Please welcome guest blogger, Geoffry Young Haney. He has some interesting thoughts on self-publishing and how it might develop with the future of publishing. Enjoy! And feel free to start a discussion in the comments. I'd love to hear your thoughts.
Self-Publishing: Your "Demo" Tape?
As I've been diving harder than I ever have before into editing a manuscript, I've been learning a ton. But lately I've found myself wondering what to do next. I know I wish to have an agent and a publishing deal when it comes to The World Within My Walls [my current WIP]. It's a series (a big one - four main stories and possibly four related tales, including two prequels...) and I want to make sure my rights are intact for something I feel could make a long-term splash out there in the world - if given a chance. But I've been battling with what to do in the MEANTIME, that is to say, the time when TWWMW will sit idly on my computer and its queries sit unanswered in the slush piles of busy lit agents.
I have myriad other ideas that could be better suited for the New World: e-books. (Eeek!) Or more specifically... SELF-PUBLISHED e-books (and non e-books alike)!!! Now before I'm struck down by the Publishing Gods of Old, let me remind them that I did just mention that in many ways I prefer the Old Ways: A publishing house edits, designs, prints, and promotes your book and you sit back to take in the profits. This is what they still do. Only things have change. This day and age is not for the author who simply wants to sit back. More and more authors are relied on to almost tirelessly promote themselves. There is just far too much entertainment out there to not be active! Getting lost in the crowd is almost a given. A review in Entertainment Weekly or a positive blurb from some big wig won't alone sell your book (unless that big wig is a certain Mrs. Meyer, in which case you might as well buy your mansion right now...) Authors need to go out there and FIND their audiences, with blogging, Facebook pages, Twitters, Tweeties, Torpedoes, Tiptocksters, or any other oddly names social networking site that comes out this month. Therefor authors, especially new or aspiring ones, are more responsible than ever for the success of their product. This is a good thing, I think. Who is better at selling something than the person passionate enough to sink countless hours, days, weeks, and years of their life into creating it?
Yet publishers, store chains, and e-book outlets seem to forget all that. They want US to do more for less (go ahead and check out this post from lit agent/blogger extraordinaire Kirstin Nelson for just one glaring example.) With more people out there writing books than ever before and new technology looming around every corner, the Big Guys hope to cling even tighter to those keys to the pearly gates of publishing heaven while squeezing as much money out as they can. I think they're afraid that their time is running out, at least their time of being financial giants. Now I don't mean to come down hard as these "Gatekeepers"; that is not my intention in writing this. And it certainly is a pessimistic worldview, perhaps, to see publishing simply as a mega corporate demon and not as something that cares about the books they sell - really cares about the stories they print. But let's not kid ourselves. The bottom line will always matter, and when their pockets aren't as fully lined as they used to be, we as the artists feel it. We've seen this in the music industry, an industry who continues to cry about profits dropping from 13.5 BILLION to 8 BILLION dollars since the wave of file-share and the Internet. And what did they do? Instead of looking inward for solutions to better their product for a waning public and to learn to better serve their artists, they alienated their potential customers by dragging college kids to court. (By the way, if I ever complain about making 8 BILLION dollars, I want someone to cut my head off...)
Now it may have been all well and good back in the day to hand over so much responsibility and profit to a publishing house, seeing as they were chiefly involved in making you money and sharing your work. In many cases that is still the best route. But consider that authors now have even more responsibility in selling themselves, and it only seems fair that the money should shift some. Heck, most of the blogs I follow are authors just like me, seeking an audience while having little if ANY published works to their credit. Already we're pimping ourselves. Why? Because its what you gotta do now. It looks good on your resume to have a blog and a readership, even if you don't quite have anything published. So on top of pouring over and perfecting manuscripts, synopsises (synopsi?), and query letters (*shudder*) we should maintain and write blogs, guest blog on other blogs with more readership (thanks Casey!), read and comment on each others blogs, and have a veritable blog orgy in the limited amount of time we have between ACTUAL writing, family, and (in most cases) a 9-5 that pays the bills. Why, then, would we want to do all this promotion and networking just to turn around and hand over more of our money to companies who seem to be doing less, or at the very least doing the same (while we work harder.)
And yet we have this model of publishing that is drowning in its own overhead and intrinsically designed around Gatekeeper mentality. What do you want from your story? A million dollars? If we all wanted the big bucks alone we'd have picked something easier to do. No, what I simply want (and many others, I'm sure, though I can't speak for them) is for my stories to be read and enjoyed. We want to make an impact with our words, touch a chord or pull on a heart string; inspire someone to share their tale. But with standard publishing...
