| | #61 (permalink) |
| Fantastical historian Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: Cambridgeshire
Posts: 1,368
| Re: Published authors and percentage income Another reason I'm glad to be with an innovative publisher, not one of the megacorp dinosaurs - Angry Robot's ebooks are around half the price of a paperback, which seems entirely reasonable to me. Readers are coming to realise that those 99p SP ebooks are often rubbish, and they are starting to pass over them in favour of decent books at a realistic price point. |
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| | #62 (permalink) |
| Advanced Muddle Brain Join Date: Dec 2011 Location: Poole
Posts: 253
| Re: Published authors and percentage income A writer writes. The more they write, hopefully the better they become at their craft. As with many of the arcane arts, there are different levels of writer; the Writer of Drivel aspires to work his way up through the ranks to become a Writer of Good Fiction, or even to one day join the near-mythical inner circle of the Writing Gods. But to use the writer to only mean those who write decently you are denying its meaning. We'd then have to find a different one for all the other people who scribble stuff down, which is unfair, because they are writing too. Is that to say a distinction should not be made? No. Going back to your own points, Peter. A chef is a professional cook, a doctor is a qualified medical professional. Engineers and psychotherapists are by definition trained in their profession. A writer is someone who writes. Someone can call themselves a writer when they write for pleasure with no thought of publishing, because it is the word that describes what they do. They like to write, and they do write, therefore they are a writer. Or do we all need to become professionals to become readers as well? Is a person a good writer just because they write? No. Are they professional because they wrote one or two stories and got them out into the world? No. I have absolutely no problem with the things you are saying, and agree that a distinction could and possibly should be made. I just think you are using the wrong word to make it. |
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| | #63 (permalink) | |
| Stephen J Sweeney Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: Greater London
Posts: 266
| Re: Published authors and percentage income Quote:
I think that happened in the US about 18 months ago. They now avoid the $0.99 books before they're certain they'll be drivel. | |
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| | #64 (permalink) |
| Tails of the Unexpected | Re: Published authors and percentage income I think like a businessman. Everything I have ever done in my career, which spans many failures and thankfully slightly more successes, I have tried to do whatever I do much better than the competition down the road. Attention to detail is everything. So when I'm ready, I'll have the best website, the best forum and the best ecommerce shop that I can create. They'll all help to push my book whether its traditionally published or I publish it. I understand it has to be better than better. I've had 3 edits by John Jarrold and one more to come. I may also put it out to a proof reader to make sure that "the royal we," haven't missed anything. I think self publishers will very quickly realise the importance of having a good product and will spend time getting it right. I think Amazon should bin books that fall below a certain level of praise, in a similar way to Ebay who stops sellers with bad service records continuing to sell. You will always get friends and family leaving feedback, I bet it happens on published books but overall the system seems fine to me. After all one mans passion is another's poison. |
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| | #65 (permalink) | |
| Brian G. Turner | Re: Published authors and percentage income Quote:
![]() Thinking about the overall issue more deeply - I wonder if perhaps the most salient approach would be to try and get main books traditionally published, but leave open the option to self-publish back stories to such work? | |
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| | #66 (permalink) | |
| Tails of the Unexpected | Re: Published authors and percentage income Quote:
I'm going to submit to agents when I'm ready and see what comes. At the same time I'm planning my marketing which will work for either scenarios ![]() Onwards and sideways | |
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| | #67 (permalink) | |
| Carpe Diem Join Date: Jan 2012 Location: Wiltshire
Posts: 31
| Re: Published authors and percentage income Quote:
![]() Ultimately AMB and others are right - if your write, you are a writer. If you publish - whether that be self or trad. you are a published writer. How do we determine quality? Perhaps not by the number of sales, as someone could put a book on kindle for .99 cents and get 100K downloads, but does it matter? A story is written for the enjoyment of the writer and as all writers hope, the reader. Yes there are some *ahem* shall we say poor quality stories out there, but I guarantee those writers have got at least one fan...... Peace Jx | |
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| | #69 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Aug 2010 Location: Bath and North East Somerset
Posts: 133
| Re: Published authors and percentage income A certain degree of snobbery around here about self publishing. You can pay your mortgage from writing. You can clothe and feed your family by writing. You can pay your taxes from writing. But you're not an author because someone on the internet says you're doing it wrong. |
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| | #70 (permalink) | ||
| Fantastical historian Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: Cambridgeshire
Posts: 1,368
| Re: Published authors and percentage income Quote:
Quote:
The window of opportunity for self-publishing at minimal cost and with no gatekeeping may be drawing to a close... | ||
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| | #71 (permalink) |
| Stephen J Sweeney Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: Greater London
Posts: 266
| Re: Published authors and percentage income I'm actually hoping that the sales of my BFTSS trilogy will ultimately count for something when I approach publishers and agents about a different series of books. I know that that has happened for Ian Hocking (Deja Vu), a former client of John Jarrold. Last edited by Scarfy; 27th January 2012 at 10:19 AM. Reason: Ian Hocking reference |
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| | #72 (permalink) | |||
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Cumbria
Posts: 1,603
| Re: Published authors and percentage income Quote:
If someone says they are a doctor, the average person will assume that this means the other person is a qualified medical professional. Not an unreasonable assumption. If Harebrain says he is a cyclist, the average person will assume that this means he cycles for pleasure - not that he rides professionally in the Tour and has blood the consistency of raspberry jam due to pumping pints of nandrolene into his system. If I say I am a writer, the average person will assume that I am a professional and published author. Does it matter what our putative average person thinks? Possibly not. But it is disingenuous of us to pretend that when we say "I am a writer" we are not hoping to generate a certain image of ourselves in the mind of the listener - and probably in our own minds too. When I was younger, a number of folk of my acquaintance called themselves "musicians"" or "poets". However, they were actually unemployed dole bludgers with a guitar or a pencil. But "musician" sounds rather better, doesn't it..... Quote:
HB is being honest and all credit for that. What I suspect he wouldn't say is "I am a writer", because to say that would be misleading at best. Quote:
I like to keep hens, I do keep hens, therefore I am a farmer. You get the point. Words are powerful and all writers - aspiring, successful or whatever - should aspire to clear communication. "I am a writer" carries a clear implied as well as explicit meaning and should therefore only be used as an absolute, unqualified statement when it is true. Regards, Peter | |||
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| | #73 (permalink) | ||
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Cumbria
Posts: 1,603
| Re: Published authors and percentage income Quote:
Quote:
Regards, Peter | ||
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| | #74 (permalink) | |
| Carpe Diem Join Date: Jan 2012 Location: Wiltshire
Posts: 31
| Re: Published authors and percentage income Quote:
If you have a certain number of sales, obviously people are enjoying your books for one reason or another - I'm absolutely positive that they will take that into account, if anything just to pay that little bit more attention to your work - sets your apart from the 1000's of other MS's they get sent! Peace Jx | |
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| | #75 (permalink) | ||
| Tails of the Unexpected | Re: Published authors and percentage income Quote:
![]() Quote:
Everybody on the internet has the spamming problem. It gets dealt with by site owners and webmastes and the spammers come back with something new so their swatted with new innovations and the cycle starts again. Amazon will deal with everybody and anything I would say. On the window of self-publishing; I think its new and it also has problems but I'm sure those problems will be ironed out. In a business enviroment, sales are everything. My mate Scarfy is knocking out 1200+ a month. How many published authors can say that. | ||
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