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Tag Archives: self-publishing

Indie Authors & Booksellers

24 Wednesday Apr 2013

Posted by randy@authorcloud.com in Publishing Commentary, Self-Publishing

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Tags

Authorcloud, book publishing, booksellers, bookstores, indie publishing authors, Randy Morse, self-publishing

There are hundreds of thousands of books published in the English language every year. An increasing number of them are released by indie publishing authors — i.e. authors who, like their indie musician colleagues, have taken it upon themselves to shepherd their own works through the publishing process and (hopefully) to a waiting audience.

ancient-books

For many of them, seeing their book listed in one of the main book wholesale distribution catalogues is a primary objective. Unfortunately, few realize that this really does nothing to encourage most booksellers to “take a chance” on their book. And when, on occasion, they do see books sent out to booksellers, they’re often shocked at how little they end up earning from the transaction. Publishing, for many of these disappointed folks, seems akin to burning money (if not books!).

bookburning460

Authorcloud Author Services founder Randy Morse is a 35-year-plus veteran of the publishing wars. He shares some insights in this video that indie publishing authors will find valuable.

For more information, visit www.authorcloud.com. And feel free to contact Randy directly with your publishing-related questions. Drop him a line at:

randy@authorcloud.com.

Simon & Schuster + Author Solutions = Bad News for Indie Authors

09 Tuesday Apr 2013

Posted by randy@authorcloud.com in Publishing Commentary, Self-Publishing

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Author Solutions, David Gaughran, indie authors, indie publishing authors, IndieReader.com, self-publishing, Simon & Schuster

Agrhhh! Another call from Author Solutions!

Agrhhh! Another call from Author Solutions!

Writing in the November 28, 2012 edition of IndieReader.com, contributor David Gaughran points out, in considerable detail, why indie publishing authors should stay away from disingenuous, dishonest operations like Author Solutions.

Unfortunately, established, traditional publishers, apparently desperate to cling to some share of the burgeoning indie publishing phenomenon, have jumped in bed with these literary low-lifes with both feet.

We’re talking ridiculous amounts for “manuscript assessment,” unprofessional editing, yet charged in the range of what we charge — in the range most professional editors would charge — for a competent copy edit, outrageous royalty fees, harassing phone calls — the list goes on. This is why Authorcloud, and similar honest, professional providers of services to indie publishing authors, exists. And remember, we’re  AuthorCLOUD, not Author Solutions!!

Here’s a excerpt from Gaughran’s blogpost:

Simon & Schuster has launched a self-publishing operation, Archway Publishing, contracting one of the most disreputable players in the business to run the show: Author Solutions…

“…We’ll get to that distasteful link-up in a second, but first let’s have a look at what Simon & Schuster are offering prospective customers (i.e. writers).

Fiction packages start at $1,999 and go up to $14,999. If you have written a business book, prices are saucier again: $2,999 to $24,999.

While the upper end of the pricing spectrum is obviously shocking, some of you might think that $1,999 isn’t too bad if you are getting a proper edit and a decent cover.

Not so fast.

That price tag doesn’t include any real editing, just an assessment which – according to their own website – is “not a replacement” for editorial services but “a preliminary diagnostic tool.”

But what if you need proper editing? Fear not! Simon & Schuster is here to help. For just $0.035 a word, you can have a thorough edit of your book. Which sounds cheap until you realize that a standard 80,000 word novel would cost you $2,800. So, in actual fact, the cheapest package, plus their edit, will set you back $4,799 for a standard length book.

As if that wasn’t enough, Simon & Schuster will also take half of your e-book royalties – after Amazon and the other retailers take their cut – and pay pennies for print sales.

Not looking so reasonable anymore, is it.

“But wait!” I hear you cry. “Those Simon & Schuster editors might be pretty damn good.” Alas, Simon & Schuster won’t be lending any editorial expertise to this new operation; it will be run and staffed by… Author Solutions – the world famous repository of editorial talent.

In fact, the whole operation has been outsourced by Simon & Schuster to Author Solutions. In case you aren’t familiar with them, let’s go over a little history.

AUTHOR SOLUTIONS

Author Solutions is the umbrella for (and owner of) several seriously shady self-publishing service companies (or vanity presses, if you prefer) – such as Author House, Xlibris, iUniverse, and Trafford.

Each of these companies has managed to achieve disreputable status on their own, but together they have screwed over more than 150,000 writers. Going through the full history of their rip-off schemes would require a book, rather than a blog post, so I’ll stick to the highlights.

The formidable Emily Suess has been covering Author Solutions for some time:

The short list of recurring issues includes: making formerly out-of-print works available for sale without the author’s consent, improperly reporting royalty information, non-payment of royalties, breach of contract, predatory and harassing sales calls, excessive markups on review and advertising services, failure to deliver marketing services as promised, telling customers their add-ons will only cost hundreds of dollars and then charging their credit cards thousands of dollars, ignoring customer complaints, shaming and banning customers who go public with their stories, and calling at least one customer a ‘fucking asshole.’

Read the above list carefully. Take a moment to consider it. This is the company that Simon & Schuster have hired to run their self-publishing operation – a company which was purchased by Penguin in July for $116m.

If you are unfamiliar with the charges above, this post will give you a little more detail.