How many hoops does a story-teller jump through just to REACH an audience? How much approval (opinion) must we seek before someone actually READS our story simply to ENJOY it free from the worry of whether they can make any MONEY off it or not?
- An agent must like your work enough to represent it.
- That agent must convince a publisher to take it on.
- That publisher must convince those higher up to promote and present it properly (you know, as if they liked it.)
Enter self-publishing. Now keep in mind, no one's even making a living off the e-book/POD thing (though J.A. Konrath is doing a decent job at it. If anyone is thinking of entering the self-pub game, I highly suggest following his blog, A Newbie's Guide To Publishing, and especially checking out this post from it.) And as Joe is quick to remind us, he has been writing for many years (his tenth novel finally sold in 2003 after 9 previous novels had been rejected a combined 500 or so times), has an agent, and has published books that sell. He just also works in the e-book medium and works in it well.
So don't go thinking e-books or self-pub is the Golden Ticket to a candy factory full of amazing wealth and deliciousness. I simply argue that, like all our other networking we do, this New Frontier of fast and friendly e-booking could be a great tool. And if you choose to go the self-pub print route, you don't even have to BUY the books first, with a little thing called Print-On-Demand (POD.) Now, it takes a lot of work and a lot of know-how to produce something worth putting out there. But I argue that we're already DOING a lot of the work. We tirelessly join critique groups. We're networking with not only authors, but artists and designers and musicians and all these creative types. We are surrounding ourselves with people who have the know-how. You mean to tell me that between all the people you know you couldn't find one starving artist who is exceptionally good as an editor (maybe even freelances or has held an editor position in the past) and would be willing to work with you for little to no money? Remember, they're a fan of you or your project already without seeing dollar signs in their eyes. Same with designers. Plenty of people in your circles I'm sure could teach you to properly create a PDF which would be the layout of your POD book. You could have illustrations! Tons of them, because a publisher isn't freaked out by how much ink it would be! This should be what our community is about, not a never-ending word vomit, empty praise, or comments on blogs. It should be about HELPING each other.
My point in saying all of this boils down to one main point and my biggest problem with self-pub critique: One of people's biggest complaints I've heard with the POD and self-publishing models is that "99.9% of its list is nearly unreadable dreck" because there aren't "quality checks" in place. How does that make you feel? That just because you haven't found an agent or a house whose opinion is that your story is good enough (and will sell,) and you choose instead to self-pub that you're peddling garbage? The quote above came from an anecdote by seasoned man of publishing Michael Stearns, founder and agent at Upstart Crow Literary. It was posted on the linked blog entry (read it, Upstart Crow is a pretty cool and innovative agency) and goes on to make many valid points about the importance of publishers and editors, including that they bring with them "those ineffable quality enhancers that make a book cost more than its printing, paper, and binding. Editing. Marketing. Publicity. Design. Attention to detail. Vision." All well and good.
But I argue that, in this new age, authors are already DOING so much of this, and that our web of contacts and networking buddies could help us with the rest. We already need to have a manuscript looking solid before submitting it. Agents want to see that we can do all those things above: self-edit, self-marketing and promotion; our attention to detail and our vision. Why? Because we are no longer simply creators of story, we are partners in selling a product. I will never sit here and say publishing houses are over and done with, or diminish the importance of a solid critique group, a skilled agent, and an experienced editor. I'm merely saying that we don't necessarily have to rely on one to get the others.
I'll equate it (as I always tend to do, because that's where most of my experience lies) to the music industry. Look at it like this. No one 10 years ago thought you could make a living off original music without a label. A label, after all, fronted hundreds of thousands of dollars for you and/or your band to go to a studio, paid for you to make a music video, and promoted you. But now that just isn't the case. What made it possible? Technology. MySpace began dictating what was popular and put artists directly in touch with an audience. Home studios became all the rage. We can shoot and edit our own music video and have it on YouTube in a week. My former band spent a little under 3 grand to buy an entire recording studio (Mac laptop and all) which we used to produce completely serviceable recordings. Could it have gone on the radio the next day? Maybe not. But our MUSIC, our MESSAGE was out there. There are more than a handful of examples of success musicians have had with just a few microphones and a solid set of MIDI synths and beats. Adam Young, the man behind the wildly popular Owl City, did just that...
