Thursday 17 May 2012

How to Self Publish: Enjoy it!


Cartoon © David Gifford 2012
There’s one major advantage to self-publishing: anyone can do it. There’s also one major disadvantage: anyone can do it! For two centuries publishers have vetted and controlled the market, with Literary agents mediating between authors and publishers. But now, anyone can write a book, submit an MS word document and through various, inexpensive means, publish their book to the world, online and through print on demand, if they think it’s worth it. Traditional publishers are up in arms because suddenly their slush pile is being self-published, vanity publishers are fast becoming irrelevant and literary agents are finally having to work for their fee.

So, surely this is all good news for the budding self-publisher. Well, yes, but the ease of access means there’s a massive increase in competition. The bigger publishers used to worry about the marketing campaigns of their equally large competitors, but now they have to think about an army of marketing-savvy 17 year olds who have no respect for tradition and live/breathe social media.

So, the advantage of self-publishing is that anyone can do it.

That’s still true. You can write your book, control its look, decide to publish immediately, determine the price and benefit from a greater share of the sale price of the ebook. And competition is good. It makes you think harder, plan more carefully and work harder at making your book a success.

But there’s one more ingredient: enjoy writing the book. Some people love the physical process of writing itself, others revel in the thinking and the planning, some even enjoy the marketing afterwards! Most writers though, use the writing as a form of expression or escape from their daily lives.

I have a nom de plum, Jake Jackson. I write practical music books on reading music, guitar and keyboard chords and a Songwriters Rhyming Dictionary. The books have sold many thousand physical copies throughout the world. Now I’m writing a fiction trilogy. I’ve been writing it for three years, just fours hours a week, mainly at weekends, and I’ve loved every single second. My everyday job is as a publisher of illustrated non-fiction, so I know the industry, I know the disappointment that would-be authors succumb to, but even so, I have kept writing because I love the process. If, eventually, 10 people buy the books I’ll celebrate.

Writing is a mission, it’s a vocation. Of course we all want success, but ultimately, we have to enjoy what we do. There’s a great article from the Guardian newspaper, with interviews of a range of interesting writers, from P.D James to Roddy Doyle. In it, Neil Gaiman says: ‘The main rule of writing is that if you do it with enough assurance and confidence, you're allowed to do whatever you like... So write your story as it needs to be written. Write it ­honestly, and tell it as best you can...’

How true.

Coming soon: Proofreaders or friends? and How to Blog to promote your Book.
For the cartoon at the top of this post, many thanks to Kingston University and David Gifford at inscript design.



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