Friday, May 4, 2012

I Did Everything Wrong

It’s time to talk about this. I’ve been thinking of writing another little booklet for other writers on the lessons I’ve learned about self-publishing – more of a memoir, really. During that thought process, it just came to me that I have literally done everything wrong. Let me explain:

  • When I became convinced I should self-publish, I rushed through it so fast that I didn’t have ANYONE edit or proof-read my book. After all, I had edited it several times and proofed it 6, count ‘em, 6 times. Let me just say – only a fool relies on their own editing! That was me. Why would I do that? It’s very simple. I was so afraid that someone would criticize or offer suggestions on the story itself and I would then be paralyzed and NEVER, EVER publish it myself.
  •  I had 40 copies of Red Mojo Mama printed and began selling them to friends and family before my sister Julie was kind enough to tell me what a mess I had produced. I ended up labeling the remainders with PROOF COPY and giving them away.
  •  I published Red Mojo Mama in paperback first. At the time, I didn’t have a Kindle, nor did I have a marketing plan. I really had no idea what I was doing. I sold a few paperbacks online and then, of course, sales petered out. I sat around wondering what to do next for a couple of months until a friend suggested, very strongly, that I buy myself a Kindle. I did and the minute I pushed the order button an email from Amazon arrived advertising John Locke’s new book How I Sold a Million eBooks in 5 Months! I ordered it as soon as I unpacked my Kindle, read it in one sitting and knew I had to epublish. The excitement was almost unbearable.
  •  I uploaded the revised Red Mojo Mama as an eBook a few days later. Here’s the thing. Revised meant that two of my sisters and my mother proofed it for me. (Until just a few days ago, that’s the copy I’ve been selling – one that was full of errors)
  •  I ordered the e-version of Red Mojo Mama, read the first few pages on my Kindle and it looked fine. I had run into bad formatting in another book I’d read, but the formatting problems had begun on page 1 so I didn’t think to look any further in Red Mojo Mama. Unfortunately, my book remained full of errors and contained bad formatting for much too much longer.
  • Along comes my dear friend Dannie C. Hill, who reads the book, loves the story and has the gumption to tell me my formatting is screwed up. He even volunteered to help me out with the problems. I will love him forever for both kindnesses.
  •  I uploaded Dannie’s corrected copy – and still didn’t look at it to make sure it was okay. At the time, I didn’t know we can preview our uploads before finalizing them. On KDP, once you push upload, the instructions urge you to go to the next step while you’re waiting for the upload to complete. Silly me – I did just that, never knowing that after the upload was completed this preview option came up. It took another kind stranger, who responded to a blog post I wrote (ironically about double checking our work before publishing) to point out this feature.
  • Finally, I gave away over 12,000 of Red Mojo Mama recently that STILL had the errors and bad formatting. Two wonderful women took the time to write me emails and tell me that although they loved the story, the errors and bad formatting got in the way of their enjoyment. I will always be grateful to them as well.  I recently had a very good proofer revise Red Mojo Mama, and happily, she’s now pretty as a picture. I checked!
  • Along the way, I have learned to make my own covers. I did purchase one and the response to it has been less favorable than to the ones I’ve created on my own.
  • When I started on Twitter, I knew absolutely nothing about it or how to interact with others and even less about how to market my book. Frankly, I’m still learning the marketing part on a daily basis, but again I had help with the Twitter etiquette. Rachel Thompson, @RachelintheOC, sent me a very sweet direct message and told me that I shouldn’t put the link to my book at the end of every tweet. I had begun following someone who looked very experienced who put the link at the end of each of his tweets, whether they had anything to do with his book or not, so I had just followed along. She was a lifesaver. Who knows how long it would have taken me to pick up on that one?  I also got a lot of information from Rachel’s free social media webinar. 
 
Here’s the good news: 1) I had so much kind help along the way and 2) except for the lack of editing and proofing early on, I wouldn’t have done anything differently. I would still advise people who are like me, who learn by doing, to just jump in. 

There are others out there who learn by reading up on a subject and approach things very carefully. I’ve never been that way. I don’t read instructions unless I need to do something specific, because quite honestly it doesn’t translate for me unless I’m in the midst of doing it. And even then, I’m bound to get stuff wrong. That’s just how it is for me. 

Am I embarrassed by my mistakes? Yes, but they don’t keep me up at night. At least I did it. I jumped in and now I’m proud to say I have six books online and I’ve learned how to do most of it fairly well. While I fervently wish my product had been a little better in the beginning, I’m happy to be able to say I’m an author and I’m really happy with what I’ve published now. Does it get better than that? Wishing for perfection is a waste of time and paralyzing. 