Owl City was started by Adam Young in his parents' basement while he worked at a Coca-Cola warehouse, turning to music as a result of his insomnia. Young received much attention for songs he had uploaded to MySpace, the "viral popularity" of which would later result in his signing to Universal Republic. In 2007, Owl City released an EP titled Of June, followed by the 2008 release of the album Maybe I'm Dreaming. Of June reached #20 on the Billboard Electronic Albums chart, and Maybe I'm Dreaming peaked on the same chart at #16.See that? Adam hit Billboard's electronic charts WITHOUT a major label. He landed a deal on the STRENGTH of his own self-produced product. And then look what he did with major backing. And Adam didn't just cut a disk and sell a few hundred copies at a local record shop (wait, what's that?...), I'm talking national radio play (his newest single is actually on the radio in the other room as I write this), attention from the big labels, loads of MySpace fans. All produced from the kid's basement. All which he and a team he surrounded himself with worked for tirelessly. In short, no one told Adam he was good enough - he told THEM. I suspect we could see the same sort of thing happen with self-pub, especially with the wave of e-books making access to a book quick and easy (just the way we've been trained to like it. Thanks iTunes.)
Owl City's first two records were released while Young was unsigned. In early 2009, music industry website "Crazed Hits" leaked that Owl City signed with the major label Universal Republic.
Owl City's third album Ocean Eyes was released on iTunes July 14, 2009, with the physical release following on July 28, 2009. The album debuted at #27 on the Billboard 200. Owl City has released four singles, "Hello Seattle", "Hot Air Balloon", "Strawberry Avalanche", and "Fireflies". "Fireflies" topped the US and Canadian charts and became the most-downloaded song on iTunes in the US. Ocean Eyes reached the top ten on the US album charts and topped the US electronic charts and also reached Amazon MP3's top 10 most downloaded album list. By December 2009, it was certified Gold in the United States. On 24 January 2010, Owl City reached the number 1 spot in the UK Top 40 Singles chart with "Fireflies".
via Wikipedia
So if you're thinking about self-publishing, as I am, remember that it's not always about the glitz and gloss of the finished product. Yes, Owl City does sound more polished than a rapper's Escalade, but there are plenty of indie bands out there who actually EMBRACE the low-fi, DIY sound of a home studio and write great material doing so. There are million dollar studios trying to EMULATE that sound for their million dollar artists because they fail to see that its not the presentation, its the message. The "best" isn't always better, and for me, it will ALWAYS boil down to the message and the passion; it'll always be about the story.
Do the work, find that editor and design friend (if you haven't inadvertently already,) do your very best to present the product well. Embrace your limitations and make the most of what you CAN accomplish. And then go out and promote the heck out of it! (You're already doing it now...) Don't imagine you will sell a Rowling amount of copies and don't try to hit a home run the first time out. Just put your best foot forward and surround yourself with the tools and the people to make that happen - people who were in your corner long before an agent told them they should be. Think of that self-pub release as a demo tape (or that indie release EP), something to give the masses and to get your voice out there. And don't let the fact that there's a lot of crap out there keep you from considering producing your own work. There was and still is a lot of crap on MySpace and judging by the fact that cast members from Jersey Shore can land book deals practically in their sleep, there was, still is, and always will be a lot of crap in Barnes & Noble. Self-publishing isn't for the Big Guys, its for us and our audience, no matter how small said audience may be. You probably get rich and famous, but who knows, maybe your little book could be the Owl City of the literary world.
Geoffrey Young Haney is an aspiring author and musician hailing from the west side of the Mitten State. He is currently editing and revising his novel, The Sons of The Moon (vol. 1 of The World Within My Walls series). At night, he spends his sleep locked in nightmares of query letters and critique groups as he plummets closer and closer to a third round of agent submissions. That, and he's expecting his first child in May (that's a lot to toss and turn over!) When not in bed, he regularly posts on his blog, Creating Life, where he and his wonderful wife, Michelle, share their journey into parenthood and, God willing, the publishing world.
I've read and ignored a lot of posts like this one around the blogosphere lately, that suggest using self-publication as a path to traditional publication. The one thing all these posts have in common: they're supported solely by anecdotes.
ReplyDeleteLet's look at the data. The best recent survey of how authors actually got published is here: http://www.jimchines.com/2010/03/survey-results/. Takeaway: You're over 100 times more likely to succeed with the traditional approach. Sales data? Check out this post http://pimpmynovel.blogspot.com/2009/09/self-publishing-great-idea-or-worst.html. Takeaway: The average traditionally published book sells 12,000 copies. The average self-published book sells less than 200.
Self-publishing recommendations fail a simple logic test, too. If you spend all your time publishing and promoting your book, you'll become a better publisher and promoter. Instead, consider spending your time becoming a better writer, by (gasp) writing. This is why 99% of all self-published work is utter dreck, because the authors didn't care enough about their craft to spend the thousands of hours needed to perfect it. Do you really want your novel in that low company?
I think self-publishing works primarily for authors who have already published books traditionally or for authors who do a lot of public speaking where they can sell books after a lecture. There are very few real world examples of people who have used a self-published book to get a foot in the door of traditional publishing. But hey, the times are changing. Maybe if enough people can make it work, it will change the industry.
