Writer Wednesday—Your Writing Career


What do you hope to accomplish with your writing? This is the first question you must answer.

Do you want to spread your ideas? Share your thoughts? Tell a good story? Or do you want to earn a living as a writer? Or as an author? Your answers determine your path.

Anyone can do the first three; often for free, sometimes for a minimal cost. You might even earn a couple dollars if you monetize your blog or sell short stories as E-books.

If you want to earn a living as a freelance writer (or editor), you should also be able to do this for little to no investment. It takes a lot of work—not just the writing part, but you need clients. It’s the finding-of-the-clients that takes time and perseverance, and it won’t happen overnight. Like any business, you’ll build up your customer base gradually, and eventually you’ll have a career.

And, of course, you need to have or acquire the necessary skills.

Becoming an author is different. Being an author means that you’ve had the wherewithal and the perseverance and the talent to write AN ENTIRE BOOK—that’s usually considered 70K words or so—and have had it published, by yourself or someone else.

And I’m not saying this is better than the rest of your options, or makes you a better person or a better writer, it’s just different.

Now, of course, once that book is published, you have another choice: leave it alone to sell a few copies, mostly to family and friends and perhaps acquaintances, or build it into a career that will normally be followed by additional books.

This is not going to be free or cheap.

Sure, writing the book costs you little except for the time spent; publishing, even, can be free or cheap. But if you choose to build this book into a career as an author, you’re going to spend money. It’s a business, after all.

One of our businesses, years ago, cost us around $10K in an initial investment; that was just start-up costs. We had to continue spending on advertising, new equipment, and so forth, plus operating costs. The investment on another business was $50K, plus ongoing costs.

I’m certainly not suggesting that you spend this much on book promotion—and by all means, don’t hand over thousands of dollars to a vanity press or other fly-by-night company.

I can tell you stories all day long of books that were published and simply had no sales because the author did nothing. They expected their publishers to do it all, or Amazon, or . . . I don’t even know what they thought!

You know all those blogs and articles that tell you to “do this” or “do that” and then say “well, you really don’t HAVE TO DO these things?”

They’re wrong. You DO have to do these things, at least some of them, and consistently too. And you have to read and learn how to do things, and get ideas for things to try. SO MANY authors haven’t a clue how to promote their books, but you know what’s really, really, super aggravating? THEY DON’T EVEN TRY. Not a bit. They read nothing, they know nothing, they learn nothing.

And their books don’t sell. And they complain. And then they get discouraged.

DON’T BE LIKE THIS.

YOU are an entrepreneur. YOU have a business. It may not be a storefront, it may not be traditional, but the bottom line is that you have, at minimum, an investment of time put into a product that you want to sell.

Let’s break it down:

Pretend that you’re opening a store to sell one thing—your book. You’ll have to spend money on rent, utilities, a method of accepting money, and advertising, right? Of course, you aren’t opening a store, so let’s change these things a bit:

Instead of rent, we’ll call it space; instead of utilities, we’ll call it brand recognition; you still need a method of accepting payment, and you still need advertising.

WHY AREN’T YOU DOING THIS?

Space can be found everywhere—social media, websites, blogs, grocery store bulletin boards, fairs, festivals, and bookstores. Brand recognition is built on the concept of space, particularly on your own social media sites and blog and website.

If someone wants to buy your book, and you can’t handle credit card payments, you’ve lost a sale. If someone clicks on your site and can’t buy the book, or can’t find it, you’ve lost a sale.

Finally, advertising works. It works for EVERY SINGLE PRODUCT on the market. Two words: due diligence. Don’t fall for every ad scam out there, do your homework, talk to other authors, made smart choices. But sometimes, maybe even often, this is going to cost you some money.

“You can’t make money without spending some” still holds true. “Most businesses don’t see a profit for at least several years” is also true. This is why you can’t say, “Oh, I spent $50 and got only three sales, so I didn’t even break even.” No, maybe you didn’t, but that’s still three sales, and those readers may well recommend your book and in a month or two or six, you’ll have more sales.

