for authors
  • make sure that you are really adding value to that relationship with an author,
whoelscher

eBook lending: Libraries go digital - CNN.com - 0 views

  • EBooks accounted for 6.4% of all publishing in 2010, according to the American Association of Publishers, and 114 million electronic books were sold last year.
  • EBook lending is growing at a fast pace at the New York Public Library. The number of downloads of electronic books on the library's website grew by 81% in the last 12 months
  • why would someone pay for an eBook if they can download it free from a library's website?
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  • Several publishing companies were contacted for this story but none returned messages seeking comment.
  • libraries make up 10% of all book sales in the United States each year
  • Libraries across the country recently developed the ability to make their eBook downloads compatible with the Kindle, Amazon.com's eReader.
  • She worries that libraries will lose their place in society as borrowing eBooks grows in popularity. "I think it will be sad. I mean there's just something about smelling the books and the whole experience," Salzano said. "It's like a feeling of calm and peace and you don't really get that anymore. You can't just sit and read a book."
  • there are commercial bookstores; more than 16,000.
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