Beta-Testing Books - Andrew Crofts
One of the greatest by-products of the electronic publishing
revolution is being able to keep developing and refining a book after its
initial birth.
The traditional publishing business model loaded most of the
pressure onto publication day, with a possible second chance of breathing marketing
life into the project when the paperback came out a year later. If your book
didn’t float on at least one of those launch days then it would almost
certainly sink beneath the surface within a matter of weeks. Copies might possibly
be washed up onto the shores of a few libraries and Oxfam shops over the coming
years, and not much else unless it became caught up in a freak rights storm in Hollywood or as a foreign
translation.
Now, however, we have more chances to get things right, more
ways to keep a book alive while we try to work out the best way to alert
potential readers to its existence and to tell them why they would enjoy it.
In other parts of the electronic jungle, such as on-line
gaming, I believe they call this “beta-testing”, trying the product out on
enthusiasts and specialists in order to check that it is good before launching
it to the general market. I have found myself doing much the same thing with
books, without fully realising that was what I was doing.
About 18 months ago I published my novella “Secrets of the
Italian Gardener” via Amazon’s White Glove Service and United Agents. Sales
were strong every time Amazon included it in a promotion and the book garnered
around thirty good and thoughtful on-line reviews, (plus one troll, which seems
a reasonable ratio). The signs appear to be good so I have now moved to the
next stage, teaming up with the wonderful people at Red Door Publishing to create
a beautiful hardback in the traditional manner, (although the POD paperback is
also still available from Amazon, plus, of course, the e-book).
I commissioned a slightly refined cover from the same
designer as before, Elliot Thomson of the Novak Collective, and Midas PR are
working on the marketing. None of this would have been feasible five years ago
and this is just one of the many reasons why I love what electronics have done
for publishing.
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