PENGUIN

At the time of the purchase, some commentators expressed hope that Penguin would clean up this cesspool. Instead, Penguin gave Kevin Weiss – the head of Author Solutions – a seat on the board.

A seat on the board!

And the scammy behavior hasn’t stopped; in fact, some of it is getting worse. I’ve received reports of Author Solutions staff calling prospective customers and asking if they want to be “published by Penguin.” Yes, they went there.

Then, a month after Penguin’s purchase, Author Solutions were heavily criticized for their misleading marketing strategies by Victoria Strauss of industry watchdog Writer Beware.

Aside from the usual litany of dodgy affiliate programs and misleading “independent” websites, Author Solutions had now gone a step further: using fake people to tout their services. A social media profile for “Jared Silverstone” was decked out with a stock photograph, and sent out to hustle for Author Solutions – under the pretense of recommending them independently.

Since Fake Jared’s fifteen minutes of fame, I’ve seen similar “writers” and “publishing consultants” disingenuously promoting Author Solutions companies in various writing groups on Facebook. And they’re just the ones that slip through the net – the administrator of one popular Facebook group told me that she “turns away people like this all the time.”

The latest wheeze is even better: an army of spam bots, posting comments to writing and publishing blogs, attempting to both lead people back to Author House and boost SEO. I snapped a comment from one such bot on the blog of Porter Anderson last week (which hasn’t been deleted at the time of writing).

Thank you, Author Solutions. The world really needed more spam bots…”

If you’d like to read the entire article, here it is.

 

Common Book Design Mistakes

17 Thursday May 2012

Posted by randy@authorcloud.com in Self-Publishing

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Tags

Book Design, Book Design Mistakes, Book Formatting, BookBaby, Brian Felsen, Joel Friedland, Randy Morse, self-publishing

A cover like this certainly makes you wonder what's inside; and I mean that in a bad way...

When you’ve been doing something for as long as I’ve been a publisher — 35 years and counting — you get to know a few things.

Like what a decently designed book interior should look like.

I can usually spot a self-published book — at least one that’s been “designed” by the author — a mile away. Aside from all the whacky covers out there that make the task of spotting an amateur’s work so easy my dog Scout could probably do it, there are some recurring, fundamental errors self-publishing authors make when formatting their books’ pages that leap out at anyone who knows what a professionally designed book should look like, as well.

Here’s a terrific — and brief — video by pro book designer Joel Friedlander, talking with BookBaby president Brian Felsen, that highlights a few of the obvious design errors to watch out for if you’ve decided to design and format your next book yourself.

Self-Publishing, the New Wave

11 Friday May 2012

Posted by randy@authorcloud.com in Self-Publishing

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

authors, bookstores, ebooks, new wave, publishers, publishing, self-publishing

What are you going to do with a garage-full of unsold, self-published books? Hey, summer's coming, it's BBQ season!

I can’t begin to tell you how often I hear from authors, concerned that (a) their publishers aren’t doing enough to market their books, or (b) much more commonly, they can’t find a publisher, period.

Sometimes of course the problem is that the author’s work just doesn’t deserve an audience, at least not in its present form. But there’s another, structural problem afoot — too many traditional publishers are wallowing in the past, while a grassroots publishing revolution passes them by.

If you’re an author these days, you have a stark choice: stick with the Czar, or join the revolutionaries and build something new.

Self-publishing's been around a long time. Ask Edgar Allan Poe. Oh, sorry, he's dead

Some pundits have taken to calling what’s going on in the publishing industry, “disruptive innovation,” led largely by self-publishing authors who are rapidly refining their publishing & marketing techniques, and finding new, often novel ways of engaging directly with their potential readers (aka “customers”).

Meanwhile, many traditional publishers, burdened by much higher operating costs, mired in old, 20th-centrury-ish ways of doing things, are staggering toward oblivion, taking their authors with them.

Bookstores. You do remember them... don't you?

In “the old days” (as in 30 years ago, max), there was a scarcity of information in the world. If you wanted to know what was happening in the world in any depth, you read a newspaper or a magazine. If you wanted to be entertained, you read a book. The only way for an author to find an audience was through a publisher; the only way for a reader to find a book was to first find a bookstore.

My, how times have changed.

Today, hundreds of millions of folks read things untouched by the corporate hands of big publishers. Things like, for example, this blogpost. Those special places people back in the 19th and 20th centuries went to to find books — you know, bookstores? They’re disappearing faster than bison from the prairies. Replaced by whatever device you’re currently using to read this.

It's still Pooh

This is self-published content. Whether a post like this or a full-blown novel, this is content the big boys haven’t had a hand in shaping. And since all traditional media are in bed together, they conspire to collectively sneer at such content, or simply ignore it all together.

They remind me of whale oil merchants at the dawn of the petroleum era, or the orchestra on the stern of the Titanic.

So what will emerge from this chaos? Good question. No doubt new arbiters of taste will step forward, as self-publishing authors vie to ensure their works stand out in the crowd. This is good news for old publishing types (like me), who would rather lend a hand than stand in the doorway, helping ensure more and more self-published works have the same decent (or even, on occasion, excellent) editorial and design standards as works published by the large, traditional houses.

Top-down is dead. The new publishing mantra is bottom-up. So all you struggling, confused self-publishing authors out there, take heart — you’re the New Wave.

We’ve seen the Future, and it’s You.

 

 

 

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