An Author’s Life of Snakes and Ladders - Guest Post by Mary Cavanagh
The Good Old Days: Forty
years ago my home town of Oxford had a small WHSmith and the truly brilliant
Blackwell’s; a large established family bookshop that catered for the academic
side of the University, and also offered several floors of fiction and
non-fiction. This was a rare luxury, and whilst other towns might have only had
a WHS, they would have had one or two excellent independents as well. Authors
were managed by the many long-established publishing firms who fully supported
them, took responsibility for sales and marketing, and took a great deal of
interest in their careers. Yes, of course, there was a sector of high
commercialism and pocket romances, but on the whole good quality reading was
the order of the day.
Thatcher’s Britain: From
the nineteen-eighties onward, in response to the boom times of economic growth,
competition in the form of large chain stores arrived. Oxford was blessed with
an enormous Waterstones, and even larger Borders. This pattern was reflected
nationwide, including two other chains, Dillons and Ottakar’s, all of whom
pushed hard for space in the smaller market towns, ousting many independents
who couldn’t compete. They all catered to mass market tastes, their stock was
controlled from their head offices, and each branch, in each town, seemed to be
a cloned twin. Behind the scenes, of course, competition drove the pace, and
publishers paid large fees for the privilege of high-profile displays. Figures
I’ve heard for those days were tens of thousands for a major London window
display at Christmas, several thousand for a ‘three-for-two’ deal, and even a
large fee for the book to be ‘outward facing’. These times were the salad days
of conventional book selling, and there was no such thing as self-published
authors, or online discounting. In fact, the only outlet for the self-publisher
was the sneered at ‘vanity publishing’.
All Change: Ah, but
how the mighty are fallen, and there came three things; the advent of Amazon
and other online selling facilities, the economic downturn, and the end of the
Net Book Agreement. The NBA, which had operated since 1900, meant that all
booksellers were bound to display a uniform retail price, but in 1997 it ended.
This meant a ‘free-for-all’ in undercutting. Online retailers and supermarkets were
able to offer rock bottom prices, and gradually, although battling to survive,
Borders went to the wall, Dillons and Ottakars were absorbed into Waterstones,
and Waterstones (apart from WHSmith) was the only survivor. Also, a huge
percentage of the remaining independents were forced to close, dumbing the
industry down even further. With cheaper books came a rise of serious
cut-throat competition, and what was seen as ‘market opportunities’. With
increased book sales many new publishers sprang up, to initially thrive (but
quickly wither). Gradually, self-publishing began to gain ground and many
worthy ‘old name’ publishers and imprints failed to compete and began going to
the wall.
It was into this world of new opportunities, and
wide-reaching changes that my life as a novelist began.
Ladder: My first
novel, The Crowded Bed (2007) was published
by the newly formed Transita, and sold 2500 copies.
Snake: They quickly ceased to trade and I lost my
contract for a second book.
Ladder: I found a
prestigious literary agent who ‘absolutely adored’ my second book, A Man Like Any Other, and sent me away
to do minor changes.
Snake: He didn’t
like the changes and dumped me.
Ladder(s): In 2008 self-publishing
was becoming big business. I signed A Man
Like Any Other up for a litho-print deal with Matador and sold 800, which
was excellent news. With their other ‘hat’, as mainstream Troubador, they
published my self-help textbook, A Seriously Useful Authors Guide to Marketing and Publicising Book. It sold very
well, and in the interim I completed
another full-length novel, Who Was AngelaZendalic. In 2009 I was taken on by another literary agent who ‘loved’ Angela Zendalic and signed me up.
Snake: It became
obvious, after two wasted years, that the agent was doing nothing to sell my
book and had lost interest in me. We parted company. Then came my wilderness
years. I never stopped writing but my published career had come to a grinding
halt.
Ladder: In 2012 I
secured a three-book deal with Thames River Press. My old self-published novel (A Man) was issued under a new title, The Priest, His Lady and The Drowned Child,
and Who Was Angela Zendalic came out
in 2013.