What I lacked for many years was encouragement and finally received it in my mid-thirties from the wonderful man I married, my late husband Pete. Because of that support I began writing screenplays and was even able to get an agent. It gave me my start. So, for the past decade or so, I’ve made it my mission to encourage other writers and writer wannabes.  This post has been a part of doing that. I hope by freely admitting my mistakes, someone out there will jump in or keep going in the face of a failure. 

Writers are a special breed and need to stick together, leaning down whenever possible to help the next guy up. 

Keep on trucking, people.

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Have a Little Adventure on Me

I had a great time writing my novella The Great Twitter Adventure: How 5 Tweeps Saved the World, which I published back in January.  It’s the tale of five Twitter friends, four of whom travel from across the country to come to the aid of the unspoken leader of their group, Frank. There’s Maggie, the 35 year-old personnel recruiter who spearheaded the effort to rescue Frank; Edie, a spiky-haired sixtyish sprite of a woman who is a recreational hacker in her spare time; Dwayne, a golf-pro from Florida with all the style of Samuel L. Jackson and Tex, the cowboy who hails from Tucson. They cavort around the Los Angeles basin in search of their pal and manage to save the world in the process. It’s truly great fun.

I published it back in January and the promptly got sidetracked so it hasn’t gotten the attention from me that I think it deserves. Now, I’m running a free promotion on Amazon from Tuesday (5/1) through Friday (5/4). I hope you’ll take advantage of it and have a wonderful time reading it. If you do, I would sincerely appreciate a review if you have the time.

A sequel is planned for publication in the next couple of months. Did I mention this will be a running series, with three to four new novellas every year? What can I say? I love these guys!

Just click through on the book cover to your right and it will take you right to the Amazon page.

Oh, and say hello to The Fearless Five for me – that’s what they call themselves!

Saturday, April 28, 2012

The Softer Side of Men

This is admittedly going to be a completely chauvinistic post. I apologize to men in advance.

I have been reading the works of a lot of Indie authors over the past year, about half of them have been written by men. I have been totally awestruck by the sensitive side of these many male authors. I suppose it is in part because I’ve tended to read hard core thrillers when I have read books by traditionally published men. Perhaps the sentiment has been edited out before publishing. I don’t know, but I welcome the softer side of male authors.

The most recent read has been Jason Halstead’s The Dark Earth. The deep love of the hero, Eric, for his daughter, Jessica, took me into the story deeply connected to the characters.

I have previously praised the following writers for their writing, but I just realized that the common ingredient has been their sensitivity:


Dannie C. Hill’s In Search of a Soul is so imbued with Hill’s obvious regard for women that a female reader cannot help but fall a little in love with his hero. Douglas Durian.

Will Bevis’ short story, The Killing of Train Man Brown, is a treasure of observation, the kind that rips your heart out. A young boy's tenderness for a man who is essentially an outcast is remarkable.

Finally, Bert Carson always writes stories steeped in issues of honor, but not just the traditional male concept of bravery in the face of danger, but that deeper "everyday" kind of honor that guides lives lived by a sense of it. I really enjoyed Fourth and Forever, for the values it illustrates.

I’m fully aware that many authors, male and female, strive for a protagonist that is cool, reserved, unflappable and I appreciate those characters, too. I’ve just been struck by the plethora of male authors whose main characters freely display deep feelings and tended to pull them out of the pack, personally.

I will keep my eye open now for traditionally published men, like Pat Conroy, who do create openly caring male protags. That is if I ever get around to reading those books with the long list of Indie books I have loaded on my Kindle!

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

My Aversion to Vampires

Okay, I know it’s not the popular thing to say, but I have a very strong aversion to vampires, or let me be more specific since vampires don’t really exist (or do they?) – vampire stories and movies creep me out.

It’s about the blood. No, it’s about my neck. No, it’s about both. I always turn my head when there’s blood and gore in a film.

I was almost paralyzed when I was about 12 and my little sister started bleeding profusely from a pulled tooth. I just barely managed to get her situated over the bathroom sink, then quickly called for my mom and went to lay down on my bed, queasy and dizzy.

Then I’ve always had this thing about my neck. See, I’m fairly convinced I was guillotined in another life and hence I can’t stand being touched on my neck or wearing anything that’s too tight around it. A choker necklace is completely out of the question.

