Read The 7 Secrets of the Prolific Writer's Block Online
Authors: Writing
Tags: #Non-fiction, #Guide, #Perfectionism, #Writer’s Block, #Procrastination, #Time Management
All this is definitely true for fiction writers, and it will also be true for many nonfiction writers, except, perhaps, for celebrated entrepreneurs, popular experts, trendy memoirists, and others who can command a big advance from a traditional publisher.
Is self-publishing easy? No and yes. “No” in the sense that no ambitious venture is truly easy. “Yes” in that it’s a rational enterprise in which your result depends largely on the quality of your effort and investment, especially in the areas of marketing and sales. That alone is a big improvement over traditional publishing, which for many writers has basically been a misery-generating crapshoot. But don’t take my word for it—here’s best-selling author and Internet marketing guru Seth Godin (who has also given up traditional publishing in favor of self-publishing) on why even obscure authors should self-publish:
No Knight, No Shining Armor.
“Sure, Seth can do that, because he has a popular blog.”
Some people responded to my decision to forgo traditional publishers (not traditional books, btw) by pointing out that I can do that because I have a way of reaching readers electronically.
What they missed is that this asset is a choice, not an accident.
Does your project depend on a miracle, a bolt of lightning, on being chosen by some arbiter of who will succeed? I think your work is too important for you to depend on a lottery ticket. In some ways, this is the work of the Resistance, an insurance policy that gives you deniability if the project doesn’t succeed. “Oh, it didn’t work because we didn’t get featured on that blog, didn’t get distribution in the right store, didn’t get the right endorsement...”
There’s nothing wrong with leverage, no problem at all with an unexpected lift that changes everything. But why would you build that as the foundation of your plan?
The magic of the tribe is that you can build it incrementally, that day by day you can earn the asset that will allow you to bring your work to people who want it. Or you can skip that and wait to get picked. Picked to be on Oprah or American Idol or at the cash register at Borders.
Getting picked is great. Building a tribe is reliable, it’s hard work and it’s worth doing.
6
The fact that you’re reading this book shows that self-publishing can work even for someone much more obscure than Godin. I’ll tell you the steps I took to get here in Section 8.9. First, however, let’s examine the essential differences between empowered and disempowered careers—one of the most important topics in this entire book. And then we’ll explore the details of strategy and marketing for empowered self-publishing writers.
1
Piper, “She’s Looked at Life From Both Sides Now,” Smith (blog), August 4, 2006 (www.smithmag.net/memoirville/2006/08/04/shes-looked-at-life-from-both-sides-now/).
2
Tara Bannow, “Amanda Hocking Signs Four-Book Deal With St. Martin’s Press,” March 24, 2011 (www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/03/24/amanda-hocking_n_840169.html), originally published by the Associated Press.
3
Geoffrey Fowler and Jeffrey Trachtenberg, “‘Vanity’ Press Goes Digital,”
Wall Street Journal
, June 3, 2010 (online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704912004575253132121412028.html).
4
Barry Eisler, “Why I’m Self-Publishing,” The Daily Beast (blog), March 24, 2011 (www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/03/24/barry-eisler-explains-self-publishing-decision.html).
5
Both the Wilson and Konrath stories are from the
Wall Street Journal
article cited in footnote 4. Regarding Wilson’s story, note that when traditionally published books go out of print, the rights to them typically revert to the author. This story also illustrates how traditional publishers often give up on books that still have a lot of life—and sales—left in them.
6
Seth Godin, “No Knight, No Shining Armor,” Seth Godin’s Blog (blog), November 11, 2010 (sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2010/11/no-knight-no-shining-armor.html). © 2010 Seth Godin. Used with permission. (By “Resistance,” by the way, he’s referring to Steven Pressfield’s conception of procrastination, from The War of Art.)
I
t is very important to your writing, and your life in general, that you understand the difference between disempowered and empowered careers.
Disempowered careers:
Faddishness.
Publishers are notorious for jumping on the latest fad—be it drug memoir, chick lit, or something else—and then just as abruptly jumping off. If your book happens to even vaguely fit that fad, lucky you—although you might regret it later if your book gets hideously mis-marketed. But if your book doesn’t fit the current fad, you’re going to have a tough time getting noticed.As alluded to by Godin above,
overinfluential and often arbitrary gatekeepers
with disproportionate power over your fate. In publishing, these aren’t just editors or agents, but teachers in MFA programs who connect favored students with agents and publishers (Section A.8), and the legions of overworked, underpaid, underqualified, low-level staffers who are often the first-line reader at many agencies and publishers.
Disempowered careers are also characterized by:
Empowered careers, in contrast:
Empowered careers are also characterized by:
Can you be empowered in a disempowering system?
There are two answers to this:
(1) Perhaps, but why bother? There’s plenty of empowerment in the world.
(2) To do it, you need to know exactly what the rules are AND you have to be at the top of your game. In fact, that’s precisely how successful authors have always succeeded—by treating publishing like the business it is, and ignoring grandiose misconceptions (Section 2.2), pervasive deprecations (Section 6.7), and especially disempowering strictures concerning how writers are “supposed to” behave—e.g., that they’re supposed to be grateful for the opportunity to be published, and satisfied with the crumbs from the publisher’s table.
In the absence of today’s fabulous print-on-demand and Web technologies, those authors didn’t really have a choice but to work within the system. We do. So, I repeat: Why bother? The fantastic Konrath quote that I began this chapter of
The Seven Secrets of the Prolific
with bears repeating:
For the first time in the history of publishing, writers have the upper hand. Don’t piss that advantage away by thinking that this is still 1995.