On the other hand, if you spend $50 with no sales, you might want to try something different. Chalk it up to experience and move on.

My favorite example is this: once, we ran a dinky classified ad and got absolutely zero response. Six months later, we had a client from a that ad who had cut it out of the newspaper and saved it all that time. A month after that, she recommended us to her sister who hired us for two different long-term jobs.

If we’d quit after that zero response ad, we’d have gone out of business within three weeks. As it turns out, a $20 investment gained us thousands of dollars in fees.

You can do this. You HAVE to do this. Read, learn, study. Find out what other authors do. And invest in yourself, in your book.

 

Writer Wednesday—Selling Books


Some book promo sites want you to have X number of reviews or stars in order to list your book. It’s a chicken-egg thing: how do you get the sales and the reviews so you can promote your book?

Places to sell books:

  1. Bookstores
  2. Other retailers
  3. Restaurants
  4. Professional offices
  5. Grocery stores
  6. Toy stores
  7. Kids’ event venues
  8. Teens event venues
  9. Any event venues
  10. Your place of work
  11. Fairs
  12. Festivals
  13. Farmers’ markets
  14. Museums
  15. Gift shops
  16. Mall kiosks
  17. Bowling alleys
  18. Roller rinks
  19. Ice rinks
  20. Your front yard

Yes, the list is a bit redundant, but the idea is to get you thinking. I knew an author who carried a table, chair, and a box of books around in her trunk and could set up a booth in two minutes flat. And it worked.

The next step, of course, is getting permission to sell books at any or all of these places. You have to actually talk to someone—I know it’s hard, but it’s the only way.

Many of them, you can simply call; they’ll have a policy about these kinds of things and they can tell you right away if it’s allowed.

For most of them, it’s better if you just go there. In person. Come out of your home or office or shell, put on pants, and go. Make a list first and map out your locations and do them all in one or two or seven days. Keep a calendar with you so you can write down the bookings you get. Yes, you’ll get some. Be optimistic!

Sure, it’s a lot of work. You have to call and visit and talk and plan and carry a box of heavy books. And you have to have change and, preferably, a way for book buyers to pay via credit card. Google that.

Is your career worth it? Or is it enough to have written and published the book? If it’s the former, get busy! If it’s the latter, please speak to your publisher and ask if he or she is okay with you sitting on your butt. Go ahead. I dare you.

Another way to sell books is to blog regularly—at least once a week, but not constantly. Pick what works for you and just do it already. However, you also must have topics that are pertinent to your writing career or to your books. Don’t just slap down posts, willy-nilly. And make sure they’re all around 500 words, minimum. Okay, 400. Just don’t do three sentences and call it a day. That’s not a blog post, that’s a status update.

And as long as we’re mentioning status updates, puh-lease—a few a day is fine. Constant posting is annoying. I’ve un-followed established authors for this. Their so-called pearls of wisdom are more yawn-inducing than anything, and they keep me from seeing more interesting stuff.

Also, don’t link all your social media accounts. That accomplishes exactly the same thing—an overflow of stuff from you. First, we get something on Instagram; then LinkedIn; then Twitter; then Facebook; then Pinterest. All coming down one newsfeed. Over and over.

For Pete’s sake, who wants to read your book after they’ve heard you yacking all day already?

And finally, make yourself an expert. In what? I don’t care—pick something. Pick several somethings, just be sure you can back that up. Did you write historical fiction? You’re a history buff. Romance? Whisper sweet nothings. YA? You know about teens.

Add a page to your website or blog and advertise your speaking services. Yes, people will pay for that. Yes, you can almost always sell books wherever you’re speaking, such as schools, business meetings, clubs, and so forth.

Note: I really wish I could find some substantiated statistics on how many sales it takes to garner one book review. If anyone has a link, I’d appreciate it!