Given these two intimate details, which is probably TMI (too much information), there is no way I can get into a book that is about vampires. So, unfortunately, that leaves a large segment of the Indie authors out of my reach. Too bad for me, I fear.

As with anything I don’t understand, I struggle to get into the mindset of someone who loves vampire stories. I would really enjoy writing a character who’s into vampires, but since I don’t get it, I can’t write it.

So, part of my reason for writing this is to ask those of you out there who are into the vampire thing to please comment. I really would appreciate your feedback.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

The Fine Art of Introspection

Looking inside yourself - examining why you do something or how you really feel about someone – isn’t always fun. I’d venture to say that the majority of the time it’s not a walk in the park. However, as writers, and really as functioning people, it’s necessary and good.

How can I write a character that’s true to life if I don’t understand what makes them tick? I can’t really understand what makes anyone else who they are if I don’t have a pretty good idea about myself. In fact, I’m pretty sure that’s why it took me so long to come into my own as a writer – because I hadn’t figured myself out yet.

I naturally over-analyze things, so I don’t often have to prompt myself to dig deeply into my interior. However, there are times when I just can’t get a grip on the way I’m reacting to something and will make myself go to the park or a quiet bistro to think it through.

Of course many of my revelations come through dreams, as I’ve made obvious through my online persona. Those trips down the yellow brick road serve me just as well.

Whatever it takes to get to our own mental and even spiritual roots, we have to do it to write well. At least, that’s what I think. How about you?

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Top 100 on Kindle...

You’re probably sick of all the KDP Select discussions. It is getting old but I needed to pass along a couple of my own observations from this time around.

First let me say, I’ve tried the free promotions before, without much luck. However, I’ve read so many blogs praising them that I decided to give it another try for the launch of my sequel, Red is an Attitude. No, I didn’t give it away, but instead went back to the original, Red Mojo Mama, and give that away for five days.

The previous attempt netted me a little over 2,000 downloads, including the UK. This time around I had over 12,000 downloads in five days, all but a couple hundred were from Amazon US.

Here’s the dynamic that really startled me. The first time I did the free promo for Red Mojo Mama it never got above #354 on the free downloads list. This time I started out on the first day at 154 and through the next four days was on the Top 100 list. Day Three I hit the highest spot at #51. As I rose through the ranks, the download rate got faster... much faster. I watched as the books began to rack up “sales” so quickly that I realized it was at 10 or more per minute. Yowza!

It seemed the longer the book stayed on the Top 100 list and the higher it got, the better the download rate became. Catch-22: You’ve got to be on the Top 100 list to do really well at the free promo, but to get there you have to have an amazing download rate first. I think the big difference here was that I promoted the free days on more than just Twitter this time. I listed it as an event on Goodreads, paired it with a Goodreads paperback giveaway, announced it on a couple of Facebook groups I belong to and on Facebook in general. Then I told everyone I knew about it. I’m sure my friends, family and tweeps helped me with that initial download rate.

So, in the first two days of Red is an Attitude being on Amazon it has sold more than the first two months of Red Mojo Mama being available. So, whether or not the original sells more (which it’s beginning to look like it will) the sequel is benefitting.

Yay!

Monday, April 9, 2012

Continuation of a Life

I knew when I began writing the story of Lydia “Red” Talbot in Red Mojo Mama that one book wasn’t going to do it. She’s a made-to-order character for a series of books, and in many ways similar to Stephanie Plum, the famous protagonist of Janet Evanovich’s many books, which is not something I had planned.

Red grew organically out of my own experiences in life and soon took control, leading me around by the nose. She’s also been persistently tapping on my brain, demanding her sequel, for the past 12 months. So, I’ve finally made it happen. On April 12th, Red is an Attitude will go live on Amazon (fingers crossed).

To celebrate, I’ve put the original ebook – Red Mojo Mama – free on Amazon from April 9th through April 13th.

This is all good news – at least for me. However, if you think Red’s let up on me – no way. She’s already poking and needling me to get started on number three. That’s okay, because I have the major plot point done. Now, all I have to do is build a whole novel around it. No big deal.

I’m beginning to wonder if I’ll ever be able to write a book without a sequel or series, since I’ve already started the second The Great Twitter Adventure novella. I love my creations so much I’m not sure I can tolerate them going away at the end of a first book. It only seems fair to give them more adventures. If I ever write something that comes from the dark side or has an unhappy ending (not likely) that may change.

Anyway, at least in this case, I’ve managed to continue the life of one Lydia “Red” Talbot and it feels good.