ReplyDeleteCONGRATULATIONS GEOFFRY and MICHELLE on the 'almost being parents' news. Hope everything goes well. Boy or girl?
ReplyDeleteNow, I've read your post twice and I'm still not sure where I stand on the whole thing. Being a traditionalist in most things, I quiver when I try to imagine trying to swim against the current. On the other hand, Buddhists believe that nothing is permanent and the world constantly changes.
I'll have to ruminate a bit more I think...
Thanks for the post and thanks for posting it Casey.
Mike - Thanks for those links! As my article states, I'm in no ways delusional about self-pub and it's returns. My post is simply about exploring other options if what you really wanna do is share a story, not sell a million copies and land a movie deal. I wish to do that, sure, who doesn't. But in the meantime, why not share some well-presented work with people who already are interested in you? Thanks for your thoughts!
ReplyDeleteSolvang - And that's exactly my point. It doesn't work now, and certainly authors with ready established platforms fair better with it. But it MAY work in the future. And we shouldn't count it out or dismiss it as useless simply because, right now, it seems to be littered with junk! Thanks for your comment!
Ann Marie - Thanks so much for the well-wishes! Michelle and I are having a boy, Carter Edison Young... at least that's the name for now. Mic is convinced it could change if he doesn't "look like a Carter." What does a Carter look like?? :D
Mike:
ReplyDeleteYou really are butchering that statistic.
Here are the REAL statistics:
If you pursue traditional publishing, in 999 cases out of 1000, you will sell 0 books. Zip. The odds are probably worse than that, actually, but we'll leave it there for the moment.
What's my evidence for this? The size of the slush pile relative to the number of people who get published. Add to the size of the slush pile the number of people who gave up.
It's absolutely absurd to compare the 200 books figure to the 12000 books figure. The appropriate number to compare the 200 books figure to is 0.
200 is more than 0.
Jim Hines' data is worthless because he only solicited the views of authors who were eligible to join the SFWA. Well, since the SFWA bans self-published authors, regardless of their total number of sales, that would tend to skew the data a bit, don't you think?
"Hey, if I ask traditional published authors how they broke into the business, they overwhelming report that they did so via traditional methods!" Wow. Woopity-do.
If you have never sold anything, and are deciding this very moment whether to self-publish or pursue traditional publishing, the facts are that pursuing traditional publishing means that the odds are overwhelming that you will never sell a single book, that you will never have the opportunity to offer a single book for sale, and that you will simply be rejected until you give up. If you ultimately are published, the road between you this very moment and future publication is measured in years.
If you self-publish using Smashwords, the Kindle DTP platform, and CreateSpace, the odds are 1 in 1 that you will be able to offer your book for sale, and your book will be up for sale within the week.
The higher average sales figure for traditionally-published books does not statistically balance out the extremely low chance of attaining publication, especially when you consider the time value of the money you're foregoing by not making sales immediately, or the long tail of sales from material you'd end up throwing away or putting in a drawer somewhere for ten years.
Thomas:
ReplyDeleteThe only point I was attempting to make is that most self-published work sells very few copies and does not lead to a traditional publishing career. Yes, there are a few anecdotes otherwise(Paolini, for example). But the data I linked does support both those statements.
If you're happy with low sales and a non-traditional career, by all means, self-publish. But you're far, far less likely to get a traditional publishing contract this way than by the standard agent/query model.
I really appreciate the perspective and helpfulness of this blog in promoting one's writing and in the forum idea of multiple contributors to share the wisdom.
ReplyDeleteHolding up my left hand and sharing the pinky with you! Unless you're sown by Indiana...
ReplyDeleteGreat post. I had no idea about the possible benefits of self-publishing, nor the American Dream story of Owl City. Still hate the music, but have let my ignorance turn to respect. same thing for self-publishing.
Good luck with the parenting, my niece just turned one today!
Also, you forgot del.icio.us re: weird site names.
Good point Thomas. I never really even thought about it like that. Mike's point is valid, that self-pub may never lead to traditional pub, but you make a good argument in favor of at least giving it a go. And that's all my article was saying as well.
ReplyDeleteGreat comments guys!
I think most of this discussion is missing the larger point that Geoffry is trying to make...there is a revolution acoming. Things ARE going to change. How they change remains to be seen. But this train is barreling down the tracks and gaining momentum by the day. It's pointless to argue about whether it's going to crash or not, at what speed, in whose backyard, etc. The real question is - will I, as a writer, be ready when it does? Will my agent? My publisher? And what does "being ready" even mean? I, for one, can't wait.
ReplyDelete