Snake: Despite my
best efforts and a huge sales campaign in all the areas that had worked before
(Facebook, bookshops, libraries, reading groups, talks etc) sales for both
books were very poor, and three months ago we parted company.
So, with my contract reversed, what on earth could I
do now to try and boost sales of my books? Having just carried out a
comprehensive update of my Publicity and Marketing textbook (hopefully to be
published later this year) I became aware that eBook sales were beginning to
overtake those of standard print. I had also spoken to several successful
author friends who spoke very enthusiastically about the various eBook ‘sales
sites’ that were springing up in the USA. These sites operate by having large
lists of subscribers who sign up for daily eBook deals to be emailed to them,
and thus, authors are offered the opportunity to showcase their books.
The sites that I discovered were: BookBub,
Ebooksoda,
The
Fussy Librarian, Booksends, Ereader
News Today, BookGorilla and BKnights.
BookBub (the most expensive) has up to a million on-line subscribers, but
most of them have at least 100,000. Each company has differing promotion rates
and genre/category criteria, and you can thus choose which one your book would
most likely slot into. One universal thing is that the price needs to be set at
an attractive bargain rate – usually not more than $3.99 – and the only ‘qualifications’ needed are that they
insist on ‘a certain amount of Amazon 5 star ratings’ and ‘good reviews’.
A typical eBook promotion works like this. You apply
on-line, and if they accept your submission you pay the agreed fee. This is
paid easily through PayPal and instantly converted to U.S. dollars. You will be
given a one-off promotion date in your chosen genre category, and on this date
your book will be emailed to their long list of subscribers for one day only. Thereafter, it will be
included on a monthly backlist.
As a British author this sounded great, as the U.S.
market is, predictably, huge. I was seriously interested as one friend, who
wrote in my ‘genre’, had secured sales of several thousands and another told me
that she’d never known of anyone who didn’t get their money back.
Right – I had the star reviews, and it sounded as if
the odds were great, so I decided to take a gamble. I republished all three of
my novels with Oxford eBooks Ltd, complete with brand new
eye-catching covers, at a total cost of £250 each. The results were excellent,
and I thoroughly recommend Andy Severne and his team. I included endorsement
‘puffs’ on the covers, and put positive reviews on the opening pages to take
advantage of the Look Inside feature on Amazon.
I signed up The
Crowded Bed with X company (I have to allow it to remain anonymous) for £14
($9.00), and dropped the price to $2.99, confident that by exposing it to
100,000 subscribers I would, by the law of averages, surely sell at least a few
hundred copies. Even these modest amounts would bag me an excellent return, and
I would have reached a wide new audience. I couldn’t wait for the day to come,
and I was bursting with excitement.
So how did I get on? Dim the lights, start the drum
roll, and hold your breath. . . . . . I
sold 4 copies. Yes – that’s right. Only 4 copies! The law of averages certainly
didn’t work for me, and I was gutted. Why did ‘everyone else’s’ books do well
and mine didn’t. Search me.
I really wish that I could have ended this article on
a high note, and endorse that eBook sales sites are the miracle that we authors
need, but it seems not (well in my case, not).
If anyone does choose to go down this route, just for
the hell of it (and if your eBook is already produced then it’s cheap enough to
register it on most sites), I wish you huge good luck. Meanwhile, I sit here,
at the bottom of another huge snake, licking my wounds!
Comments
So keep going you'll get there.
Congratulations on an interesting post, Mary. I liked your snakes and ladders take on the whole thing. Don't hit me if I borrow it sometime.
Yes, that game is only too familiar. My first stories were published in the early 90's, my first novel in 1999, and there have been many snakes and ladders on route, to say nothing of a frustrating pre-publication decade trying to find the right agent/publisher for my work.
But look on the bright side... there are only so many snakes on the board (even though publishing appears to have more than its fair share of them!), and when you reach the bottom there's only one way to go. Up another ladder!